Party conference season is over for another year. But
politics goes on, and going on (and on and on) on his pet subject – slagging off
Mil The Younger for the purpose of garnering More And Bigger Clickbait For
Himself Personally Now – is the sad and embittered Dan Hodges. As in Winshton’s
assessment of Austen Chamberlain, Dan always plays the game – and he always
loses it.
Hodges makes three key mistakes in his career mardy strop at
the Labour leader: he trusts his own judgment, which is, right now, not good,
he believes what the Maily Telegraph
publishes is factually correct – not a good idea for a paper that will splash
on any old rubbish to prop up the Tories – and, worst of all, believes what
anyone called a Labour MP tells him.
The Tories got
an opinion poll bounce from their conference. Their press supporters went
rather OTT gorging on it: Miliband was “under
pressure”, then the party was supposedly in open revolt, and from there
came the combination of logic leap and false assumption to suggest that he
would be gone before the General Election. The all-too-suggestible Hodges
drank this Kool-Aid in one go.
And off he went yesterday: “My understanding is that [Alan] Johnson has told allies he would be
prepared to accept the leadership as part of a ‘coronation’, but will not be
part of a contest”. No Dan, someone saw you coming and told you what you
wanted to hear. Remember
what you said about Corporal Clegg? “He
may announce [resignation] in his conference speech”? That was wrong, too.
Why don’t you actually look at what
was said to Ben Riley-Smith in the article you cite, Dan? “One former Labour minister”. Ooh let me
guess, how about David Blunkett, with Jack Straw as an outside bet? Who else
spoke to the Tel man? “Another Labour MP” who described Johnson
as “a straight talking sort of guy”.
So that’s a disgruntled Blairite, then. That “number of Labour MPs” was just two.
The article was mere speculation, biased further because
Riley-Smith either didn’t ask anyone on the Labour front bench – or they wouldn’t
comment. It was produced to conform to the Telegraph’s
political stance, and to its agenda. Any pundit with brain engaged and a hole
in their jacksy should know this. Not Dan Hodges. Any excuse to whine at
Miliband and he loses all reason.
What is worse for all those feeding the 24-hour rolling news
speculatron is that the storyline is already unravelling. A new set of rumours
now suggests that there may be a Labour reshuffle next week – impossible if
Miliband were indeed under pressure to go. And the latest rolling YouGov poll –
the one that set the speculation off in the first place – has Labour
back in the lead.
Hello Dan Hodges – you goofed again. It’s getting to be a habit, isn’t it?
" It’s getting to be a habit, isn’t it?"
ReplyDeleteHabitual Hodges Howler just rings off the tongue.
As his namesake might say in a new film where the cast has just been revealed "Put out that light". And treat your public like mushrooms?