» Wednesday, September 6, 2006

Premiership

Asked why Tom Watson was still a minister when he had signed an ultimatum for the Prime Minister to go, the PMOS said that the Prime Minister was planning to talk to Tom Watson later today. Asked whether Tom Watson would still be a minister later today, the PMOS said that the Prime Minister would speak to him later today so it was best for that to take place first before commenting. Asked whether the Prime Minister planned to speak to the Parliamentary Private Secretaries (PPS) that had signed the letter too, the PMOS said that the Prime Minister was intending to talk to Tom Watson. He was not aware of other conversations people would have to wait and see.

Asked if the Prime Minister would be speaking to the whip that had signed, the PMOS said that he thought that idea was based on a misconception. Asked whether the Prime Minister expected Cabinet Ministers to speak to their PPS’s, the PMOS said people should take this one step at a time. He was not going to go through each name. Asked whether the meeting with Tom Watson had been arranged at the Prime Minister’s request, the PMOS said that he tended not to get into that kind of detail, suffice it to say the Prime Minister would be talking to Tom Watson. Asked why the Prime Minister was planning to speak to Tom Watson, the PMOS said that was for the Prime Minister and Mr Watson to discuss first. Asked about details of the letter, the PMOS pointed out that those that had sent it said it was a private letter so he would not brief on it’s content.

Asked if we were acknowledging that the Prime Minister had received the letter, the PMOS said that Downing Street had acknowledged last night that a letter had been discovered on one of the office’s many fax machines late yesterday afternoon. Asked which room the fax had been in, the PMOS explained that we had many fax machines in the building and no doubt sending it to one at random had been part of the problem. Put that perhaps the party rebels were not modernisers if they were still using faxes, the PMOS declined to comment on what was clearly a party matter.

Asked whether Downing Street was looking into how The Sun story had got leaked, the PMOS said we could always spend time trying to figure such things out, but it was generally more useful to concentrate on issues where they could get a result. He did not know how it had come to light; perhaps The Sun’s political correspondent could help. Asked how the memo had got leaked, the PMOS suggest that this was an artful way to ask who was responsible for the memo. He would not get drawn into that as he had said all he intended to say on that matter yesterday.

Asked whether it was still the Prime Minister’s determination to make no further remarks on his future, the PMOS said that the Prime Minister had set things out in his Times interview, David Miliband had said what he had on the radio yesterday, the PMOS had nothing further to add to the subject this morning. Asked whether Downing Street was happy with David Miliband’s timetable leading back to 31st May, the PMOS said that it was probably helpful to restate the position. We were not going to give a running commentary on dates. As far as he could ascertain that applied yesterday to The Sun. People may choose to contact us with dates but we were not going to comment on them. Any suggestion that this was in some way an authorised Downing Street operation was wrong.

Asked whether there had been discussion with the Chancellor about a timetable, the PMOS said, as was the usual rule, he did not brief on discussions between the Prime Minister and his Cabinet colleagues. Asked whether the comments by Hilary Armstrong and David Miliband were helpful, the PMOS said, as he had yesterday morning, Cabinet colleagues were perfectly entitled to express their views as they had. The Prime Minister had said what he had and David Miliband and Hilary Armstrong had made their own assessments of what the Prime Minister’s words had meant. They had also said that they believed the Prime Minister would do what he had said.

Put that if we did not deny The Sun’s story it would become the received wisdom, the PMOS said that people had a choice to make in all of this, which was you either ticked off a right and wrong for every date or you do what Downing Street had consistently done and not offer a running commentary. Downing Street would stick to the latter. Even though this might allow journalists to suggest that we had not confirmed nor denied The Sun’s specific date if people looked back we had not confirmed any specific dates at any time all the way through. So we were being consistent on that matter. Asked by CNN to sum up what the Prime Minister intended to do between now and next May that made it worth hanging on against all these pressures, the PMOS said that even though he had just come back from his holiday, he would not buy into the implicit attempt to draw him into a commentary on a date. He was too old a dog to walk into that one. However, the PMOS said he would, having extracted that part of the question out, answer the other bit of the question in his own words.

The Prime Minister intended to get on with the agenda that the government had been elected to address. As he had already shown the Prime Minister wanted to keep moving forward on the energy review and keep momentum going following the pensions review. He would keep things moving forward on education and health reforms, just as he had always done. He would also keep things moving forward on migration, an issue he had acknowledged that people had a variety of concerns about on all sides, such as those heard from the CBI last week. Likewise in foreign policy he wanted forward movement on the Middle East and Northern Ireland. There was a deep agenda of serious issues to be addressed and in addition to that the Prime Minister would continue to deliver his lectures as he had done yesterday. The next one would be on science.

Put that people should be more honest about what David Miliband had been doing yesterday and that he had licence from No10, the PMOS said that he would not bristle too much at the use of the word honest. As he had already said the David Miliband had decided to go on the Today Programme himself. Journalists may smile at that but it was factually the case. Asked if there were a date in mind whether Cabinet colleagues would be consulted, the PMOS said he suspected that was being ask to give a commentary on dates, but he had already made clear he would not be doing so.

Briefing took place at 6:00 | Search for related news

No Comments »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Post a public comment

(You must give an email address, but it will not be displayed to the public.)
(You may give your website, and it will be displayed to the public.)

Comments:

This is not a way of contacting the Prime Minister. If you would like to contact the Prime Minister, go to the 10 Downing Street official site.

Privacy note: Shortly after posting, your name and comment will be displayed on the site. This means that people searching for your name on the Internet will be able to find and read your comment.

Downing Street Says...

The unofficial site which lets you comment on the UK Prime Minister's official briefings. About us...

Search


September 2006
Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun
« Aug   Oct »
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930  

Supported by

mySociety.org

Disruptive Proactivity

Recent Briefings


Archives

Links

Syndicate (RSS/XML)

Credits

Enquiries

Contact Sam Smith.

This site is powered by WordPress. Theme by Jag Singh