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Lone wolf: Flanked by security men, Gordon Brown cuts a solitary figure outside his Manchester hotel

Reshuffle in a fortnight as Brown gets tough

Joe Murphy and Paul Waugh
22.09.08

Gordon Brown is preparing a reshuffle in a fortnight as he battles to stamp his authority on the Cabinet.

And the Evening Standard has learned that the Prime Minister's closest allies want ministers to be subjected to a "loyalty test" to keep their jobs.

News that a shuffle is imminent raised tensions at the Manchester party conference, with Blairites warning Mr Brown against a purge of ministers who are suspected of plotting against his leadership.

One minister warned: "How big the reshuffle is will depend on how strong he is at the time."

There was talk of Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly, a Blairite, and Defence Secretary Des Browne, a Brown loyalist, both leaving the Cabinet.

But Mr Brown's most senior supporters want him to go much further by cracking down on dissidents by insisting they make clear statements in private that they will support the Prime Minister's continued leadership.

One senior figure said: "We do not want a situation where rebels are both inside the tent and still p***ing on us.

"There is a big fight against Cameron ahead and it is rational to ask them: 'Are you up for it?'"

The source said that ministers who were being loyal in public now but were not prepared to commit themselves to remaining so ought to resign from the Government. "If someone thinks it is a question of timing, whether now is the right time or not, that person should have no place in the team," said the source.

However, a senior Blairite scoffed at the idea. "I would tell them I am absolutely committed to a Labour election victory," said the minister, making clear he would not feel bound to support Mr Brown indefinitely.

A senior source suggested the most likely time for the reshuffle would be in two weeks, when MPs and ministers return to the Commons. However, some Labour MPs hope Mr Brown will spring it next Thursday - the day after David Cameron's speech at the Tory conference - and overshadow Mr Cameron. The Prime Minster will tomorrow attempt to revive his support with a speech to the party conference hall that is being billed as setting out more clearly his personal beliefs and values. Aiming to address critics who say he lacks a vision, Mr Brown will set out what he thinks the Labour Party exists for and what motivated him to get into politics.

However, there were coded criticisms of his style from ministers on the conference fringe.

Communities Secretary Hazel Blears said Labour needs to restore the "emotional connection" it had with voters in 1997. She said: "We are not going to win by reciting lists of achievements. They mean nothing.

"And nor will we win simply by denouncing the Tory record."

But Chancellor of the Exchequer, Alistair Darling, denied the Cabinet was divided. "Ours is remarkably unfactional actually," he told BBC Radio's Today programme. "If you look at it ideologically, if you look at it in terms of what we're trying to do, our Government is quite remarkably unified."

Mr Darling admitted that the Prime Minister's speech tomorrow was important to the future of the Labour party.

"All of us know that it's important that Gordon tomorrow sets out his vision about what the Labour Government stands for. Many people have had their criticisms but he knows where he stands."

Tessa Jowell, the Olympics Minister, said the Government had to improve its communications: "We have not lost, people have just stopped listening, and if we change the way we talk, what we say now will be as important as it was in 1997 and will be in 2012."

Labour MP Ian Gibson said Mr Brown's speech needed to provide "that Obama moment" of inspiration for delegates or "it could be curtains for him".

In an interview yesterday Mr Brown said he had made mistakes and promised: "I will do better."

Reader views (17)

 Add your view

Deckchairs and Titanic, spring to mind.

- Neil, Brentwood, UK.

Brown has to stay! He does NOT have the personality we expecect - but he KNOWS the UK economy inside out. he is the ONLY person who can save the UK from economic extinquision

- Cllr Linda Eyre, Ilford UK

That's a great picture!

"RESERVOIR DORKS"


Let's have a General Election shall we?

- Silent Hunter, Fintry, Scotland

This cynical re-arranging of deck chairs is not for the public interest but merely to prevent the Brown stuff hitting the fan.

- Tom, St. Albans

Government Ministers order of priorities.
1) Loyalty to Mr Brown.
2) Loyalty to the Labour Party.
3) Loyalty to the country.
In that order, if they are seen to observe the first two, then stuff the third.
An election please, do you have the guts Mr Brown ?

- John E., Northants

I hear that they would love him to appear in Strictly Come dancing .... doing the SHUFFLE!

- Raminder Bhalla, Northolt

He should reshuffle himself, and presto!

- Delphine, Oxford

I can't see the point in having a reshuffle in 2 weeks when Brown has had all Summer to do it and before Conference, so that the key SOS's would have had a chance to get to know their portfolios, and a pre-conference reshuffle woud have given added impetus to the Govt and be welcomed by Conference. A loyalty oath would be unwise: we don't want just Yes Men/Women in Govt.

- Dhanraj, basildon, essex

He needs to reshuffle himself. Out the door

- Michael Cooper, London

why rearrange the deckchairs on the titanic? but whilst he is i hope he gets rid of tessa jowell. a more pointless minister there has yet to be!

- Josh, london

Deckchairs on the Titanic Gordy, deckchairs on the Titanic. Whatever you do you are sunk, and New Labour will be out of power for decades, fingers crossed for ever.

- The Gene Genie, Croydon

The first to go should be geoff hoon (chief whip)

He is a disaster, him and whoever advises him are so out of touch with people and events.

- Billy Boy, london

What does Gordon expect. Captain Pegleg Tony hijacked the ship of state with pirated polices. Sailed it onto the rocks and then abandoned ship before even the rats realised it was sinking. Now the rats are mutinying and the poor old first mate discovers the treasure chest is a myth. Almost as comical as "Pirates of the Caribbean".
Keep waving the flag mate!

- Colin, mora, Sweden

Yes, batten down the hatches, steer for the iceberg. Let no one leave the sinking ship! Then we get rid of all the dead-legs in one fell swoop! Marvellous! Bring it on!

- Paul Freeman, London England

So this is it then.
Unless this is one of Brown's clever bluffs, the Cabinet plotters have got two weeks, at most, to get their knives into Bottler Brown and to do him the maximum damage.

Otherwise, because these plotters are probably already suspects then they're extremely likely to be identified and sacked at the reshuffle, when they'll be far less effective as external critics.

A reshuffle is only another re-re-re-re-re-launch distraction though, ultimately Glenrothes and Salmond will seal Brown's fate.

Whatever, I for one don't want a Prime Minister who looks like an undertaker.

- Dave, cumbria

Shuffling the deckchairs won't help Brown. He's yesterday's man and everyone in the country (except him and Ed Balls) knows it.

- Ian, London

If Crash had any integrity he'd shuffle himself right out the pack ......

- Marianne, S W France


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