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New Labour New Crises

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    New Labour New Crises

    These NL criminals are reeling now, a heavy defeat in the looming bye elections should finish them off , good riddance I say.




    Black Wednesday: New Labour's triple whammy
    By Andrew Grice, Nigel Morris and Maxine Frith
    Published: 27 April 2006



    A sex scandal, a public humiliation, a Home Office bungle, and apologies in triplicate. New Labour has hardly experienced a tougher 24 hours than its own version of Black Wednesday, at the end of which there were question marks over the future of three of Tony Blair's most senior ministers.

    Mr Blair has had his bad days before - the Ecclestone affair, the death of David Kelly and the double resignations of both Peter Mandelson and David Blunkett: this one, though, was different. It was a triple whammy - controversies swirling around John Prescott, Patricia Hewitt and, most seriously, Charles Clarke.

    There were indeed echoes of the dying days of the Major regime, and a fin de siècle atmosphere pervaded at Westminster last night as Mr Blair was thrown on to the defensive at Prime Minister's Questions, with his greatest discomfort over the release of 1,023 foreign criminals from British jails - 288 of whom were set free after the Home Office was warned there was a problem.

    Labour MPs expressed concern that the disclosure, the job cuts in the National Health Service and the "cash for peerages" scandal would harm the party's prospects in the council elections in England a week today. They warned that if Mr Blair did not "get a grip" immediately, he would have to stand down "sooner rather than later."

    Mr Blair's day went from bad to worse. His preparations yesterday morning for his weekly joust with David Cameron at noon were interrupted by the disclosure in the Daily Mirror that John Prescott had a two-year affair with a civil servant working in his private office.

    Mr Blair was said to be "relaxed" about Mr Prescott's former relationship with Tracey Temple, his 43-year-old diary secretary, with whom he was pictured cuddling and dancing at an office party and attending a memorial service for British troops killed in Iraq.

    Mr Prescott, 67, faces accusations of hypocrisy after ridiculing the Tories over their sexual peccadilloes during John Major's government.

    Yesterday the tables were turned as MPs in all parties wondered whether the Blair administration had now reached the "tipping point" that the Tories hit on Black Wednesday in 1992 - and was beyond recovery. Tory MPs could not help but relish what they called "Labour sleaze". One Labour MP admitted: "They used to say Tory scandals were about sex and Labour ones about money. Now we seem to be managing both."

    Mr Blair knew his "High Noon" battle with Mr Cameron would be dominated by the prisoner release fiasco. Amid highly charged exchanges, the Tory leader demanded the resignation of Charles Clarke, the Home Secretary, and questioned Mr Blair about what he knew when.

    The Prime Minister then left the Commons chamber, leaving Mr Clarke to face the music in a difficult emergency statement. Mr Blair's rapid exit provoked speculation that he was distancing himself from his beleaguered Home Secretary - although Downing Street insisted he still enjoyed the Prime Minister's full confidence.

    Chances of Clarke surviving

    At 2.50pm, Mr Clarke was called in by the Labour whips. The Home Secretary is determined to ride out the storm, but told friends it could cost him his job if evidence emerges of released foreign prisoners committing serious offences. Mr Blair, who has always prided himself on his tough line on crime and immigration, regards the prisoner releases as the most serious aspect of the triple crisis that crippled the Government yesterday.

    Downing Street made clear that Mr Blair had only just learnt details of the 288 offenders let out without checks since July when Mr Clarke was told about the mistakes. In a desperate attempt to track them down, the Home Office forwarded the names of the 80 most violent offenders to police chiefs. Although most Labour backbenchers still want Mr Clarke to survive, two MPs suggested he may be forced to resign. Lindsay Hoyle, the MP for Chorley, said the public expected Home Office officials to resign. But he added: "I have got to say the public opinion is they also expect elected members to consider their position when actions so seriously have happened and I must pass that advice to you."

    Ian Gibson, the MP for Norwich South, said: "Who knows what's going to happen? I think he's not personally to blame. It's someone down the line. There's a lack of interaction, somebody hasn't been pulling people together, but at the end of the day the buck stops there." One member of the Government said: "If I thought his resignation would solve anything I would support it."

    Mr Clarke has insisted that he only learnt of the chronic breakdown of communication between the Prison Service and the Immigration Service last July.

    But doubts grew about his survival after it emerged that both the Chief Inspector of Prisons, Anne Owers, and the Prison Reform Trust had raised the alarm over the issue in 2004.

    Nurses turn on Health Secretary

    While Mr Clarke met the Labour whips, word spread that Patricia Hewitt, the Health Secretary, was having a terrible time as she addressed the annual conference of the Royal College of Nursing (RCN) in Bournemouth.

    Nurses booed, slow handclapped and jeered her after she insisted that there were more nurses, shorter waiting times and better results in the NHS than before. One of the more moderate health unions was giving the emissary from a government that has doubled spending on health the roughest ride any minister has faced since Labour came to power in 1997.

    Back at Westminster, a Labour MP watching television with disbelief said: "To lose the nurses is a disaster." Another said that while a contrite Mr Clarke had got the tone right, Ms Hewitt had alienated the nurses by getting it wrong.

    Ms Hewitt was forced to cut short her speech to the 2,000 RCN delegates and take questions instead after they began booing, stamping their feet and waving placards with the slogan: "Keep nurses working, keep patients safe."

    She was visibly under pressure as one delegate told how staffing shortages meant that he was often the only specialist nurse on a neo-natal unit caring for 14 extremely premature babies.

    When she suggested that his individual trust was to blame, she was jeered. She was also booed when she said that the redundancies announced were not real because they involved agency staff and that the problems could be rectified by "reorganising rotas to use permanent staff better".

    More than 13,000 NHS jobs are being threatened with redundancy, a third of them nursing posts, because of the £623m deficit facing trusts.

    #2
    I think that deserves an 'oh dear', and a banana given the number of slip-ups they're making.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Joe Black
      I think that deserves an 'oh dear', and a banana given the number of slip-ups they're making.

      Aye JB

      BTW Hows it going with your dispute, the whole affair is absurd, you have my total support with this issue, please PM myself if you need any help whatsoever.

      Good Luck and dont give up

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Joe Black
        slip-ups
        That's one way of putting what prescott was up to.

        Comment


          #5
          Looming by-elections ? Local elections surely.

          Charles Clarke
          Both he & Liebour are desperately trying to blame 'the system' rather than themselves. Yet again we have a minister saying they'll take full responsibility but cynically never intending on acting on that responsibility.

          Clarke's position is untenable and should go.

          Patricia Spewitt
          Nice to see her hanging on her own deceitful spin. Very deserving.

          Johnny two-shags
          "The Tories idea of morality is not getting caught".
          Such are the words of this ignorant twat. Now he will have to fill his fat gut with loads'a humble pie. Again, very deserving.

          Cash for peerages
          Much worse than cash for questions and actually illegal to wit. I hope this issue won't be obscured by Clarke and Spewitt's deserving woes; or just disappear into obscurity. The latter I suspect is likely, ironically because of the enormity of the potential ramifications. i.e The Prime Minister guilty of a criminal offence.

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by AlfredJPruffock
            Aye JB

            BTW Hows it going with your dispute, the whole affair is absurd, you have my total support with this issue, please PM myself if you need any help whatsoever.

            Good Luck and dont give up
            Saw the solicitor first thing this morning. His view is that the deportation order is simply illegal in the circumstances, specially given they've just been slapped down by the EU courts for doing this sort of thing.

            Kafkaesque is the only word to describe yesterday.

            Don't know which is worse, what NL is up to in the UK or Belgiums Joseph Heller/Catch-22 style bureaucracy where you can be considered to be living here, but living not here, working but not working...

            Comment


              #7
              Its great....

              And very entertaining to watch politicians squirm. Especially this self righteous bunch of tw@ts .

              Dont you think its a bit of a coincidence that labour are basically getting f3cked up by scandal after scandal. Why has the media suddenly turned on NL? The incompetance is not new but the exposure of it is.

              Now somebody needs to open the David Kelly enquiry again, with a bit of a "foul play" slant, dig into Cheries property dealing again in Bristol and implicate Tone, uncover "new" evidence of NL bullsh1tting the public over Iraq and I dont think they will survive
              There are no evil thoughts except one: the refusal to think

              Comment


                #8
                What made me really sick about new labour is the fact that they changed the law regarding compensation to people who have been hurt in a terrorist incident but would not back date it to cover people hurt in July 7th bombings. However they always find a way to back date taxes.

                Labour are scum, all they have proved is that they are good at wasting money, who screw honest people but help the scummers.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Personally I'd rather be reading in the papers how good a job they've done.

                  Still they've had more than the chance to improve things in the UK and have done nothing but **** things up so they deserve everything they get.

                  Agree with the self righteous comment. Gordos habit of smirking at times as he announces some new scheme, or when telling an interviewer how much better off xyz is, certainly annoys me.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    It's not all bad you know. From the Beeb:

                    Home Secretary Charles Clarke is resisting calls to resign over the release of 1,023 foreign prisoners who were meant to be considered for deportation.

                    It has now emerged there could be 1,500 more foreigners in UK jails than previously thought.


                    There is always the possibility that the 1500 unknown foreigners in jail include the 1023 that didn't get deported as NL don't know where most of them are. Therefore, NL are just under 500 foreigners up...

                    I'm surprised they haven't spun that yet!!

                    Older and ...well, just older!!

                    Comment

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