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Is he dreading what Blair's thinking?
Monday 25th April 2005
Election: The deal - If Labour wins another landslide, as now seems possible, will the Prime Minister decide to go on and on? John Kampfner on the Brownites' nightmare.
There has been no deal between Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. There
has been no promise on the succession, verbal or written. On this point
both sides are adamant. So where does this leave voters, and the large
contingent of disgruntled Labour supporters who might be persuaded
by the Chancellor to keep the faith?
When Alastair Campbell went to
see Brown in Scotland over the Easter holidays to persuade him to appear
in an election broadcast, Brown agreed to discuss it further with Blair.
The truce that followed was based on an understanding about the way
the campaign would be conducted. Life after polling day was not discussed.
Brown did not want to be seen to be making his co-operation conditional.
In any case, he doubted, in the light of past experience, whether any
deal would be watertight.
Brown did achieve the following: he ensured that
plans to move him to the Foreign Office were quashed; he ensured
that the economy would be the centrepiece for the campaign; and he
ensured that his two right-hand men, the future MPs Ed Balls and
Ed Miliband, join the election strategy committee. These conditions
were explicit. Anything else was implicit.
By the time Brown belatedly became involved in
the manifesto, he and his people were pleasantly surprised at its
tone and contents. They saw his mantra of the progressive consensus
had already been included. They saw that nothing had been slipped
in, unlike the 2001 manifesto, with its heavy focus on private provision
in the NHS. The timing and detail of the next phase of public service
reform remains to be agreed, but Brown had no substantive objections
to the manifesto contents. He requested more of an emphasis on tax
credits, particularly child tax credits, and that was agreed. In
the manifesto launch, and in the various press conferences since,
Blair has focused far less on choice and diversity of provision and
much more on defining Labour's management of health and education
against the Conservatives - territory on which Brown was entirely
comfortable. The triangulation of old has been ditched, for the moment
at least. The more they have rediscovered the art of working together,
the more Blair, Brown and their respective entourages have felt at
ease. I am told that Brown and Alan Milburn are even able to converse,
something that would have been unthinkable even a few weeks earlier.
This is less about
peace than, in the words of one senior party official, a coincidence
of interests. The Blair camp has for some time been divided into
two groups: those who have sought consensus with Brown, led by Campbell,
Philip Gould and John Prescott; and those who have wanted to marginalise
him. Blair fluctuated between the two, but was finally persuaded
by Gould's private polling on the gulf between the PM's personal
trust ratings and those of Brown that he needed his Chancellor after
all. Brown has delivered on his side of the bargain. "Gordon has neutralised much of the anti-war
hostility," says one cabinet minister not usually generous to
him. Note that the Chancellor has avoided all attempts during the
campaign to pin him down on Blair's handling of Iraq. But by standing
so close to Blair on all other issues, he is sending a subliminal
message to disgruntled voters that it is safe for them to return
to the fold.
The rewards for his efforts, however, are still indeterminate.
Brown had nothing to gain, in the long term, from a diminished Labour
majority. He needs as much of a buffer as he can get to withstand
a combination of factors working against him in 2009/2010: the possibility
that the Conservatives might, finally, learn from defeat and present
a more palatable alternative next time around; boundary changes that
will reverse much of the current pro-Labour bias; and a general sense
of the inevitability of a cyclical political shift that, as John
Major found in the mid-Nineties, a new leader struggles to withstand.
The
logic of the campaign suggests that the balance of forces is moving
inexorably towards the successor. It confirms Blair's dependency
on Brown and the defeat of forces that seek to deny the Chancellor
the inheritance. But that is not enough of an assurance. The cut-off
point - the planned May-June 2006 British referendum on the EU constitution
- may now dissolve thanks to the French. So what if Blair decides
to stick it out, perhaps for three more years or even more?
Labour
is now looking forward to a third successive landslide, or so it
seems. The Conservative campaign has run out of steam. The polls
should be treated with caution, but Labour's pollsters at key marginals
are reporting that the vote is holding up well. Ministers were, for
the first months of 2005, contemplating what the disembowelling of
Labour's majority would do to the longevity of Tony Blair. Now they
are beginning to consider the other scenario. Would another majority
of 100-plus persuade the Prime Minister to go on and on? What if
Blair convinces himself that it was he who delivered the victory?
He would argue that a third landslide had seen off Iraq as an issue,
and that he might remain an asset after all. Already some around
the PM are talking of Brown's "huge but not necessarily
decisive hand" in the result.
The Brownites are working from
the same assumptions they made in 2004: that the momentum is moving
their way, and that Blair will be forced to be true to his word.
The most telling signal is the rapprochement with several cabinet
members who had previously been wary or hostile. Those who might
have mounted a credible challenge to Brown have fallen by the wayside.
The negotiations on the composition of the next cabinet and on the
handover will begin on 5 May as voters go to the polls. The timing
of the transfer of power could be any point from the next party conference
to . . . and there's the rub. Brown, this time, sought no assurance
from Blair and has received none. Blair continues to tell his allies
he will go on his terms. He has reiterated publicly that his election
mandate is to serve a full five years, as he is obliged to say. But
what if? As the Prime Minister visibly relaxed in his appearances
in recent days, was he genuinely demob happy, or was he thinking
what his rival was dreading thinking?
This article first appeared in the New
Statesman and may not be reproduced
without permission.
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