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Leadership contender Miliband slips up as 'defining' conference speech falls short of expectations
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22 September 2008
Gordon Brown won a reprieve in the Labour leadership crisis today after David Miliband failed to establish himself as Labour's saviour in waiting.
The Prime Minister was given a clear run to win over his beleaguered party when he makes what could prove to be a defining leader's speech tomorrow afternoon.
Mr Brown's supporters expressed private delight after Mr Miliband's keynote address fell short of the dramatic expectations he created this summer when he paraded his ambition to lead Labour.
Bananaman: David arrived at the conference to a cry of 'Don't shoot!' from a photographer
Downing Street had been fearful that his appearance would be billed as a defining moment that marked his emergence as a threat to Mr Brown.
They had worried that a strong performance by Mr Miliband would blow apart the fragile truce imposed by the party for its show of unity at the Labour conference in Manchester.
But the 41-year-old Foreign Secretary avoided any reference to his personal ambitions and made a point of lavishing praise on his boss.
Rebel MPs complained afterwards that he had failed to deliver the kind of barnstorming address that for a decade defined Mr Brown as Tony Blair's obvious replacement.
'Let us prove the fatalists wrong': David Miliband at the Labour Party conference
Mr Miliband had earlier walked into the Manchester conference centre clutching a banana in the fashion of a handgun, prompting one photographer to plead: "Don't shoot."
In his speech he attempted to burnish his Labour leadership credentials as he urged the party to end its "defeatism" and believe it can win the next general election.
He insisted that David Cameron's Tories were "beatable" if Labour proved it was the party of change.
He left open the question of his own ambitions, saying instead that "any age of massive change needs leadership from the party of change".
From Britain's performance at the Beijing Olympics to recent bans on cluster bombs to the bravery of UK troops in Afghanistan, he said the country should be proud of its standing on the world stage.
He stressed that a similar optimism should be transferred to Labour's own hopes for the next election.
Mr Miliband set out his political credo with references to his father's service in the Royal Navy in the war and his grandfather's arrival in Britain as a refugee.
Miliband shakes hands with Prime minister Gordon Brown after his keynote speech this afternoon
He won a 52-second standing ovation but in a clear signal that the party rank and file were in no mood for disloyalty, the strongest applause in the entire speech came when Mr Miliband praised Mr Brown's efforts to boost aid for Africa.
Making clear that he felt a historic fourth term for Labour was still possible, Mr Miliband said it was time to restore the party's sense of self-belief and conviction.
"Each day in government is a privilege for us, another opportunity to change the country. So let us earn the privilege, seize the opportunity and prove the fatalists wrong," he said.
"You know the truth is the Tories are beatable. Let's say it with conviction: they are beatable. So just as I hate defeatism about our country, I hate defeatism about our party," he said.
He attacked the Tories' " isolationism" and anti-European instincts, claiming that the party still had not changed enough to take office.
Miliband praised Brown's efforts to boost aid in Africa
Mr Miliband came under fire from some Cabinet ministers for issuing contradictory and unclear signals about his leadership ambitions. One Cabinet ally said Mr Miliband was trying to be "half in-half out" of the Cabinet.
Some Blairites fear his mixed messages suggest he will back away from any moves to challenge Mr Brown until at least after next June's Euro elections. "You can't go halfway in (to a leadership contest) and then pull out again," one Cabinet minister said.
Mr Miliband appeared to play both the loyalty card and be a rebel. He used one speech to accuse the media of exaggerating claims that he is preparing a leadership bid, and to urge Labour to "pull together behind Gordon's leadership".
'Let's say it with conviction: they (the Tories) are beatable,' said Miliband
But he also gave two interviews highlighting his family life, seen as honing his image in readiness for a contest.
As for the banana - shortly after Mr Miliband's speech, Chief Whip Geoff Hoon had to employ some fancy footwork to avoid slipping on a banana skin dropped in the main aisle of the conference hall.
Someone else had crushed it by stepping on it, but it was not known if the offending banana had belonged to the Foreign Secretary.
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