http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/ed-miliband/11212964/Ed-Miliband-is-abandoned-left-to-face-his-destiny-alone.html
Ed Miliband is abandoned, left to face his destiny alone
Even the New Statesman is calling time on the Ed Miliband era. Labour and the Left are turning on their leader
And then there were none. This morning Jason Cowley – editor of the house journal of the progressive Left, the New Statesman – has effectively called time on Ed Miliband’s leadership. Miliband is “trapped”, he writes. “His MPs sense it and the polls reflect it. Ukip is attracting support in the party’s old working-class northern English heartlands and winning converts in key Home Counties swing seats that Labour would once have hoped to win. In Scotland the SNP has become the natural party of government.”
According to Cowley, “Labour wins well when its leader seems most in tune with the times and can speak for and to the people about who they are and what they want to be in the near future: Attlee in 1945, Wilson in 1966, Blair in 1997.” By contrast, Miliband “does not have a compelling personal story to tell the electorate”. He “doesn’t really understand the lower middle class or material aspiration. He doesn’t understand Essex Man or Woman”. Instead, Labour is currently lead by “an old-style Hampstead socialist”, with “a deterministic, quasi-Marxist analysis of our present ills”, who has created “a gulf between the radicalism of his rhetoric and the low-toned incrementalism of his policies”.
This is not the Daily Mail we’re talking about, but the New Statesman. On the front cover is an artist’s impression of Miliband wearing a fez. Six months from the election, the Left is now openly mocking its own leader.
Yesterday evening, as the embargoed copies of Cowley’s article began to circulate, it was announced that Miliband had conducted a mini-reshuffle. Shadow transport secretary Mary Creagh had replaced Jim Murphy at DfID, and had in return been replaced by Michael Dugher, who had previously held the post of shadow minister for kicking lumps out of the Coalition.
But there were two other significant appointments. Lucy Powell, Ed Miliband’s former chief of staff, has been formally brought into the shadow cabinet, as has key Miliband supporter and union go-between Jon Trickett. Powell is a rising star, Trickett an old Westminster greybeard. Yet both were already fully paid-up members of the Miliband inner circle. And their elevation represents a final, symbolic circling of the wagons.