Melissa Kite Melissa Kite

Osborne stumbles: but is there a bigger story about Mandelson?

Melissa Kite says that the shadow chancellor should have known better than to cross the most brutal spin-doctor in Westminster, or flout the conventions of the super-rich. But we should not be distracted from the Business Secretary’s true role in this saga

issue 25 October 2008

Melissa Kite says that the shadow chancellor should have known better than to cross the most brutal spin-doctor in Westminster, or flout the conventions of the super-rich. But we should not be distracted from the Business Secretary’s true role in this saga

If George Osborne survives the spectacular fallout of his now notorious Corfu adventure he may want to review the way he spends his holidays. If a bespoke travel agent arranged his recent sojourn he should be asking for his money back, because sunshine breaks don’t come much more disastrous than this one. Not since John Fowles’s character Nicholas in The Magus has a man stepped on to a Greek island and got himself into such a surreal muddle.

Admittedly the ingredients for intrigue were already in place when Mr Osborne arrived among the olive groves. A Russian oligarch, the scion of a banking dynasty, the most feared spin-doctor ever to prowl Downing Street… something should have told Mr Osborne that this holiday was going to be trouble.

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