Project Gordon

Not been the best week for Mr. Brown. Approximately 6 months after Project Gordon disasterously failed to “put a more human face on the Iron Chancellor”, Blair has come out and said that he will remain in office for “at least another year”. UBS have predicted that CPI is about to hit 2.8%, which means more rate hikes are on the way, which is unlikely to impress Britain’s over-indebted population of Labour Voters, as they see their mortgage repayments hit heights they never expected. The economics editor of the Guardian summed up the situation nicely today, reiterating the fears that people appear to be facing, after one tiny measly 0.25% rate rise:

We will see in the coming months just how many individuals in Britain are living on the edge, with only modest increases in rates enough to tip them over the edge. My guess is that the economy is far more sensitive to a quarter-point rise in borrowing costs than it was, especially if there is a threat of further moves from the Bank. The fact that insolvencies were 66% higher in the second quarter of 2006 than in the second quarter of 2005 is a sign of just how tough many people are finding it to meet their financial commitments; add in spiralling energy costs, rising unemployment and higher interest rates and you have the recipe for extreme difficulties for many households.

So, despite being listed in Time Magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world (Blair was excluded) last year, things are not looking too good for Gordon. He may not be facing serious competition for the succession (John McDonnel notwithstanding), but the real question is: if and when Gordon hits Number Ten, how long is he expecting to remain?

Betfair Odds for Gordon as Next Labour Leader: 1.42
Betfair Odds for Next General Election: Labour 2.1, Conservatives 1.93

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