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Uber Member
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Fareham
Posts: 5,650
Party: Conservatives
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The Tories are from Mars but Cameron is from Venus, says Tessa
Jowell By Melissa Kite, Deputy Political Editor (Filed: 05/02/2006) David Cameron is from Venus - but the rest of the Conservative Party is from Mars, according to Tessa Jowell in the most personal analysis yet by a Labour minister of the Tory leader's early success. In an interview with the Sunday Telegraph, the Culture Secretary admitted that the Tories had enjoyed a revival under Mr Cameron who was "very unusual for a Tory". "It's the Venus and Mars analogy," she said, referring to the self-help best-seller Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus, by John Gray, about the immutable differences between the sexes. "The old view of the Tories is that they were domineering and hectoring and very male. Cameron is a Venusian and that is very unusual for a Tory. But he's employed all the same old Martians to advise him on policy and you have got the biggest Martian of all advising him on economic policy, John Redwood. "The question is whether Cameron, with his metrosexual appeal and femininity, can sustain himself as a convincing leader when he also has to face the policy challenges that he set for himself. "At the moment it is easy just to stand up every day and look relaxed and ooze empathy but sooner or later he's going to have to face some of the very hard questions he's kicked off INTO phpbb_the long grass to be looked after by Martians, and he's going to have to develop a manifesto." Ms Jowell said the Tory leader was "a bit like a caterpillar who's shed his skin and has emerged for a little while as a butterfly". She added: "The Tories have had a revival on the strength of Cameron. Is there a danger in Cameron? Let's wait and see. Will he produce a coherent set of policies? Let's wait and see." Ms Jowell was speaking over tea and mineral water in her immaculate office above Trafalgar Square, with its pristine white sofas, soft lighting and trendy artwork. She acknowledged that the Government was in a period of transition and subject to "counter-currents". But the Prime Minister's closest Cabinet ally rejected the notion, put forward by some commentators, that Mr Cameron was now the "heir to Blair". "That is complete rubbish," she said. "That betrays a complete misunderstanding of who Tony Blair is and what Tony Blair did. When Tony became leader in '94 the country fell in love with him. "They fell in love with his freshness, they fell in love with the fact that he seemed so normal and relaxed, the fact that he was so in touch with their lives. Every time he went on TV or made a speech he radiated this sort of easy communication but none of that was spontaneous. He had worked out exactly what we had to do." Ms Jowell has had a tough week with the announcement by Multiplex, the Australian company building the new Wembley Stadium, that it may not be finished in time for the FA Cup final on May 13. Having ridden to the rescue of the £757 million project, she could be forgiven for feeling let down by Multiplex. But she said: "When Wembley is built it will be the finest stadium in Europe and it will be there for decades to come so if it is ready five weeks late, that will be forgotten." She added: "I'm not saying it will be five weeks late." Ms Jowell has also been keeping an eye on the religious hatred laws going through Parliament, which have prompted concern from performers including Rowan Atkinson. She said it was right that Muslims were protected from Islamaphobic abuse but wrong to curtail free speech: "Where malice is not intended, no comedian, no playwright, no actor will be able to do less under the new legislation." Ms Jowell acknowledged that New Labour was in a transition period. "It is like guiding a boat down a river with a lot of countervailing currents. There are counter-currents that want to turn this third term INTO phpbb_a period of time marked at one end by [Blair's] re-election and at the other end by his stepping down as Prime Minister and almost certainly the election of Gordon Brown as leader of the Labour Party but these are parts of a process. The important things are achieving the policy changes." When asked what Mr Blair's legacy will be she said it would be "building a consensus for British politics, which is in the centre ground". She added quickly: "But we are not at the point of defining a legacy because that always sounds like writing a political obituary." Clearly, she does not want to do that. |
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