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| An insider view of the not-so
beautiful game |
Political tattle-tale books like this are turning
us off democracy, writes Gerald Isaaman, but still we lap it up
The Spin Doctors Diary: Inside Number Ten with New Labour
by Lance Price
Hodder and Stoughton, £16.99
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Author Lance Price

Peter Mandelson

Alastair Campbell

Tony Blair
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A BBC radio programme about the Thatcher era recently came
to the solid conclusion that the Tories are now in the political
wilderness because they never understood the changing effects
their policies would have on the country at large.
Hence Michael Howards now remarkable addendum that it will
take a devastating slump before the Conservatives, no matter who
is chosen as their new leader, have a chance of getting into government
again.
If that is the big picture, then why are we so obsessed with the
tittle tattle of politics today, in particular the backroom Downing
Street gossip that inspires national newspaper editors to devote
acres of space to bile and bluster in which wild speculation is
turned into fact?
The question is worth asking with the publication of Lance Prices
new book, which has created headlines as deadly as the sinking
of the Titanic yet really will cause rarely a ripple of any lasting
importance.
That, alas, is where we are today with a daily battle going on
between the government and the media in what is called the Westminster
circus, much of which doesnt affect our lives directly or
even importantly, apart from the fact that it demeans politicians
and journalists alike and has an undermining effect on whether
people will continue to vote or prefer to dump the democratic
system in despair.
Nevertheless, the fact remains that Price, the former BBC journalist
who became number two to Alastair Campbell at Downing Street in
1998, provides a fascinating backdrop to the political scene and,
like suckers, we lap it up.
Its not that Price dishes any dirt that truly sticks, the
public largely understands the unworthy tricks of political scavangers
who produce hyped sensations that disappear the following dawn.
He actually admires Tony Blair, Campbell and many others and tries
to paint a picture of government on the hoof amid a sea of inexperience
and hope. Reporting politics has become a game but, alas, not
a very beautiful one.
Price is not as thorough or as balanced as Blairs chief
speechwriter turned teaching assistant at Islington Green School
Peter Hymans earlier tome Price confesses his mistakes
and says he may even have got some of it wrong but his
insiders view is nothing but entertaining if not totally
enlightening.
Indeed, he offers an insight into the great humiliating Frank
Dobson affair over the London mayoralty when tricky Ken Livingstone
bedazzled the party and won with public acclaim.
Many have asked why local MP Dobbo actually took on the task when
he was doing so well as Health Secretary, yet, according to Price,
there were moments when he actually believed he could win
and there were two moments when Blair twisted his arm, even to
the extent of inviting Dobbos wife Janet to Number 10.
In the end, Blair under-estimated Livingstone, realised that Mo
Mowlam should have been the candidate to defeat Ken but left it
too late to promote her, probably against Dobbos desires
anyway.
Even so, Price disparages the beloved Mo, declaring: Mo
is playing a ridiculous game, more concerned with her own popularity.
She really is useless.
At the same too he reveals that Dobbo could have had any prize
for his sacrifice, a seat in the Lords, life as an ambassador,
anything. Yet such was his hurt that, his pride in tatters, he
sulked off to snipe from the backbenches when he could have continued
to do so much good. He needs to tell his story one day.
There are endless other stories to enjoy, especially the extraordinary
tale of the defection of Tory MP Shaun Woodward to Labour, which
was Prices big coup.
Even Cherie Blair was dragged in because Shaun insisted on talking
to someone who was human.
However, another about Campbell and pop star Britney Spears gives
you a clue as to their general level. Price reports: AC
won a £200 bet by getting the Evening Standard to splash
today with Britney Supports Labour on the strength
of a signed photo to him she had spelt his name wrong
when she probably had no idea who she was signing it for.
Price indeed may well be seen as a traitor whose gay abandon with
loyalty has earned him five minutes notoriety and an armful of
cash, a symbol perhaps of the Thatcher mentality of greed.
Unfortunately, politics doesnt immediately provide the perfection
people desire, and the press feeds on that.
John Humphrys cries out that the media has the right to get it wrong.
The trouble is that they do. And books like this only add to the
conflagration when the world is facing too many real dangers. |
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