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July 18, 2008 Est 1999 Scotland's award-winning independent newspaper
Why isn’t Brown playing his part on the world stage?
Iain Macwhirter on Global crises

IN HIS recent book, Courage: Eight Portraits, Gordon Brown praised the Burmese dissident Aung San Suu Kyi as a fearless prisoner of conscience battling a state with one of the worst human rights records in the world. So, where is Gordon Brown now Burma has been devastated, and the generals discredited, by cyclone Nargis? Courage seems suddenly to be in short supply in Number 10.

Apart from a token denunciation of the junta's "unacceptable" behaviour, Brown has largely absented himself form the worst natural disaster since the Asian tsunami. Yet we all remember how Gordon Brown leapt onto the international stage after the Boxing Day inundation in 2004. Then, he commanded the international stage; challenged the conscience of the developed world; campaigned, not just for emergency relief, but for the elimination of the debts of poor countries.

We could do with some of that spirit now. Brown may not be able to force the generals to step aside so the aid agencies can avert a humanitarian catastrophe, but he could at least do something. Why has it been left to the Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg to call for emergency food drops? Shouldn't Brown be holding talks with the chiefs of staff to see if Britain could help? No-one is talking about invading Burma, but Britain is one of the few countries that could organise airborne relief with naval back-up.

In terms of crude politics, it is astonishing Brown has not sought to minimise his domestic difficulties by reminding us of his anti-poverty initiatives of 2005, especially since the doubling of world food prices has undone much of what was achieved by the G8 Gleneagles summit that he inspired. Perhaps he doesn't want to remind us. Back then, Brown was one of the most influential political figures in the world - almost as influential as Bono or Saint Bob! As one of the most successful chancellors in modern history, Brown's command of economics was considered unmatched and leaders of the industrial nations hung on his every word. It all seems like such a long time ago.

When he was chancellor, Brown bestrode the world. Now, as prime minister, he can barely bestride the gutter outside Number 10. He has been forced into a desperate U-turn on the 10p tax rate, and has been defied by his protégé, Wendy Alexander, over a referendum on Scottish independence. Ten days ago, his party suffered its worst local election results since 1968, as Labour plunged to third place behind the LibDems in English local elections. Losing the mayorship of London to Boris Johnson has handed the Tories their first electoral victory since 1992. On Friday, Brown suffered Labour's worst opinion poll rating since records began as YouGov put Labour at 23% - 26 points behind the Tories on 49%.

We are witnessing one of the most astonishing reversals of fortune in modern political history. It's hardly original to say it has the quality of a Shakespearean tragedy, but that doesn't make it any less tragic. For those of us who have watched Brown over the past 30 years, it is almost as if he has become a different person. Where is the politician of courage and ambition who tried to make poverty history? Three years ago, Brown didn't need to prattle about his "moral compass". He didn't dither and prevaricate.

You couldn't have imagined the old Gordon getting into this muddle over the 10p tax rate, shamelessly appeasing the wealthy over tax relief, or dancing to the Daily Mail agenda over refuse collection, youth crime and cannabis reform. I'm almost tempted to believe the stories circulating Westminster about Brown having had a breakdown caused by the strain of public exposure. His wife Sarah recently told a women's magazine he is working 20-hour days.

Perhaps he is spending too many of those hours with the merchant bankers and PR people who run his private office. But Gordon Brown must surely know that he is a champion of the dispossessed or he is nothing. That is what people expected of him when he took over from Tony Blair; that was always his personal mission statement. Brown may not have been elected by vote, but when he became leader last summer he had a moral mandate to change direction.

Britain wanted out of Iraq; wanted an end to the sleaze of cash-for-honours; wanted the bonus culture of the City challenged; wanted some fairness restored to society, especially in areas such as housing. What the country didn't want was Blair minus the charisma. The British voters may not be socialists, but they have a gut revulsion to extreme disparities of wealth. They don't like seeing their children mired in debt before they are 30 and trying to raise a family in a two-bedroom flat.

After a decade of largely stagnant earnings, then the mortgage famine and food price inflation, there is anxiety stalking the suburbs. Witness all the press features about "making do and mending" as the middle classes feel the pinch. The credit crisis has turned us all into neo-marxists, resentful at the way the City financiers enriched themselves playing roulette on the derivatives market and are now demanding public money to recoup their losses. Has there been any time in the past 30 years when more people have felt the rich have lost their moral bearings? You have to go back to the Tory prime minister, Edward Heath, talking about the "unacceptable face of capitalism" back in 1972, during the last great banking and debt crisis.

The great mystery is why Gordon Brown has failed to respond to this new moral climate. It is right up his street. Why hasn't he been taking the super-rich to task over their lack of social responsibility, been demanding a new political settlement between capital and the people? Instead of handing billions to the banks, he should surely have focused discontent at the way they have cynically created a debt society and plundered our pensions in the process.

The financial crisis is a global one. Brown could have used his global profile to lead a global response, seeking international regulation of finance and controls on speculation in essential commodities like food. The alternative is a breakdown of international free trade. He could have used the Burmese cyclone to remind people, as he did once before, that we are all one planet, are interdependent, and that we must work together or end up returning to autarky, competitive devaluation, depression and war. That's what one of his heroes would have done. Unfortunately, it seems there are no heroes any more, at least not in Number 10.

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Posted by: ratzo on 8:47pm Sat 10 May 08
Iain, there's one glaring omission from your talk of the heroes of the world stage - Brown co-authored one of the largest geo-political catastrophes of modern times when he approved the Iraq war. No amount of cosy piety about scottish christianity will obscure the criminal stupidity of that act or the exorbitant scale of misery it unleashed.
Posted by: pehman, sussex on 9:29pm Sat 10 May 08
From the article ;-

, but Britain is one of the few countries that could organise airborne relief with naval back-up

Iain, you of all people must know of the crisis in the Royal Navy, steaming around the world at 4 mph to save fuel, budgets cut to the bone, excerises put back or canceled, ships that should be replacements for older one are being sold off for hard cash, While the Navy make do and mend, Matelots and booties in rubber boats sent to take on Iranian MGB's, helicoptors taken away for service in Afganistan,


Take a good look at the Royal Navy/ Marines Iain, there's a bloody good story for a man of your calibar.

pehman = **** off ex bootie
Posted by: Mick t on 10:06pm Sat 10 May 08
Iain wrote
You couldn't have imagined the old Gordon getting into this muddle over the 10p tax rate,"

Iain-where have you BEEN these last 10 years??
Beans FIRST act in '97 was to plunder the pensions of EVERY manjack in these islands, and he has continues to plunder the poor amongst us in other ways ever since!

The problem was, folks were sooo glad to see the backs of the tories that they turned a blind eye to all of this, your journalistic colleagues also conspired in that they did not comment as this was perpetrated upon us!

So dont go around stating that bean has "somehow" changed in personality!

He was ever thus!
Posted by: Duns Scotus, The Borders on 10:10pm Sat 10 May 08
As one of the most successful chancellors in modern history, Brown's command of economics was considered unmatched and leaders of the industrial nations hung on his every word. It all seems like such a long time ago.
Whit! Based on massive borrowing (public and personal), house price bubble madness, stealth taxes, selling gold at rock bottom prices, raiding pensions, etc., etc.

Mr Macwhirter - get a grip on reality. Bean hasn't even trained as a bean counter. All his smoke has been blown away and all his mirrors are shattered. And while I'm dancing in the streets of Raith with mixed metaphors, all his chickens have come home to roost.
Posted by: spagan, Heisker on 10:52pm Sat 10 May 08
The great mystery is why Gordon Brown has failed to respond to this new moral climate. It is right up his street. Why hasn't he been taking the super-rich to task over their lack of social responsibility, been demanding a new political settlement between capital and the people? Instead of handing billions to the banks, he should surely have focused discontent at the way they have cynically created a debt society and plundered our pensions in the process.

Oh Iain
For goodness sake - the answer is because he is a Tory millionaire who would like to be a Tory billionaire.
Once you accept that fact - evrything else falls into place.
Slainte Mhor

Posted by: sceptic sid on 10:54pm Sat 10 May 08
they were a shower of opurtunistic also rans who saw there chance and grabbed it. it was a con from the begining. they told britian what it wanted to hear and after years of tory rule everyone was desperate for change. that desperate we didn't listen or look at what we were all actually signing up for until it was too late.as soon as the greed set in there was know way it was going to stop.the uk and it's people are up to there necks in debt,and blairs of round the world quids in with his best pal left to sweep up the crap that they both created.at least in scotland we do have an alternitive to labour and tory. we might not all agree that independance is the way to go right now. but they surely can't be any worse than the last 50 years of labour stranglehold. brown is out of his depth after waiting all that time waiting for his turn. you usually find that the one thing that you want ain't all it is cracked up to be when you finally get there.
Posted by: Unravelling Broon on 11:06pm Sat 10 May 08
"Why isn’t Brown playing his part on the world stage?"

The behaviour of Douglas Alexander on Thursday may go some way to answer that Iain.

He was late for a statement on Burma and the Commons had to be suspended. It was at the same time as FMQs.

They are more focussed on saving their own navels than looking out to the world.
Posted by: megz, glasgow on 11:10pm Sat 10 May 08
Pretty hard to strut on the world stage when you are spending all your time holed up in the bog in #10. Besides he has worse things on his mind like filling black holes in labour finances, making sure wendy stays inline now she has u-turned on her u-turn (should maybe check her and see if she is heavier at one side might stop her going round in circles)
Posted by: observer on 11:26pm Sat 10 May 08
Gordon Brown isn't playing any part on the world stage because he is pacing the floor in the bunker. This is a man who did set out with good intentions, but was fatally damaged by his association with Blair. That is because of his fundamental weakness, he knows what principles are, but only theoretically.
Posted by: sam t on 12:03am Sun 11 May 08
Just heard andrew neil and another tory Scot both agreeing that the barnett formula will have to be reduced asap as it is upsetting the sassenachs with all our "free" things!

The unionists are sweating profusely now-hahahaha!
Posted by: mt on 12:07am Sun 11 May 08
The Conservatives started the fuel tax and Gordon Brown increased it twice in his first year of office. Taxes on pensions, aggregates tax, landfill tax. Fines for speeding, fines for parking, fines for not have forms filled in on time, fines for putting 4 inches too much rubbish in our bins, fines if disabled badges were displayed upside down or wrong way round. This list is not exhaustive.

Money going round and round then falling out of the country through a black hole.

Tony Blair got out in time but all the politicians share the blame for the disgraceful way this country has been run for the past decade.

Britain needs stability
Scotland needs stability
Business needs stability
The public needs stability

There is not as much shame in not being able to do the job, but more shame in continuing doing the job in the knowledge that it is not being done properly

Posted by: DougtheDug on 12:42am Sun 11 May 08
"For those of us who have watched Brown over the past 30 years, it is almost as if he has become a different person"

That's only because you labour groupies had starry eyed delusions and some form of weird wish fulfillment fantasies that Gordon was going to be the saviour of Labour, Britain, the Union and the Empire.

Those of us who have watched Brown for the last eleven years have seen nothing change. He's as disfunctional now as he was at the start. The difference is that he is in the public gaze and has no Blair to take the flak and to shield and protect him when things don't go well.

Doing anything about Burma would require a decision and that's just something Mr. Brown just cannot do. When has Brown ever backed up the rhetoric when the chips have been down?

And for God's sake stop using absent as a verb. Just because US english has become obsessed with the word. It's the journalistic equivalent of teenagers picking up the moronic interrogative from Australian soaps. Speak English bawwyyy.
Posted by: Soloman, Sterling on 1:52am Sun 11 May 08
Too many people getting hung up on the 10p tax rate, the biggest single tax that drives the poor to poverty is the fuel duty tax, doesn't matter if your annual salary is £5000pa or £500000pa, when you roll up at the pumps and pay for your fuel you will pay Westminster approx £70 for every hundred you spend. Absolutely out of order and we wonder why people are in debt, well its through paying taxes from their well earned money.
Perhaps before Mr Brown looks at debts in poor countries he should look at the people that he alone has made poor in his own beloved Britain!
Role on an independent Scotland.
Posted by: Graham, Kazakhstan on 4:56am Sun 11 May 08
The UK has about two helicopters left for "Royal training flights", and a few ships up for sale on the international second hand market.
The last I heard, only about 540 "regulars" in the country.
What could we do appart from possibly divert a minesweeper from Hong Kong harbour.
Now if Burma had had one or two oil refineries effected by the catastrophy, then it may be a diffrent story.
Oil would be $300 a barrel and the rest off the world would have acted / invaded the tinpot generals, under regime change excuse !
Posted by: art1000, Dunfermline on 7:22am Sun 11 May 08
I saw the headline and ignored the rest as irrelevant, pointless drivel. Broon is the inept, nominally head of a corrupt, bankrupt state who is derided at home and ignored abroad.

You banked the wrong horse there MacWhirter. Let me spell it out for you. Broon is history and soon the rest of his dirty, corrupt party will be history too. Even that loathsome turd Prescott was quoted as telling Blair to sack him years ago.
Posted by: mt on 8:16am Sun 11 May 08
Solomon, Sterling

"the biggest single tax that drives the poor to poverty is the fuel duty tax" Correct!

Everytime fuel goes up one pence, half a percent goes onto transport costs.

Animal feed is transported to the farm on an HGV.
Milk is transported from the farm to the dairy in an HGV.
The dairy transports the packaged milk to the distribution centre in an HGV.
The milk is transported with all the other food and consumables to the supermarket on an HGV.
The HGV gets approximately 7 MPG and there is no rebate on the fuel tax even though it is an essential user. One HGV provides the Government with over one hundred pounds in one working day (+VAT)
If the price of fuel rises to £1.55 as is forecast, it will put another 30%+ onto transport costs increasing the cost of food further
Posted by: mt on 8:17am Sun 11 May 08
Solomon, Sterling

"the biggest single tax that drives the poor to poverty is the fuel duty tax" Correct!

Everytime fuel goes up one pence, half a percent goes onto transport costs.

Animal feed is transported to the farm on an HGV.
Milk is transported from the farm to the dairy in an HGV.
The dairy transports the packaged milk to the distribution centre in an HGV.
The milk is transported with all the other food and consumables to the supermarket on an HGV.
The HGV gets approximately 7 MPG and there is no rebate on the fuel tax even though it is an essential user. One HGV provides the Government with over one hundred pounds in one working day (+VAT)
If the price of fuel rises to £1.55 as is forecast, it will put another 30%+ onto transport costs increasing the cost of food further
Posted by: wullie, govan on 9:14am Sun 11 May 08
Deary me Iain, this is as poor as the guff you wrote in the guardian the other day about Scotland,when labour finaly beat the tories it was not to roll back any of the damage they had inflicted on the people. No No No!! it was to get in on the act and enrich themselves and their friends havent they done well !!!
Posted by: Neil, Aberdeenshire on 10:38am Sun 11 May 08
Courage seems suddenly to be in short supply in Number 10.
Suddenly? When had Brown ever displayed any courage? Why do you think he obsessively writes books on the subject? Because he doesn't have any and doesn't understand it.
Posted by: jazzguy, glasgow on 10:45am Sun 11 May 08
Another great article . Well done Ian, i too cant understand why Gordon Brown seems to have morphed into a different person.I do have certain sympathies for him having to clean up Blairs mess. Maybe he should get out more and look around at the shambles this once great country has now become.
Posted by: Disgusted Dorothy, Glasgow on 11:26am Sun 11 May 08
Clear up Blairs mess?
He was part of the mess and continues to be so!
As were ALL of the cabinet for the last 11 years.
The people who have made money hand over fist are the BIG businesses and the none doms thereof.And of course MPS, notably the Blairs.
Ordinary folk have been robbed blind and the country is bankrupt both financially and morally.
Moral compass?? My bahoochie!
Posted by: Jim, Irvine on 5:35pm Sun 11 May 08
Ian/ For awhile I enjoyed your articles ; but I think you must be back on message.
The Mar show interviewed Lord Levi on his book about Blair/Browns and Political Donations. This Entrpeneur claimed that Brown knew all about the Donations pouring into NU Lab Funds. Blair, Brown and Levi should be interogated again by Mr Yates as somebody has lied; there is obviously enough evidence to convict on the Donations/Peers scandel.
Two hundred thousand Iraquis died in an attack
paid for by the Chancellor Brown. This was a
premeditated plan and is still going on. He is
as culpable as the Burmese Regime ; the cyclone
was an act of Nature.
The Iraq Shock and Awe was an Act of the UK
Government of Blair and Brown.
Posted by: Lee, highlands on 6:11pm Sun 11 May 08
Some people are only just realising that Brown has the political and leadership capacity of a whelk. He beavered away behind the scenes to give Blairism some traction, and he seems to be quite bright in a very narrow academic track. But why he or anyone else believed he could be a political leader is a gigantic mystery. He cannot even lie like Blair !!
Posted by: Alberto on 7:05pm Sun 11 May 08
"Why isn’t Brown playing his part on the world stage?"

Need you ask?

In the 'show' called 'The Pantomime of World Politics' Gordon Brown is no'but a 'bit' players, and generally, they are 'Ten a Penny!'

We now have enough shame in the World - a laughing stock nonetheless - surely we don't want to advertise one of the instigators of the chaos we live in currently!
Posted by: John Bennett, Drumchapel, City of God on 1:34pm Mon 12 May 08
Haw McWhurterr,

At the end of your not-bad article on the words of the "Broon Mooth" you write about 'AUTARKY'.
Do you not mean 'AUTARCHY'?
Can you look up Websters or Collin's dictionaries and help me out. 'Ta.
Posted by: dirk, USA on 11:30pm Mon 12 May 08
It was not Brown but Blair who was the statesman who tackled poverty and dictatorial evil regimes. Of course the left would be in denial and this article does not even mention the name Blair once. Stay in your dreams of hope for a communist utopia and wonder why your man in the labour party and recommend more taxes as a remedy. It's a sure formula for failure.
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