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Entries in Gordon Brown (3)

Thursday
Mar262009

Scott Lucas on BBC World Service: Barack Obama and Gordon Brown

bbc-world-service1I spoke with BBC World Service's Newshour last night about President Obama, British Prime Minister Brown, and the presentation of bad news, especially in a time of economic crisis. Conclusion? Each, in his own way, is suited to the role he is playing publicly (and, yes, this is far different from when President Franklin Roosevelt was having "fireside chats" during the Depression).

The discussion is now on-line, about 20 minutes into the programme.
Friday
Mar202009

Special Relationship Update: Brown Can't Watch Obama DVDs

brown-obamaTwo weeks ago we noted the exchange of gifts between Barack Obama and Prime Minister Gordon Brown. The British Prime Minister gave the President a pen holder carved from the oak of HMS Gannet, which took part in anti-slavery operations. Obama gave Brown 25 DVDs.

Which seems a fair, thoughtful exchange. Except that when Gordon sat down to enjoy, let's say, Porky's II, he only received an eyeful of disappointment.

As many of us who have smuggled DVDs back from the US know, they are only coded to work in North America. When a Daily Telegraph reporter called Washington to report this small technical point was missed, "A White House spokesman sniggered....He was still looking into the matter when my deadline came last night."
Friday
Mar062009

Obama and Brown: So long, and thanks for all the DVDs

Barack Obama and Gordon BrownThere is perhaps no stronger indictment of UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown's recent visit to the White House and Congress than this morning's slow-news-day-controversy over President Obama's gift to the PM. Brown's presents for the new president were carefully considered, symbolic offerings- a pen holder carved from the oak of HMS Gannet, which took part in anti-slavery operations (and whose sister ship became the Oval Office's desk), and a first edition Churchill biography. Obama, on the other hand, gave Brown some DVDs- the diplomatic equivalent of Marks & Spencer vouchers. Brown's visit to Washington wasn't a failure, but it was about as meaningful and thought-provoking as that DVD boxset.

Some are suggesting that Brown was snubbed by Obama, pointing to the brevity of their meeting as well as the lack of a formal dinner and the cancellation of a joint press conference. The truth is that the Obama administration, up to its eyeballs in economic and foreign policy crises, has no use for a lame duck British Prime Minister with close ties to the Bush-loving Tony Blair. Like an unwanted if generally affable houseguest, Brown was politely greeted, dispatched, and forgotten about.

Much the same happened at Congress. If you have a spare 34 minutes you can watch Brown's address:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6W-AJRo5G4I[/youtube]



If you don't, let me summarise: "America is wonderful!" (applause). "We're knighting Ted Kennedy!" (applause). "America was a staunch ally in World War 2!" (applause). "We stood together after 9/11" (muted applause). "Terrorism and Iran are grave threats!" (applause). Then, the riskier content- "The economy and the environment must be fixed" (cautious applause). "America landed on the moon!" (baffled applause). "End the dictatorship of oil and tackle climate change!" (silence). Brown closed with a linkage between the Rwandan genocide, African poverty and- weirdly- "expensively funded madrassas teaching innocent children to hate us." Not Rwandan children, surely? No explanation was offered, but neither was one required. And Brown signed off (applause), ending what could be his last official visit to the US.