Anatole Kaletsky and Siobhan Kennedy: Davos sketch
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Davos is famously the setting for Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain. It tells the story of a young German who travels to a sanatorium in the Swiss Alps to recover from a deathly illness. The rarefied mountain air and time away from the stresses of daily life eventually help to nurture the man back to health.
If yesterday was anything to go by, Davos proved to be a Magic Mountain for Gordon Brown, too. The run-up to his one-day stop at this year’s World Economic Forum hasn’t been ideal. The besieged PM has had to grapple with the resignation of Peter Hain, an embarrassing climbdown on capital gains tax and the botched rescue of Northern Rock.
But rather than looking subdued, Mr Brown was in his element, and unquestionably the PM was the star of the show. Appearing in no fewer than three plenary sessions, on “global citizenship”, “civic duty” and “business-government partnerships to meet the Millennium Development Goals”, Mr Brown was unrecognisable to those who had grown accustomed to his miserable Westminster mien. He even slipped in a surprise visit to a lunch of Britain’s top businessmen where he cracked jokes and stole the limelight from the energetic Foreign Secretary, David Miliband.
Mr Brown’s good humour was hardly surprising, considering the introduction he received from the Forum founder, Professor Claus Schwab, saying: “The purpose of Davos is to promote entrepreneurship in the global public interest. But you, Mr Brown, are the finest example I know of Prime Ministership in the global public interest. You have led global initiatives to cure disease in Africa, to promote education, to end global poverty — and I could go on and on!”
Delegates who witnessed the transformed Mr Brown here said Davos had been the tonic the Prime Minister needed. One chief executive, who asked not to be named, said: “He’s very comfortable in this domain. He’s got the background to understand it all, he’s got ten years worth of relationships and back home is trouble. It’s more engaging for him to be here than to stay at home and be attacked by [David] Cameron.”
When he spoke, Mr Brown described how much better the world economy would work with all sorts of new institutions. He pledged that the world would not stand by while one in seven women in Sierra Leone died in childbirth for want of trained medical staff. He then declared with evident satisfaction that many more children in Africa were now being educated.
Lord Winston, the retired fertility scientist and Labour peer, said: “What we have seen in Davos is a rather reasonable performance that was listened to with respect and appreciation. Last year Tony Blair was going through a very bad patch at home and he was marvellous in Davos. Gordon has shown those same sort of characteristics.”
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What embitterred little bloggers.
So cutting third world debt isn't an acheivement. The very interest on the debt was crippling the poorest African countries and preventing them even making a start on development.
But let us not for one second give any credit to your own country/Government for making it happen. That would be simply be too un-British.
Ian, Toronto, Canada
The real purpose of Davos is as an ego fest for those who attend. They want to be seen with other famous people.
I once saw an appalling American business lady there, who, fortunately, I have never heard of since. She hired a photographer and leapt out from behind pillars to be photographed with the great and good. They looked most surprised, but smiled for the camera. That is why they are there.
Of course the organizers arrange glowing introductions! They want to promote the event to the media, to try to give it some real importance.
chris clarke, chappaqua, New York USA
It looks like the Hain debacle has gotten Labour, and their apologists rattled. Hence the damage limitation exercise going on now.
Curbishly, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Don't tell me - we paid for his little excursion. It was probably rather like a National Union of Students conference - all do-gooders thinking they had the monopoly on charity and changing the world.
But he ignores the people in whose name he is ruler at his peril.
Gerald Dyson, Leeds,
Career politicians look for their next promotion which is Europe or the International stage.
So the focus changes from their own constituents ie the people and their own country to their future employers. Blair was the person who exposed this strategy in irrefutable terms.
This needs to stop. It is breaking down the sovereignty and cohesion of our own society. One way of stopping this is to introduce more democracy and immediate feedback and consequences to our (once every four years) elected representatives.
David Cartright, Birmingham,
Brown is Yesterdays man... we need someone with vision to lead the UK
Hal, Methil, Scotland
But Davos does not count - we do not live there!
Brown is simply not delivering.
Platitudes at Davos - a mutual admiration society - achieve nothing. The last thing we need are yet more world institutions, especially from Brown - he has the FSA to sort out first.
Michael Corby, London,