No daggers, not even a petition. . . just a cheer from the party faithful Labour's elder statesmen lend support as Brown prevails over his critics

The HeraldJune 09, 2009

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Summary


AS Gordon Brown entered committee room 14, the Gladstone Room, there was a great round of applause for the man who led his party into two of the most disastrous electoral results in the history of the Labour Party.

It was clear then that the whips and the ministers were in control and the plotters had lived up to their name as a herd of assassins rather than a phalanx of killers.

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No daggers, not even a petition. . . just a cheer from the party faithful Labour's elder statesmen lend support as Brown prevails over his critics

There was no petition, no daggers hidden in the folds of the senators' clothes, but a tense atmosphere as hundreds of Labour MPs and peers sandwiched themselves together to decide the fate of their leader.

Their mood was depres...

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