Westminster playground gets ugly

Gordon practising his left hook

It was almost inevitable that following the allegations of bullying contained in Andrew Rawnsley’s book appeared to be backed up by the National Bullying Helpline, the Labour machine would turn on Christine Pratt and her organisation and try to claim that it was motivated by political malice. The allegations contained within Rawnsley’s account were so potentially damaging that only the robustest of defences was ever going to be considered.

From PM’s point of view, you have to manage the crisis by not making the story about the PM and his treatment of staff – which, frankly, is an open secret far from the Westminster Village. Instead, the government spinners are trying to make the story about a dodgy charity launching a personal campaign against the PM at a time when they believe people have more capacity for sympathy than they have in the past. To a point, they have succeeded.

But let’s cut through that. The fact that three patrons of the NBH – including Conservative MP Anne Widdecombe - have resigned because Ms Pratt chose to reveal that her charity had fielded calls from Number 10 staff demonstrates that by all accepted standards of ethics, she shouldn’t have made public information about her clients. I’ve listened to her on the radio and she seems very passionate about her cause – but she can’t sustain a charity that is nominally about confidentiality while sounding off to the press if she thinks it is in the public interest.

So yes, Ms Pratt has a case to answer. But then, she’s not Prime Minister. And nothing that she has done (I believe she was so incensed by minister after minister lining up to defend someone she knew ran an office where there was a problem that she let herself be drawn into an error of judgement) detracts from the central allegations.

Let’s look at the evidence. No-one has denied that No 10 staff phoned the charity, even if they were wrong to say so. Sir Gus O’Donnell’s statement roundly leaves open the possibility that he approached the PM and warned him about his behaviour. And both PM and Harriet Harman’s use of the euphemisms “demanding on others” and “he gets frustrated” along with the PM’s “I get angry with myself” all pointedly don’t rule out the account of Rawnsley.

But while Ms Pratt is being shoved through the ringer, the PM is being given a relatively easy ride. The distraction technique has worked – apart from Nick Robinson, whose unwillingness to side with Labour is quite telling. It would be safe to assume that he knows things he’s not inclined to reveal.

All that matters, of course, is what the voters think. The appearance of a Number 10 employee to testify to having been on the receiving end would probably seal the PM’s fate. That won’t happen unless someone is planning to leave the Civil Service at the election anyway because the price of talking would be ostracism from the higher grades. Even though Labour would smear them, the weight of evidence would be too great and the PM finished – it would be poetic justice indeed.

As it happens, things are finely balanced. DC is right to back off and strongly rebut any Labour smears about opposition connivance. But it is worth saying that while Christine Pratt made an error speaking out, that doesn’t discredit the testament that she made. And a lack of self-control and respect for others is not a trait that lends itself well to the modern office of Prime Minister.

Labour’s Smearing Group

It is good news that Nadine Dorries has been paid an undisclosed damages by Damian McBride for the disgusting smears that he tried to perpetrate against her. It’s a bit surprising to me that it hasn’t attracted more media attention but they probably want to give it a wide berth for fear of accidentally repeating the libel.

Nadine, who is great to follow on Twitter as @NadineDorriesMP, has two more cases against McBride, who also resigned as editor of the ever-optimistic LabourList website. It’s also fair to say that other Labour figures, some of them involved in the online world, were “in on the joke” as well and it gives an idea of just how hollow the “no more spin” mantra from the PM was.

The truth is that Labour is spinning more and more heavily as the PM gets more and more desperate. Mandelson, Whelan, Draper, Campbell and Blair are all back on the scene – differences put aside – as the see the end of the tracks up ahead. Privately, all apart from Brown probably believe the situation is hopeless; and that’s fine as they all have plenty of other things to do. But that one last challenge – to keep DC and the Tories out – is irresistable. If they fail, that will only be as expected and if they succeed, they will have pulled off the greatest political escape act in British history.

The process of trying to achieve that goal is going to include some heavy hitting from Labour, backed by the government machine and a compliant BBC that fears being pulled apart by the Conservatives as the price of 15 years cosying up to Labour. There’s going to be a lot of dirt, a lot of scheming and a fight to the end. And that’s before you put the Liberal Democrats into the equation.

Election 2010 will be the most keenly fought, bare-knuckled political slug-out certainly since 1992 and probably ever. Technology has made the process of electioneering as underhand and sly as the art of hacking itself. The disgraceful smearing of Nadine, George Osborne and DC was just the beginning and I hope that Tory high command is ready for the onslaught.