Who’s on the Ropes Now? 
Ross McKibbin
That a week is a long time in politics is one of those wise sayings which usually turns out to be untrue. Not now. All those articles written only a couple of weeks ago and giving entirely good reasons why Gordon Brown was on top and David Cameron on the ropes now look faintly embarrassing. But at the beginning of October Brown was on top and no one can be faulted for failing to see his impending humiliation. Nor could they have predicted that the abandonment of a premature general election would lead directly to the resignation of Menzies Campbell as Liberal Democrat leader, even though his position had for some time been uncertain. Yet little more than a week later, Brown is on the ropes, Cameron on top and Campbell has gone.
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Ross McKibbin is a fellow of St John’s College, Oxford, and the author of Classes and Cultures: England 1918-51 and The Evolution of the Labour Party: 1910-24.
Other articles by this contributor:
Make enemies and influence people · Ross McKibbin tells Tony Blair what to do
Nothing More Divisive · The Great Secondary School Disaster
What Works Doesn’t Work · Politics without Ideas
Mondeo Man in the Driving Seat · Blair’s Government at Mid-Term (1999)
What can Cameron do? · The Tories and the Financial Crisis
Sleazy, Humiliated, Despised · Can Labour survive Blair?
Pure New Labour · Three Groans for Gordon
The Tax-and-Spend Vote · Ross McKibbin wonders whether the election will improve New Labour’s grasp on reality