Ocnus.Net
Brown Humiliates Alexander
By Eddie Barnes, Scotsman 11/4/08
May 12, 2008 - 3:39:46 PM
In emergency talks on Friday following the Scottish leader's
astonishing call for a referendum, the Prime Minister told Alexander the issue
should be ditched.
Scotland on Sunday can reveal the Prime Minister told Alexander twice in the
past few days that he did not support her proposal to force an referendum on
Scotland, to "call the SNP's bluff".
But Alexander chose to ignore her mentor and pressed ahead anyway, even
claiming publicly she had his support.
The affair has left a deep scar in relations between the two former allies, who
spent more than 24 hours over Friday and Saturday trying to piece together a
fresh statement declaring they were now in agreement.
This was supposed to draw a line under the matter, but Alexander faced further
mockery by political opponents last night after conceding in the statement that
her hopes of forcing a snap referendum in the next year were now dead in the
water.
The SNP says it will hold the referendum in the autumn of 2010. Meanwhile,
Alexander's other option – to get Brown to rush through a referendum bill at
Westminster – has been closed off after the Prime Minister told her he would
not countenance such a plan.
And in a further setback for Alexander, the former First Minister Henry McLeish
said the affair had shown "contempt" for the Scottish people, and he
accused her of leading Labour "into the worst of all possible
worlds". Labour MSPs also privately warned they may rebel against
Alexander by voting against a referendum bill. But Labour donor Willie Haughey
said he backed Alexander on the issue, declaring it was time to give Scots a
vote.
The extraordinary chaos facing Labour began on Sunday when Alexander told Alex
Salmond on BBC to "bring it on", arguing she was not afraid of a
referendum. Aides then revealed that she backed an immediate referendum on
independence. Alexander said on Tuesday that she was even considering
introducing a bill of her own. However, the plan fell into farce after Brown
failed to back the plan for a referendum on Wednesday. Then, on Thursday, Alexander
hit back, declaring that she still wanted it to go ahead.
Scotland on Sunday understands that two days before Alexander went public with
her U-turn, Brown told her that he could not support a plan for a referendum on
independence. Nevertheless, Alexander went ahead.
Then, in a phone conversation on Tuesday night, after Alexander's U-turn had
been made public, senior Whitehall sources insisted that the Prime Minister had
again repeated his refusal to back his protege. Despite that, Alexander then
publicly insisted that Brown was in favour of the plan.
A Whitehall source said: "Gordon told her on the Friday before she went
public that he wasn't going to back it at Westminster.
"Then, on the Tuesday, he quite clearly told her that 'You must not say that
I am backing this course of action'."
However, hours later, on Newsnight Scotland, Alexander insisted that Brown did
indeed back the plan. Last night, Alexander's spokesman said: "Wendy had
extensive discussions with senior colleagues down south and they hadn't made
clear to her that she was going in the wrong direction."
On Friday, Alexander cancelled public speaking engagements after Brown insisted
that they come up with a strategy to draw a line under the affair.
Yesterday, after more than 24 hours discussion, they issued parallel
statements.
Alexander declared: "The case for a referendum to demonstrate support for
the Union has been increasingly discussed in Labour circles. The Scottish
Labour Group at Holyrood united around calling the SNP's bluff this week."
She went on: "However, as a minority party in the Scottish Parliament,
Scottish Labour alone cannot force the SNP to act. The SNP have now made clear
they will block any referendum bill Labour might have introduced . . . the SNP
have therefore now blocked this route in the Scottish Parliament."
She added: "The SNP can never again claim that a 'unionist cabal' is
denying Scotland a voice. The SNP party colour is yellow and we now know
why."
An aide to Gordon Brown said: "Wendy Alexander is a first-rate leader of
the Labour party in the Scottish Parliament. Together with her, and her team,
Gordon Brown will continue to defend the UK and Scotland's place in it."
Henry McLeish last night savaged the handling of the affair. "This is the
worst of all possible worlds. We have marginalised the Calman Commission (the
body studying more powers for the Scottish Parliament), confused the Scottish
public, taken the Liberals and the Tories out of the equation and seemed more
enthusiastic than the SNP to have a referendum."
He added: "Labour supporters and activists will find it difficult to work
out what on earth is going on. It's hard to understand how Labour could get
itself into this position. What about the public? They have been treated with
contempt."
And there were signs last night that some of Alexander's MSPs were beginning to
rebel. One said: "Labour voters deserve better than this. Those who kept
with us through recent difficulties don't deserve this. Wendy needs to examine
herself to see what contribution she is making."
Scottish Conservative leader Annabel Goldie hit out: "This must go down as
one of the most extraordinary, humiliating press statements ever issued. Wendy
Alexander tries to defend her indefensible actions … by re-writing history,
stretching credibility and taking the public for fools."
SNP deputy leader Nicola Sturgeon MSP said: "Words like 'laughing stock'
do not even begin to reach the extent of the Labour party's disarray and
humiliation. Do they seriously believe that everyone will now believe it was
all a cunning plan? Labour in Scotland are now just ridiculous and plummeting
to new depths of absurdity as well as in the polls."
Nicol Stephen, of the Liberal Democrats, said: "There are fundamental
question marks over the honesty of what the Labour Party is saying."
Source: Ocnus.net 2008