The Labour leadership process is well
underway now, and even with a rival
candidate to Gordon Brown, it seems highly
likely that Brown will be the next unelected
Prime Minister.
It will be interesting to see how he behaves
in his first months of office. When we
clearly know that he is the architect of
much that has gone wrong with pensions, the
economy and tax credits, he will have an
incredibly tough battle to win the hearts
and minds of the British people,
particularly since he will not have been
elected by them.
He has a difficult position to overcome: on
one hand he may consider breaking from the
past and distancing himself from Labour’s
controversial issues such as the war in Iraq
and the loans for Lordships scandal. And
yet, it is he who has signed the cheques to
pay for these policies, thereby directly
supporting them over the last ten years. It
will therefore prove very difficult, if not
impossible, for him to distance himself from
the past.
As Chancellor, Mr Brown has also been
relatively hidden away from public gaze and
it will be fascinating to see, once he is
Prime Minister, what the man is really like
when all the stresses and strains of full
public life begin to take their toll upon
him.
Mr Brown is in something of a catch-22
situation and I would not be surprised if he
decides that he needs to let the British
people decide by calling for a general
election. Let’s hope that’s sooner rather
than later.