If Tony Blair Won't Listen to the People It's Time the Labour Party Did ...

Sunday HeraldJune 15, 2004

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Summary


IF the England football team get a good "kicking" from France tonight in the European championships, the manager, Sven Goran Eriksson, will be required to explain. If the defeat is so large as to be one of the worst in England's history, the manager will need to deliver first a public apology on how things went so wrong, and secondly, to deliver a correctional strategy to ensure the "kicking" doesn't happen again.

And if the manager refused to apologise? If he insisted nothing was wrong, insisted nothing needed changing, insisted he would not deviate from the strategy that led to the massive defeat? The outcome doesn't need expert insight: the manager would be sacked and sacked quickly before he could inflict more damage; and there would be little complaint from anyone.

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If Tony Blair Won't Listen to the People It's Time the Labour Party Did ...

To compare British politics to the politics of international football management may be an analogy too far. But the question still needs answering: why has Tony Blair reacted to the severe "kicking" - John Prescott's word - Labour received in the polls last week by insisting all his party ha...

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