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Brown's slo-mo death scene

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    Brown's slo-mo death scene

    From the News of the Screws :

    TAKE your seats, get a year’s supply of popcorn. Because Gordon Brown is about to stage his second slow-motion death scene.

    Remember last year, when our PM lurched from mishap to calamity and was written off by his party? Well, he’s about to do a remake.

    But Downfall 2009 will be glitzier, with a star-studded cast. Even the Queen has a walk-on role. And it’s all kicking off NOW.

    It’s the G20 summit on Thursday — the day that Gordo hopes will portray him as some kind of economic war leader.

    He wants the 20 world leaders to claim they’re all agreeing a £1.4 TRILLION stimulus deal — money, of course, already being spent.

    It sounds impressive. Especially if Brown can claim (and this is his dream) that Barack Obama is somehow using his ideas.

    Brown_280_2903_32802aSadly, the wheels are already coming off. Because a good chunk of the guests are denouncing the stimulus, in no uncertain terms.

    The Czech premier, currently European Union president, described the idea of a new stimulus as a “road to hell”.

    He says he was inspired by the AC/DC song “Highway to Hell”. And France and Germany agree, albeit in different terms.

    So the £4 million-an-hour summit is already dead in the water. But Gordon’s tour last week shows us that already.

    He wanted to speak to leaders ahead of the summit, to show he’s a statesman. Instead he reprised his Mr Bean comic capers. First he addressed the European Parliament — and was mauled by a young MEP whose speech became a YouTube sensation.

    He went to New York and is introduced as the man who “became PM in 2007 — and it’s been downhill ever since.”

    Next, Brazil — where he is stood up by Pele and is told by the president that “white, blue-eyed people” caused the recession.

    Finally Chile, where the president humiliates him by saying she saved in the good times — unlike Britain, which ramped up debt.

    It was a Mexican wave of derision starting in Strasbourg and ending in Santiago. With a reprise at the G20 in London.

    But while Brown has been losing his grip, other people have been strengthening theirs. Namely the Chancellor, Alistair Darling.

    Against all odds, Darling is becoming the hero of this recession. He’s in the “Highway to Hell” camp, against a new stimulus.

    His ally is Mervyn King, the owl-faced Governor of the Bank of England, who went public in his opposition to Brown last week. It was a very British coup. The Governor effectively told MPs: I won’t sit let Gordo saddle the British public with more debt.

    And then he went straight to see the Queen, the first time Her Maj has EVER seen a Bank of England governor. In her 57 years, she has only spoken to Prime Ministers.

    But this time, she clearly wanted a second opinion. No one knows what King and the Queen said in private.

    But the photos of them together did not go down very well with Gordo.

    His reaction came just 40 hours later: from a plane over Brazil he announced he’d change royal succession laws. Which she hates.

    Her Maj needn’t worry. The election will take place before this is announced. From now on, it will be one disaster after another.

    The G20 will “agree” some fluffy nonsense. When Brown can’t get agreement in his own government, what hope of a 20-nation deal?

    Next month’s Budget will be an utter disaster, proving the last stimulus has been an abject FAILURE. The June local elections will be even worse for Labour, and probably start speculation over Brown’s future yet again.

    Just yesterday, Brown heard the worst news of all. Obama wants to see David Cameron for a full HOUR of talks on Wednesday.

    This compares with 65 minutes the President had set aside for 10 Downing Street. And the message it sends out will be all too clear.

    From Pele to Obama, the world now regards Gordo as a dead man walking. This time, it really is all over.
    and talking about screws, the NotW have just had an injunction overturned and will be revealing the full story of Nigel Griffiths' capers in the House of Commons the other day.

    From rumours I've been hearing at my client site (which involves news and media), the "brunette" he was with may turn out to be a "brunet", if that's how you spell the male equivalent
    Work in the public sector? Read the IR35 FAQ here

    #2
    Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
    just had an injunction overturned and will be revealing the full story of Nigel Griffiths' capers in the House of Commons the other day.
    Gordo's made it so, all part of the desperate media manipulation plan, fools.

    (Just like he made it so with Jack Tweedy being allowed a night off.)

    Toss the NOTW-reading core vote some more porn fodder in the Sundays to keep their little brains off that unhelpful G20 meeting coming up. Nigel Griffiths only has a majority of <500 anyway so he's expendable.
    Last edited by moorfield; 28 March 2009, 22:23.

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      #3
      I wish Gordo's trip to South America was on a one way ticket.

      Even better if he could be stranded somewhere nice like Bogota
      Last edited by SantaClaus; 28 March 2009, 22:41.
      'Orwell's 1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual'. -
      Nick Pickles, director of Big Brother Watch.

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        #4
        People always only buy one way tickets to SA. Odds are you don't need the return part.
        "Condoms should come with a free pack of earplugs."

        Comment


          #5
          One small thing you may wish to consider before wishing Browns sudden demise...if he pops his clogs Harman is PM.

          Scary eh?
          Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God? - Epicurus

          Comment


            #6
            Brown is 'unlucky'. Right from the beginning of his term as prime minster he has been saddled with one disaster after another, and inherited an awful economic mess. Meanwhile B**** came in and exited with immaculate timing, receiving a standing ovation even, leaving Brown holding the brown stuff.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by TimberWolf View Post
              Brown is 'unlucky'. Right from the beginning of his term as prime minster he has been saddled with one disaster after another, and inherited an awful economic mess. Meanwhile B**** came in and exited with immaculate timing, receiving a standing ovation even, leaving Brown holding the brown stuff.


              So what was he doing as Chancellor from 1997 that exempts him from culpability on the economy ? I don't think he was unlucky at all. It was us that were unlucky to have him decimating our pensions, raising our taxes exponentially, and creating an unaffordable extension to the wasteful public sector.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by OwlHoot View Post
                His ally is Mervyn King, the owl-faced Governor of the Bank of England,
                So true..
                "Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark Twain

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