If you just read one newspaper today you’d know things were getting pretty bad for Gordon Brown. Let’s take the Observer for example: not exactly a hostile paper to the government over the years. Beyond the story of the defection of former DWP advisor David Freud to the Tory front bench, there’s a terribly damaging piece of analysis from Andrew Rawnsley. He observes that a serious split has opened up in Cabinet between the “no contrition” camp and those who believe the Prime Minister should find a way of showing some humility over his role in the economic crisis. As readers of this column know, Downing Street has been taking a close interest in President Obama’s recent public apology. But as a ministerial source told Rawnsley: “Gordon will never change. He does not do apologies.”
Rawnsley’s account of the exchanges at Cabinet is embarrassingly detailed:
“Harriet Harman led the charge by broadly repeating what she had said in a banker-bashing speech in Yorkshire a few days earlier.
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