No wonder Britain’s Prime Minister Gordon Brown looks as
though he has all the cares of the world on his shoulders. As well-intentioned
as he undoubtedly is, nothing seems to work out for him. Ever since he stepped
into Tony Blair’s shoes two years ago, he has been battling a series of
unprecedented problems not of his own making. Yet, try as he might, there are
few kudos heading his way.
“To be honest, you could walk away from all of this
tomorrow,” he recently told the Guardian. “I’m not interested in what
accompanies being in power. I wouldn’t worry if I never returned to all those
places -- Downing Street, Chequers -- and it would probably be good for my
children.”
If just about any other world leader had uttered those
words, I would have been highly skeptical. But I believe Brown. He’s a serious
man, a simple man, an unglamorous individual, who lives much of the time in his
own head. He was never one of the leadership in-crowd. Not for him invitations
to Bilderberg meets or celebrity-owned palatial vacation hideaways in the West
Indies. His ambitions to lead Britain didn’t spring from a desire for
self-aggrandizement or a will to power but were based on old-fashioned
socialist instincts.
Few would question his basic decency, yet many in his own
party and throughout the nation want him to go. It seems that decency isn’t a
prerequisite for a successful leadership in today’s troubled world where media
showmanship is everything. He knows his limitations. He admitted to the
Guardian that the ability to communicate his policies isn’t one of his greatest
strengths.
In another age, perhaps, he might have emerged as a great
moral leader in the mold of Churchill, but, as it turns out, he’s the right man
at the wrong time. Or, alternatively, he could be summed up as chronically
unlucky. First of all, Tony Blair re-engaged on their private pact that Brown
would take the top job during the Labour Party’s second term, which, by all
accounts, left Gordon Brown embittered and brooding. Secondly, by the time the
baby chose -- or was pushed -- to quit, he was left with the bathwater. Almost
from the moment he took office, he was faced with alleged terrorist attacks on
London, bovine foot-and-mouth disease, and major flooding; all of which he
handled with aplomb.
There was a tiny window when his popularity was high but
that shut when he failed to live up to public expectations by postponing a
general election. Who can blame him for being reluctant to risk the coveted
prize being stripped from him so early on? Nevertheless, the country did. From
then on, it’s been downhill all the way for the PM even though he has made no
mistakes even approaching his predecessor’s disastrous invasion of Iraq.
And now that he has agreed under the weight of public
pressure to hold an enquiry to that “war of choice” after new evidence emerged
that Blair was aware all along that Saddam didn’t possess weapons of mass
destruction, Blair’s specter still haunts him. Apparently, Brown conceded to an
indirect request from his former colleague to hold the enquiry behind closed
doors. But this has provoked outrage from opposition parties and general calls
of “cover-up,” so he is already starting to backtrack. And although Blair will
be very much in the spotlight, there is a slim chance that Brown, who was
chancellor of the exchequer at the time, could be tarred if government
wrongdoing is proved.
Until now, Brown’s biggest headache has been the global
economy downturn, which has had a grave impact on Britain’s housing market,
jobs and GDP. Once again, this collapse of the system was no fault of the
British PM, although he has been blamed for not making hay when the sun was
shining. In any event, he has proved himself to be the best man to lead the UK
out of recession as the tide is already starting to turn. He also showed strong
international leadership within the G-7 and the EU but was mocked without mercy
in Parliament for a slip of the tongue. “We not only saved the world . . .” he
said when what he meant was, “We not only saved the banks . . .”
And as if he hasn’t had enough on his plate over the past
two years, an enormous -- and growing -- scandal has blown up in his face
involving parliamentarians from both sides of the aisle, including Cabinet
ministers. A ruthless Daily Telegraph expose has revealed that MPs have been
claiming expenses for nonexistent mortgages, so-called “second homes” occupied
by other family members and for such trivia as garden gnomes. Several
implicated members of Cabinet have already fled the kitchen in fear of the
heat. The speaker of the House has had to resign. A number of MPs and Peers
face police questioning and potential prosecution for fraud. Naturally, the
public is outraged and is venting its spleen against the Labour Party and
Gordon Brown’s leadership.
Having recently beaten back a leadership challenge within
his own party, Brown’s tenure of No. 10 is hanging by a thread. Personally, I
hope history will judge him kindly. He’s not a bad man. He’s not an incompetent
man. He’s just a man who has been abandoned by impetuous Lady Luck time and
time again.
Linda
S. Heard is a British specialist writer on Middle East affairs. She welcomes
feedback and can be contacted by email at heardonthegrapevines@yahoo.co.uk.