Tuesday 3 June 2008

Exclusive: Jacqui Smith now 20/1 to replace Gordon Brown.

After reading Nick Robinson's Blog this afternoon, I contacted William Hill to see if they had picked up on Jacqui Smith's performance last night. Their Media Relations Director Graham Sharpe kindly got back to me at 15:28 with this:

William Hill have cut the odds of Jacqui Smith replacing Gordon Brown from 33/1 to 20/1.

From William Hill:

YOU BET SMITH COULD SUCCEED BROWN

Jacqui Smith has emerged as a potential contender to succeed Gordon Brown as Labour Leader and William Hill have cut her odds from 33/1 to 20/1 after she apparently impressed Labour MPs with her arguments over the 42 day issue. 'Ms Smith has apparently enhanced her reputation in recent days and we have cut her odds accordingly, but she still has some way to go to become the first female Labour leader' says Hill's spokesman Graham Sharpe.

Hills make David Miliband 5/2 favourite and also offer 7/1 Johnson; Straw; 8/1 Balls; 9/1 Denham; Purnell; 14/1 Burnham; Cruddas; 16/1 Benn.

Today Nick Robinson reported on his Blog that Smith's star could be rising in the Labour leadership race:
Shares in Smith soared last night. As Labour MP's and peers poured out of the Parliamentary Labour Party meeting all were agreed that Jacqui the home secretary had put in the performance of her life. Some went further and claimed that this was the best ministerial performance in the past year or two.

Even those Labour MPs, who still refuse to vote for 42 days - and there are still quite a few - know that the home secretary was not the one to come up with the idea. Instead she was handed this poisoned chalice by Gordon Brown.

Last night in the lobby, some even dared think whether our Jacqui might be the next leader that Labour is looking for.
Oh my God! Can you imagine it? Jacqui Smith as PM - It would go down a storm with the police.

3 comments:

John M Ward said...

Wow! A female Prime Minister as a possibility -- now there's a novel idea...

More seriously, I don't think a one-off reportedly top-notch performance (to her own party, so hardly all that challenging an audience) is reason enough to consider her as a serious contender. However the problem remains that there really isn't anyone in the offing who would be much good, regardless.

Whoever it turned out to be would still be effectively without a mandate from the electorate, who voted in the 2005 General Election on the basis that Blair was to serve the full term. We don't have a presidential system in this country, but we still cast our votes on the basis of stated claims about who is going to run the country and how.

I wish they'd just go to the country, right now, and again let the people decide who should be running the country, and how.

Daily Referendum said...

John,

Unfortunately novelty trumps ability every time.

Anonymous said...

I think my money would be better off safely locked away in my wallet.