Although he is a little harsh on the mixed bag that is Progress, Michael Meacher writes:
The Blairites never wanted Ed Miliband to win the
leadership and when he unexpectedly did, they have never missed an opportunity
to gossip against him from the sidelines.
Some like Dan Hodges (son of
Glenda Jackson) regularly spit out their vitriol and bile against Ed in the in
the Tory press, others more insidiously give unattributed briefings to
the media which Blairite journalists, like Nicholas Watt in the Guardian today,
shamefully repeat without naming the source.
The bitter irony in all
this is that Ed has bent over backwards to placate Progress (the Blairite
Tendency) in order to maintain party unity.
They gladly swallow all the
concessions he makes to them, but that never earns their loyalty - they always
return to bait him at the next available opportunity.
But what is
particularly contemptible about this latest bad-mouthing of the Leader is that
they are indulging their prejudices at the expense of seriously damaging the
party’s prospects with the general election only 10 months away.
He rightly took on Murdoch over his attempted takeover of
BSkyB, which was a high-risk call, and triumphed.
Cameron on the other
hand was so much in hock to Murdoch that he did all he could to wave the deal
through, and Blair (and let’s be honest, David Miliband) would certainly have
done the same.
Miliband deserves enormous credit for the courage he
displayed then since a Murdock takeover would have delivered Britain to the
kind of Berlusconi-style monopolisation of the media which no democracy should
ever contemplate.
Miliband also had the guts to take on the Tory tabloids
in support of Leveson’s demand for an honest and accountable press, which Blair
and DM would certainly not have done.
And let’s not forget this, Ed
actually stopped a Western missile strike against Syria, with all the murderous
destruction and carnage that yet another US-UK Middle Eastern war would have
entailed.
Ed has never been given the enormous credit we owe him for
that act of defining personal courage, when Blair of course would have been
gung-ho for another war and perhaps DM pulled along in the slipstream.
Blair
achieved nothing when in Opposition before 1997 and, for that matter, nor did
Thatcher before 1979.
For a Leader to achieve so much without executive
authority in Opposition, no Leader in modern times can stand beside Ed
Miliband.
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