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Tuesday, 14 April 2009

"Come over to the light"

I have thought for some years now that Frank Field was too honourable a man to stay in the cesspit that is the Labour Party. His blog entry today entitled: "Darkness at the Heart of the Labour Party" does nothing to dispel this feeling. Here's a few extracts:
"Harold Wilson asserted that the Labour party was a moral crusade or it was nothing. The McBride affair has left Labour members looking at nothing. That is the reality check that McBride has wrought on the party.

The whole of the government's energy should be spent on governing now and building a programme from which, within and year, we will be seeking permission to rule for another five years.

Far from helping sketch out a new roadmap, the McBride activities shine a searchlight on the paucity of the government's programme.

Week after week MPs have been turning up but with almost no serious work to do. There is the odd bill to be sure. But there is no legislative programme to speak of. Even the debates that are put on to fill in time are ones that deny MPs a vote. The whole exercise is vacuous.

...

We have lived through an age of record public expenditure provision, but are now entering one of increasing cuts. There have been some beneficial results from this huge tax-payer largesse, but they in no way match up to what radicals predicted would be the outcome.

...

A necessary government information machine has been corrupted by a spin that seeks not to inform but control and, if needs be destroy. And it has been in existence for over a decade.

McBride sat on the Prime Minister's political War Cabinet. If this is the war the Prime Minister thinks the country wants he is in for a very rude awakening. In the meantime, Labour supporters are left bewildered and wondering what happened to the moral crusading side of our mission.

Poor old Labour party."


Come on Frank, take courage and make the move. A move now could also guarantee a junior ministerial role under David Cameron and when he asks you to "think the unthinkable", unlike Tony Blair and Gordon Brown he might actually be prepared to take note of your findings.

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