Tom Bradby, ITN's political editor on why Labour is losing the argument

Hat tip to Tim Montgomerie at Conservative Home for pointing out a number of recent pieces in the MSM about how Ed Miliband isn't up to the job.

Iain Martin in today's Mail (See article at the bottom of this webpage) suggests that the split screen TV pictures of the Labour leader comparing himself to Martin Luther King while yobs threw ammonia bombs at police could be deeply damaging to Labour. (Incidentally, this may also be more relevant than you might expect to Bransty ward's forthcoming election - watch this space.)

Tom Bradby, ITN's Political Editor, has written a devastating analysis of why Labour is losing the argument on the economy and the strategic political mistakes Miliband is making. (I originally had a link here but sadly it has now disappeared from the ITN website.)

He points out the fatal problem in Labour's stewardship of the economy was that

"Gordon Brown came to believe he had abolished the economic cycle and was therefore proceeding extremely incautiously during the runaway boom years when, in retrospect, as we can now see, he should have been saving for a rainy day."

He adds that "Ed Balls can say all he likes that our historical debt position was not outrageous, which is true. But we were running deficits in these years when we needn’t have and we were much, much too reliant on what we can now clearly see was highly speculative income from the financial sector."

Labour hasn't said what it will do now:

"Ed Miliband admitted to me in Afghanistan that this reliance on the City had been a mistake, but at no point has any senior member of the shadow cabinet tackled this issue head on. Combine it with the fact that the party was incredibly slow to acknowledge the dangers posed by the deficit and the way in which it is still barely able to come up with a single cut it would make in public spending, despite being committed in theory to at least eighty percent (and who knows, perhaps, in reality, more) of the spending cuts the coalition is currently implementing and you can see why the patience of most non-aligned Westminster observers is wearing thin."

Not paying off the debt could hurt growth: "Labour would have been committed to four fifths of these cuts anyway and we can all see that paying more interest for longer would have its own impact on growth."

Eurozone crisis reinforces Osborne's rescue mission:

"it’s possible Osborne is doing too much too soon. Maybe it will all blow up in his face. But the longer the European debt crisis continues, the more people may tend towards the view that his is the less risky option."

The end of New Labour's economic credibility: "The party now seems to me to be in serious danger of losing the economic credibility that Gordon Brown and Tony Blair worked so hard to build."

Many in Labour agree that Ed Miliband has the wrong message: "You think these views are a little harsh? Too cynical? Too jaded? Too unfair? Well, I can assure you that there are plenty of very senior Labour figures who would agree with every word."

And Bradby's final conclusion:

"Miliband needs stronger arguments and better troops. And he needs both fast."

Comments

Jim said…
Most people know the Labour Party are nothing but a joke, the only ones who would disagree are those who live on the benefits they handed out, or in the free housing they provided. These are bought votes using money (which they didnt have) not policy.

Most will remember the state of the finances after 3 labour terms, the hard core voters who cant be moved from labour will of course still blame the bankers.

Its ok to remind people of the Labour parties incopetance but it wont really help any other party.

Let me show why

"Im going to vote for X as My new MP because they are much better than the last labour one."

sounds a bit like

"Im going to register with this GP because they are much better than Harold Shipman"
judi bola said…
Tom Bradby i think he's just a man who can make mistake and forgetting.

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