The knives
are sheathed but the scalping goes on
By Neville de Silva
How very predictable politics is at
times, never mind where or when. The recent confrontation
between Prime Minister Tony Blair and his chancellor
Gordon Brown, perceived by some as his inevitable heir
apparent, in their battle for office and place could
have happened in Colombo.
We have all seen it before though
it did not get as bloody as the battle between the two
Bs as Brown tried to corner Blair in what some considered
a putsch in which the chancellor possibly had a hand,
as some have speculated.
|
Gordon Brown: Would like to see
Blair go sooner than later. |
It is a charge that has been hotly
denied by the Brown camp but left many sceptical when
it later emerged that one of the 'plotters' who signed
a letter asking Blair to go had met Brown in the chancellor's
home in Scotland the day before the letter reached No
10 Downing Street.
The plot thickens, so to say, as both
were quick to say that it was only a social call and
politics never cropped up in the conversation. Those
who know politics and politicians would naturally wonder
how it was that not a word of politics passed between
two politicians- one who had just signed or was about
to do so, a stinging letter to the prime minister and
the other who wants to don the premier's hat.
In our own time in Colombo we have
seen the struggle for the premiership between Sir John
Kotelawala and Dudley Senanayake after the sudden death
of then prime minister Don Stephen Senanayake.
Sir John who thought he had the job
for the taking suddenly found at the UNP parliamentary
group meeting one morning that it had slipped away from
his grasp. Those who were at the top in Lake House then
would know how the tide turned.
We have seen the behind-the-scenes
struggle, again in the UNP to succeed President JR Jayewardene,
between Ranasinghe Premadasa, who many considered the
rightful successor, on the one hand, and Gamini Dissanayake
and Lalith Athulathmudali on the other.
|
Tony Blair: Choosing the time
and place for one grand exit. |
More recently Sri Lankans have witnessed
the more public claim made by Mahinda Rajapaksa to be
anointed prime minister under Chandrika Kumaratunga
and later to become her successor.
Though there might have been anger
and bitterness in these struggles for power, none of
them seemed to have plunged to the acrimonious depths
that the Blair-Brown clash descended to two weeks back.
It was generally accepted in the Labour
Party and in the country, that Gordon Brown would succeed
Tony Blair as the leader of the party and then lead
it at the next election due by 2008. Brown would be
the prime minister- in-waiting.
It is undeniable that Tony Blair's
success as a Labour prime minister is unprecedented.
He led an increasingly despondent party to the third
consecutive election victory last year, a record that
no previous Labour prime minister could claim.
The only other claimant who could
match Blair's performance in recent years is the rival
Conservative Party's Margaret Thatcher.
Yet for all the victories that Blair
could claim he is in the throes of the political cut-throatism
that Thatcher herself suffered and of which Blair would
be a victim in the not too distant future.
Thatcher was brought down in 1990
and the Tories' suffered for years without a charismatic
leader.
One might well ask how it is that
two such successful prime ministers who not only led
the country for so long but also stamped their personality
on it could end up by being hounded by the very parties
that they resurrected from the dustbins of history.
Why not! Britain's wartime prime minister
Winston Churchill who led the country to victory over
Nazi Germany was defeated at the very next election.
Cynics will have no trouble in saying
that it is in the nature of politics to devour oneself
as some reptiles reportedly do. The analogy is not without
point for the political arena is a snake pit and those
who survive do so because they are more poisonous than
others or have the resources with which to fight other
contenders for dominance.
Despondency in the Labour Party began
when Blair led his country into war in Iraq in what
seemed like a deferential bow to his transatlantic partner
George W. Bush, brushing aside concerns within his own
party and the opposition of millions of British people.
In opting for war many people believe
that Blair misled not only parliament to secure a crucial
vote but also that the intelligence on which the decision
was supposedly made was doctored by his aides to suit
a political purpose.
That decision and his decision to
stand resolutely by President Bush in the aftermath
might have made Blair popular among a wide swath of
American people but it earned him no popularity among
his own.
Though last year's election was won
by Labour the turn out was low and so was the support
for the party. At that time Blair vowed that he will
not lead the party at the next election.
That is precisely what some in the
party wanted to hear for they thought Blair was increasingly
becoming an electoral liability. It was also music to
Gordon Brown's ears. The time had come, as the Walrus
said to the carpenter, to talk of many things-particularly
when the crown would pass on to him.
But the more he waited in the wings,
the more time Blair seemed to be taking to prepare for
his departure, soliloquising like a Hamlet burdened
with doubt. To go or not to go was not the question.
When to go was what was nagging him for he wanted to
chose his time and place and make one grand exit.
But Brown and the Brownites would
like to see him go sooner than later and when Blair
hitched his foreign policy wagon to the fading star
in the White House over the Lebanese crisis, those in
the Labour Party who had doubts over their own fortunes
at the next election, quickly prepared for the next
act.
They decided to force Blair to quit
early and make way for Brown who would perhaps think
of them positively when governments are made and jobs
are distributed.
There was no blood on the stage as
the knives dug in, like in the political assassination
in Julius Caesar. But treachery and self preservation,
those cardinal requirements of political survival, were
very much on display.
The next months will be interesting
as the push-pull system of political power play works
overtime and the jockeying for power grabs the media
headlines.
|