Sunday, 7 June 2009

SUNDAY TIMES 7.6.09


Ed Balls goes to war with Lord Mandelson

Isabel Oakeshott, Deputy Political Editor

GORDON BROWN'S reshuffle has created a bitter rift between his two 
most powerful lieutenants, threatening to derail attempts to rebuild 
his shattered government.

A Downing Street insider claims that Ed Balls "went nuclear" as the 
prime minister wavered over whether to make him chancellor - and 
threatened to stop cooperating with Lord Mandelson.

The schools secretary, whose hopes of being moved into No 11 were 
torpedoed when James Purnell, the work and pensions secretary, 
resigned, is said to suspect the business secretary of deliberately 
undermining his chances of getting the job.

The episode has fractured the truce between Balls and Mandelson, who 
had been bitter political rivals but patched up their differences 
when Mandelson returned to the cabinet last autumn.

The new crisis in their relationship highlights the fragile state of 
Brown's hastily constructed cabinet as he faces disastrous election 
results in the European polls, due to be announced tonight. Labour is 
braced for its worst performance in a ballot for the Brussels 
parliament.

An ICM poll for the News of the World last night showed that seven 
cabinet ministers face the loss of their seats in a general election.

Last night Balls described claims of a rift with Mandelson as a 
"fabrication", claiming he was the victim of a smear campaign. 
"Whoever is inventing this rubbish is trying, through lies and 
malicious fabrication, to undermine the Labour party and the Labour 
government. Nobody should believe a word of it," his spokesman said.

It comes as two more female ministers consider resigning amid 
disillusion over Brown's leadership.

Meanwhile, Caroline Flint, the former minister of state for Europe, 
has launched a new attack on the prime minister.

In an excoriating article for The Sunday Times, Flint, who resigned 
on Friday, lashes out at the chauvinism of the No 10 cabal, accusing 
Brown of "utter hypocrisy".

"In my relationship with the prime minister, I have felt that I had 
to repeatedly prove my loyalty while being prejudged," she says.

She claims women politicians have to "constantly work and work to 
prove their worth" and accuses allies of the prime minister of 
briefing against her and her female colleagues, adding despairingly: 
"Why they act like this I don't know."

Last night there were signs that the revolt by women ministers was 
widening. Bridget Prentice, the justice minister, and Jane Kennedy, 
the environment minister, are understood to be considering their 
futures.
Kennedy said: "After the drubbing we have just had at the elections, 
I would be amazed if there was a single member of parliament [who was 
not] talking to their local party to judge what the feeling is in the 
party."

Five senior ministers, Jacqui Smith, the former home secretary; John 
Hutton, the former defence secretary; Hazel Blears, the former 
communities secretary; Purnell and Flint - have already resigned, 
three over Brown's leadership, in the greatest crisis of his 
premiership.

The Sunday Times has learnt that as the future of Alistair Darling, 
the chancellor, hung in the balance, a succession of cabinet 
ministers and backbenchers lobbied the prime minister to keep him in 
his post, leaving Brown fearing more resignations if he pressed ahead 
with his plan to promote Balls.

Balls immediately agreed to remain as schools secretary when Purnell 
announced his resignation, privately acknowledging that Brown could 
no longer afford to risk ousting Darling.

However, a Downing Street insider claims that Balls confronted Brown 
earlier in the week, as he agonised over whether to give him the 
chancellor's job, warning the prime minister that he could cease to 
cooperate with Mandelson if the long-standing plan to move him to the 
Treasury was abandoned.

"Ed thinks Mandelson ran a covert campaign to stop him. He thinks 
Peter advised Darling on how to handle everything. He went nuclear 
and warned Gordon that if he didn't get the job he wouldn't cooperate 
with Peter any more," the insider said.

The Sunday Times understands that it is not the first time Balls has 
privately made such a threat. However, despite the latent mistrust 
between them, the pair have worked closely and effectively together 
since Mandelson's return. They were both at Brown's side when Purnell 
resigned and, despite Balls's threat, were both closely involved in 
Friday's reshuffle.

No 10 fiercely denied a rift, saying suggestions of "any tension" 
between the two men were "completely untrue". The denial was echoed 
by a spokesman for Mandelson.

The prime minister is expected to face a stormy meeting of Labour 
backbenchers tomorrow as rebel leaders continue their quest to 
collect the 72 names required to trigger a leadership ballot. 
Meanwhile, there was growing fury at a Brownite smear operation 
designed to undermine the credibility of critics of the prime minister.

Nick Brown, the chief whip, was yesterday forced to issue a public 
apology to Alan Milburn, the Blairite former health secretary, after 
branding him a plotter. Brown had briefed Milburn's local newspaper 
that he was "active" in attempts to unseat the prime minister.

However, yesterday the chief whip offered an embarrassing retraction 
after saying sorry in a telephone conversation with Milburn. "We got 
our wires crossed and it needs correcting," said Brown.

A study by Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher of Plymouth University 
suggests that Labour is on course to lose 140 seats at the next 
general election, giving the Conservatives a 34-seat majority.

A new survey of Labour grassroots activists reveals that fewer than 
half want Brown to lead them into the election. One in five is 
calling for him to quit now, according to the poll of 800 party 
members carried out by YouGov for Channel 4 News.