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House Diary

House Magazine

What the Hell is going on?  Gordon struts the world stage to great effect but it won`t do him any good at home.  Our Cabinet of Pygmies allows blockages at home, Kindergarten Kids scrawl graffiti everywhere and a Faith Squad of ex-Blairites, worship St.Anctimony.  We should never have allowed Derek Draper back.

 

It`s all so unlike the Party I remember from our testing time in the Seventies.  Then a battle-hardened party, led by a Cabinet of Giants held to the faith to the bitter end.  Never mind, Gordon.  I`ll continue to advise you.  The unpaid, unseen, power behind the throne.

 

Friday 20 March          Meeting of 100 fishermen in Grimsby’s Fishing Heritage Centre to tell them about the new compensation scheme which we`ve forced Government to launch after the Ombudsman’s verdict on the weaknesses of the last.  Everyone sober and in good order but even now Government is trying to cheat us by introducing an impossible new condition that fishermen must have served two years in the Cod Wars.  Why do we always get so mean and petty in the last stages of generous compensation deals?  Civilian Prisoners of the Japanese, Equitable Life, Icelandic Fishermen, etc.

 

Tuesday 24 March       Meeting with the new Icelandic Foreign Minister who turns out to be an old friend.  When I tell him we’re delighted Icelandic vessels have resumed landings in Grimsby after 20 years, he expresses the hope that my wife won`t be going down to the ships for the purpose of prostitution.  Long memories in Iceland.  In the 1983 election Linda was hosed down by dock security at 3.00 am.  They assumed she was a prostitute going down to service Icelandic vessels.  In fact she was waiting for me to get off Grimsby vessels where I was soliciting for votes.  I hoped the incident had been forgotten.  Not in Iceland apparently, but they can`t vote.

 

Thursday 26 March      By-election for a North East Lincs Council seat.  After desultory canvassing go to Leeds (yet another speeding ticket) for the launch of  The Damned United where me and three gnarled Leeds veterans are the only survivors of the Seventies in an audience of teenaged footballers and news hounds, none of whom I know after thirty years of making new rather than reporting it.  Then back to Grimsby for the count. 

 

As is now traditional we lose but the Tories and Liberals who run Grimsby have fallen out and spent the entire campaign abusing each other.  Meet the newly selected Tory candidate for Grimsby.  She`s so nice I decide not to ask Damian McBride to check her out.  But a keen, young Gel  dogging my steps for a whole year will be worrying.  It`s never happened before.  The Tories usually select lunatics at the last minute who then disappear.  Even worse, the Grimsby Telegraph is reporting her avidly where they never use any of my eight page press releases.  Indeed, the only time they tell Grismby I exist is when they publish my huge expenses and all the bills for brothels, the Ivy, tea at the Ritz and that nude statue of Linda Lovelace.

 

Saturday 28 March       After surgery (even more depressing than usual) and a motivational business presentation, off to watch Grimsby Town struggling against relegation.  I`ve sponsored the ball and now my staff tell me I`ve got to pay for it personally because, unlike dirty videos, it`s not a permissible expense.  Fortunately, we win which allows me to sneak out without the usual abuse: “You bring us bad luck”, “Don`t come again”, etc.

 

Tuesday 3l March         Ports Lunch in Drapers Hall (where Derek runs his Daily Draper website) near the Bank of England which is now sand-bagged with a new minoret so Iman King can attack government borrowing over the loudspeakers.  Outside the Bank comedian, Mike Thomas, holds up a big sign saying “Everything All Right” with a crowd of bankers clustered round to tell him it isn`t.

 

Inside the lunch my fellow diners warn me they won`t be there next year because John Healey is charging them retrospective business rates they can`t pay.  Try to explain that John`s a nice lad really.  He`s only obeying orders but the Government`s position is insane and promises deep damage to the ports.  It will all end up in the courts and my guess is the port businesses will win.  “There`s nothing we can do” is never a convincing defence for a Government which can do anything when it wants to. 

 

Come out of the lunch in tears to find Mike Thomas still telling people “Everything`s All Right” and the City police trying to move him on because Mervyn King has told them it isn`t.

 

Wednesday l April        Lead a huge rebellion against the Government’s proposal to give those who shouldn’t pay retrospective rates eight years not to do so.  Rally five votes including Shona McIsaac who`s not sure how to rebel because she`s never done one before.  I tell her I`ll get her a mention on Derek Draper`s website if she`ll join us.  She does but all the other Labour MPs who represent ports vote for the Government like turkeys for Christmas.   The Tories and gutless Lib Dems sit on their hands.  Never mind.  Five`s a good start.  I can build up from there.

 

Friday 3 April               Two hours on hospital radio.  The Trust`s Chief Executive assures me that two hours of me will help achieve his target of quicker bed turnover.  Ask for the latest Joan Baez “God is God” which I love, having loved Joan Baez ever since I interviewed her forty years ago.  I continue this pathetic, unrequited love now that she`s given up protest for God but they haven’t got a single Baez track in the archive. Settle for Barry McGuire`s “Eve of Destruction” which sums up my current mood.

 

Monday 6 April            At last a chance to catch up on the mouldering piles of unanswered mail and emails which have poured in from “Tellthem what you think dot com”.  None have been answered.  Many are incomprehensible.  Call in medical staff to see if the piles harbour C Deficile or MRSA.  They hose them down.

 

Friday 10 April Arrival of grandchildren to wreck my work schedule.  Decide to walk along the canal to Hebden Bridge and walk ahead with grandson, Red.  He counts obsessively to 7000.  Linda catches up.  “So marvellous to see you bonding.  What have you been talking about?” “7001” says the child and walks doggedly on.  “7002-7003…”

 

Satuday 11 April          To Leeds Playhouse.  It`s Mrs. Thatcher’s legacy to West Yorkshire because the funds left over when she abolished the metropolitan county were used to build it.  Sadly, by the time she abolished Humberside she`d got wise so nothing was left for Grimsby except debts.  Tonight`s play is J.B. Priestley’s “When We are Married” which I enjoyed, though I`d never realised before that Priestley, once my hero, was making fun of Yorkshire for Southern gits.  The bastard.  The play makes me realise that I grew up in the period when social life, once organised round chapels and a thousand versions of the Messiah at Christmas, was dying.  Everything shifted to the cinema, the radio and the football club.  My parents were chapel.  My youth Methodist.  But by my teens it was all Jazz Clubs, pictures and TV.  The chapel became a carpet warehouse.

 

Sunday 12 April           Grandchildren show no interest in the Damion Mc Bride scandal which is a shame because in a couple of years they`ll be in their teens and eligible to become Government advisers and part of the children`s crusade.  Put kiddies in power and you get kiddy politics. 

 

Monday 13 April          The McBride of Frankenstein and the AttackBlog Affair rumbles on.  Should I offer Damian a job as medical adviser on my blog site?  Derek Draper has agreed to be my psychotherapist but so far he`s only made me more depressed, a process compounded by reading AlistairCampbell’s novel which has convinced me that they`re all mad.  To be sane in today`s politics is to be totally impotent.  Which is why Draper is treating me.

 

Wednesday 15 April     Things have turned very sour very quickly.  Lunchtime drinkers in Grimsby tell me Gordon is useless. Passers-by say they’ll never vote Labour again.  People in pubs say they’re fed up.  What on earth can I reply?  Say “It`ll come right” and they start denouncing MPs` expenses.  “It`s all right for you”.  Say “We`re all doomed” and they shout that it`s my job to do something about it.  “You`re paid enough”.  My only hope is that now the kids` crusade has screwed up, Gordon will see the need for the senior, experienced advisers who he should have brought in years ago.  No names no packdrill, but Tom Watson tells me the announcement could come soon.  I`ll tell Gordon how Jim did it better.

 

*           *          *

 

Now Gordon’s back from bestriding the globe it`s make or break time here at home.  Either he establishes himself as the Pilot who`ll weather The Storm, gives the big spending boost the economy needs and breaks the bottle necks in housing, college and school building, university expansion, industry support and job defence we need or we’ve had it. 

 

It`s a straight choice between a British Keynesian splurge and an Irish tax and cut option.  With less than a year to go, we can`t carry on drifting towards the “Time for a Change Falls” like a mad scene from Political Academy I, with Derek and Damian paddling forward, Blairites bawling “back”, and Peter handing the Mandy money out in pence and halfpence, while Tories sit on shore giggling and Liberals, as usual, half in and half out of the water, unable to decide whether they`re wet or dry.  Plus me composing my 380th letter to Gordon telling him what to do.  I`m beginning to believe Damian never passed the previous 379 on to him.

 

 

 

House Diary

House Magazine

Under my careful supervision Gordon’s getting the hang of handling recession.  Too many Blair retreads makes the government look like Blair’s Animal Farm, but since we`re all socialists now I suppose a few waifs and strays don`t matter.  So I decided to have a relaxing break and let the lad govern on his own for a bit.  Result? Gordon came out from my shadow.  I had a disaster

Read more: House Diary

   

House Mag Diary

House Magazine

“Lead Kindly Light Midst the Encircling Gloom”. As I said to Gordon. Unfortunately he doesn’t listen to me. He`s promptly headed off for the darkest part of the forest and started using the old Blair leadership trick of jumping off a cliff and forcing the party to catch him. 

Read more: House Mag Diary

   

House Mag Diary

House Magazine

HOUSE DIARY
AUSTIN MITCHELL MP
 
These are the times that try men`s socialism. Polls disastrous. Morale low. New chums wondering if ritual suicide might be helpful. Blairites in the ascendant with crazed proposals to force the disabled back to work (assuming the Poles leave any jobs) or proclaiming the virtues of wealth, Mandy announcing that Gordon has forgiven him, and Tony sucking up more jobs in his flibbertigibbet progress to the throne of Charlemagne II. 
 
* * *

Read more: House Mag Diary

   

Bleak House Diary

House Magazine

Misery, gloom, doom, despair and the worst Christmas I remember. Lousy weather. Miserable mood. Low morale. Wife gets Christmas cards from David Cameron and Alex Salmond. I don`t even get one from Tommy McAvoy. Every poll shows us heading for disaster. All economists predict recession, repossessions, rising unemployment, falling house prices, a more miserable mess than even Norman Lamont managed and only Tony Blair`s speech fees keeping the balance of payments from total disaster. I began Christmas feeling things can`t get worse. They do.

Read more: Bleak House Diary

   

House Magazine Diary for June 2007

House Magazine

Doldrum Days. We`re waiting for Gordo. Parliament ticking over. Nothing much to do. Disorientation because we don`t know who to be sycophantic to. A Party of creeps needs to know who to grovel to.

Even Tommy McAvoy has become benign. He tells me, if I feel rigor mortis coming on, I can die at home rather than in the Chamber. Bless him. He’s one of only three Ministers who`ve held the same job from the start of the glorious revolution. Next week he’ll be one of one.

Read more: House Magazine Diary for June 2007

   

House Magazine Diary for March/April 2007

House Magazine

It`s wonderful to escape from our febrile Fun Factory. Our non-election-election is killing me. Junior Ministers desert the SS Blair to climb on the Big Brown Boat, Charles Clarke does the dance of the seven veils. The Deputy fight becomes a crowd spectacular with everyone but me standing. I don`t know who to crawl to. I smiled and waved at Gordon who looked straight through me. I never see Tony to ingratiate myself (no change there)and I shouted “Hi Dave” to Miliband but the wrong one. Only Michael Meacher talks to me. Obsessively.

Read more: House Magazine Diary for March/April 2007

   

House Magazine Diary for April 2007

House Magazine

European commitments on global warming. All Targets. No bullets. How many Eurocrats does it take to change a light bulb? 25 Heads of State.

* * * *
Our lads and lass in Iran brings back Mort Sahl’s Korean War joke. If captures tell them nothing except your name, number and the exact location of your unit. For that now read Sat.Nav position.

Read more: House Magazine Diary for April 2007

   

House Magazine Diary for November 2006

House Magazine

This is the half year of the two PMs. Tony goes after the May elections. Gordon comes in unopposed. Everything goes on the same as before.

It`s worrying. We need change: a new start. Instead we`ll get the great merging. Gordon becomes Tony: like Animal Farm. Policies weld together seamlessly. We pretend nothing`s happened. Yet something needs to.

Read more: House Magazine Diary for November 2006

   

House Magazine Diary - Retrospect October 2005 - September 2006

House Magazine

Not the best of years for my Party or me. It’s slipped in the polls, been clobbered in the councils and torn by a leadership struggle we have to pretend isn’t really happening in case our new Chief Whip suspends both Tony and Gordon from the PLP for bringing the Party into disrepute.

For Old, Mitchell, it’s been the year of the collapsing backbone, pain, crutches and having to speak sat down. Which made fellow MPs think I’m permanently pissed. Along with that went pain killers but these made me feel good about government policies.

Cheer up. Things ain`t so bad. Previous Labour governments have had far worse mid term problems. It will pass as the electorate makes a considered judgement on Labour’s achievement, which is good. Particularly compared to Tory vacuities and Lib-Dem impossibilities. Q.E.D.

Read more: House Magazine Diary - Retrospect October 2005 - September 2006

   

House Magazine Diary for July 2006

House Magazine

Life’s moved into parallel universes. In Blairworld Tony leads us on, bravely launching new initiatives and reforms and justifying everything with his brilliant eloquence.

But no one’s listening. Everyone else is in Post-Blair World. There Tony’s history (without a bracelet). People are calculating support for alternative candidates, not just for deputy but for the leadership. Possibles are Alan Johnson, Harriet Harman, Hilary Benn, John Reid, John McDonald. These are for ABGs (Anyone But Gordon) people, but on the precedent of Bryan Gould, others wonder if anyone will stand against Gordon the Invincible. Meanwhile the Chancellor’s own supporters speculate about who he’ll offer what job and try to stop him endorsing every Blair whim. Identity cards are the only thing left which he hasn’t nailed himself to. My question is how long can we straddle these two worlds?

Read more: House Magazine Diary for July 2006

   

Commons Diary: April 2006

House Magazine

This Intimation of Mortality should provide a laugh a line diary. Three vertebra are crumbling so I shuffle round on two walking sticks. Just like a trainee member of the House of Lords. Indeed one attendant actually addressed me as "My Lord".

I'm allowed to speak sitting down which puzzles constituents, though Elfyn Llwyd tells people it's because I'm now an alcoholic. The consolation prize is that I don't have to stay to vote on some of our dafter legislation. Such as ID Cards and glorification of terrorism.

Read more: Commons Diary: April 2006

   

House Magazine Diary for January 2006

House Magazine

Miserable life. Miserable me. Miserable New Year to you. This is going to be the most exciting political year since 2005 but ushered in by a miserable recess (or rendition, as we now call it): lousy weather, fractious family, mini-flu and awful back pain. The break for renewal and regeneration has been disastrous and debilitating.

Read more: House Magazine Diary for January 2006

   

House Magazine Diary for October 2005

House Magazine

Happy Days are here again. The Pioneer Corps of socialism re-assembles on the Westminster Parade Ground. Tony triangulates the line of march. The Party Conference retriangulates it back again. No-one’s sure where we’re going, the Tories are all over the place and the Lib Dems apparently asleep.

Read more: House Magazine Diary for October 2005

   

2003-4 - The Year Reviewed

House Magazine

The Story so far...
A loveable but shambolic party with a deep inferiority complex allows itself to be taken over by a dedicated group of meritocratically motivated men. Inspired by Changing Parties by Lawrence Llewellin-Mandelson they transform it into a nicer conservative party, the old association with workers, peasants or naughty trade unions, replaced by a more upmarket, nicer and wealthier friends. Now the dispossessed struggle to take back their party before castration is completed by a “more of the same” manifesto for the 2005 election. Read on:-

Read more: 2003-4 - The Year Reviewed

   

House Magazine Diary for October 2004

House Magazine

Friday 1 October
Cooking competition in Hull. Lawrie Quinn and I are humiliated by a team from Radio Humberside. Our dish, Balti Coeli a la Prescott, was delicious. Unfortunately my chocolate mousse turned out like soup.

Read more: House Magazine Diary for October 2004

   

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