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Nick Cohen
Wednesday 24th February 2010
Will Brown Dump Charlie Whelan?

The personal relates to the political very closely in Gordon Brown's case because his bullying is not a manifestation of his dynamism and determination but of his childish inability to admit error and acknowledge the need for change. Nowhere are the weaknesses of his character more obvious than in his aides' treatment of Alistair Darling at the start of the economic crisis. Darling had told my Guardian colleague Decca Aitkenhead that we were facing the worst recession in 60 years. If Darling was guilty of anything, it was understatement. But Brown could not tolerate his clear-headed assessment, because it revealed that his supposed economic miracle was an illusion and implied that his failures to regulate the banks and balance the budget would have catastrophic consequences. So out went his attack dogs to undermine the chancellor at the very moment when he needed the Prime Minister's support.

   I heard Charlie Whelan, Brown's prolier-than-thou public school boy, denounce the Chancellor outside a Soho pub. It says much for Whelan's certainty that the political press would obey orders that he did not go off the record but conducted his black propaganda operation in a public place where anyone might have overheard him.

  I was therefore  free to report what happened and here's what I wrote at the time

I was waiting with a crowd of guests at the Pillars of Hercules pub in Soho for the start of a party being thrown by Kevin Maguire, the Mirror's amiable political editor, to celebrate his wife's launch of a chick-lit novel. Political journalists and rom-com novelists are not the most promising mixture for a convivial evening, but we were all rubbing along until for no reason Charlie Whelan, Brown's point man in the unions, turned to the journalists and started laying into the Chancellor of the Exchequer. As he was speaking in a public place and did not ask to go off the record, the etiquette of journalism allows me to say that I was astonished. Darling had been a loyal friend of Brown's, but that did not stop Whelan from denigrating him. More pertinently, it was obvious even then that we were indeed facing the gravest economic crisis of our lifetimes; obvious to everyone, that is, except the Brownites. Because Darling had implied, however obliquely, that Brown's stewardship of the economy had been less than magnificent, Whelan and his friends were willing to betray an ally, make an unnecessary enemy and undermine the Chancellor at a moment of national danger. The result was predictable. Darling could barely contain his contempt for the deviousness of a man he once considered his friend. (I imagine having to go to work every morning and contemplate the mess Brown left at the Treasury did not help cool his temper either.) Meanwhile, Balls rode on the back of the destabilisation campaign and implied that if Brown wanted rid of the Chancellor he would blushingly step forward to offer his own modest self as a replacement. Yet Darling survived the attacks and gained in stature.

 

On Sky this morning Darling recalled that briefings like Whelan's were going on across Westminster and that he felt as if the forces of hell" had been unleashed against him.  Brown replies that  "I was never part of anything to do with this. Look, this was the most amazing time... and lots of things were happening in this time. But I would never instruct anybody to do anything other than support my chancellor, and I think Alistair will confirm that."

 

In which case will he sever all his links with Whelan? Will he upbraid him for trying to undermine the Treasury during a national crisis?You only need to ask the questions to know the answer.

 

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Catherine
February 27th, 2010
10:02 AM
I don't know if Willsteed Ash is your name or the affluent sounding name of the house you live in, but you must be confusing Nick Cohen with someone else. He wrItes for the Observer, not the Guardian.

Willsteed Ash
February 26th, 2010
4:02 PM
Ah yes, man of the people. Have friends called Decca.... I mean who in their right mind would call a baby Decca? Oh, oh, hang on, you write for the Guardian, toffy-socialists.

windter
February 25th, 2010
10:02 AM
also - 'here's what I wrote at the time'? That piece is from May 2009. The book in question, 'Gym and Slimline', came out in 2008, an entire year before you wrote that article. That's real bravery - waiting a full year to report the comments...

windter
February 25th, 2010
10:02 AM
"prolier-than-thou public school boy" - Not like you to get your facts wrong, Nick - Charlie Whelan did not go to public school. Oddly enough, a lot of your Standpoint 'comrades' did...

OhThisBloodyPC
February 24th, 2010
11:02 PM
Nick, What was the chic lit book like though? I need something to cheer me up through the worst recession in 60 years, and I don't have an expense account, I don't get invited to free booze ups and I can't live on vol au vents Come on!

X-bencher
February 24th, 2010
10:02 PM
Nick's blog is based on what Charlie Whelan said about Darling on behalf of Brown, but there are no quotes. What did he say? I suspect a couple of monosyllabic grunts might add a touch of verisim.

ratbiterbiter
February 24th, 2010
10:02 PM
You claim that Charlie Whelan went to public school. A little research shows http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charlie_Whelan 'The son of a civil servant, Whelan went to the Ottershaw School, a boarding school in Ottershaw, Surrey.' and http://www.osobs.co.uk/index.php?page_id=14 'The school was established in 1948 by Surrey County Council (SCC) as a boarding school for boys of 12 to 18 years of age. It was the first of its kind in the country to be entirely in the hands of a Local Education Authority.'

Tim Worstall
February 24th, 2010
5:02 PM
I always knew we'd get you blogging properly at some point Nick......

madasafish
February 24th, 2010
5:02 PM
C Whelan works for UNITE. UNITE are the Labour Party's biggest donor. It is obvious Whelan is a fixture and is unsackable.

Kev Ball
February 24th, 2010
4:02 PM
It would be useful to hear the details of the attack Whelan made. Was any of it justified?

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About Nick Cohen

Nick Cohen is a columnist for the Observer. He is the author of Pretty Straight Guys, What's Left?, and Waiting for the Etonians. For more information and his previous blog, visit nickcohen.net

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