Actually from watching that video I don't think that really was the case - you could certainly have reversed the genders without affecting it markedly.
Gordon Brown's problem was that by the time he became PM he'd been running the domestic side of government for a decade as well as raising a young family- while trying to micromanage everything. The guy was utterly exhausted; it's no wonder he kept losing his temper.True, and I do like Gordon Brown, although I don't think he was very good as prime minister. But it does remind me a little of the time a decade ago or more when Michael Howard was the Great White Hope of the Conservative party, at the tail end of IDS's leadership. It said a lot more about IDS than it did about Howard.
Gordon Brown's problem was that by the time he became PM he'd been running the domestic side of government for a decade as well as raising a young family- while trying to micromanage everything. The guy was utterly exhausted; it's no wonder he kept losing his temper.
There should be a new Septennial Act to force ministers to have a sabbatical every seven years. Six months as a backbencher before they can return to office. Staggered so they don't all leave at once.
It's funny that Mr Quackers seems sympathetic to Brown. I didn't expect that at all.
He's a half-blind workaholic who likes to chat about neo-classical endogenous growth theory, so no, it doesn't surprise me. And I think that political calculations certainly played a part in his decision to get married (because of the prejudices you mentioned) *, but then he discovered that family life was surprisingly pleasant.Gordon Brown is a very strange chap. He didn't get married until he was 49. That's suspiciously late, don't you think?
Some said, at the time, that he only got married to help his political career. A well-rounded politician must show it; by being capable of forming a committed relationship, I suppose.
And somehow they made amateur mistakes such as telling women to vote no because thinking for themselves was too complicated.
we will never know if it was an amateur mistake, the poll results tend to say it was not ...
Gordon Brown is a very strange chap. He didn't get married until he was 49. That's suspiciously late, don't you think?
Some said, at the time, that he only got married to help his political career. A well-rounded politician must show it; by being capable of forming a committed relationship, I suppose.
All Presidents have to have a first lady to show. And the British are picking up on it.
Since when is it strange to marry late? what is this? the 1950s?
If you undergo the, er, unpleasant experience of reading the Daily Mail, then you will surely find they are quite prominent figures in that. (That is, if their figures are quite prominent, then the readers of the Daily Mail will ensure they're undergoing an unpleasant experience).I'm really not convinced that's true. Brown's wife had a very low public presence (indeed I had to google her to remember her name). Cameron's wife is also not particularly prominent, and I'd say the same of the spouses of both Major and Thatcher. I don't think people take them much into account when voting. There's no official office for them, as there is for the wives of US presidents, and they play no role in the political process, either formally or, as far as I can tell, informally, beyond whatever personal influence they have on their husbands. Cherie Blair is perhaps the closest one finds to a US first lady, but that's partly because she was a prominent legal figure anyway; and even there I don't think she was as significant to voters' assessment of Tony Blair as, say, Hilary Clinton was to voters' attitudes to Bill. She didn't sponsor bills in Parliament or spearhead social initiatives in the way that American first ladies seem to do - something that seems very strange from a UK perspective, at least to me!
Pangur Bán;13470318 said:SNP are paving the way for one just now. It might not be very long, but will definitely be after 2016.