Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Gordon Brown 'mortified' by his 'bigoted woman' slur

Gordon Brown 'mortified' by his 'bigoted woman' slur

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The moment Gordon Brown was caught on microphone

Gordon Brown has said he is "mortified" after being caught on microphone describing a voter he had just spoken to in Rochdale as a "bigoted woman".

Gillian Duffy, 65, had challenged him on issues including immigration.

As he got into his car, he was still wearing a broadcast microphone and was heard to say "that was a disaster".

Mr Brown later spent more than half an hour at Mrs Duffy's house, apologising to her before telling waiting reporters he had misunderstood what she had said.

He said: "If you like, I'm a penitent sinner. Sometimes you say things you don't mean to say, sometimes you say things by mistake and sometimes when you say things you'll want to correct them very quickly.

"I wanted to come here and say to Gillian that I was sorry, I had made a mistake, but also to say I understood the concerns she was bringing to me and I had simply misunderstood some of the words she had used."

'BIGOTED' JIBE COVERAGE
Gillian Duffy and Gordon Brown

Nick Robinson: 'That was a disaster'
Profile of the woman behind row
Transcripts: All the exchanges
Analysis: Why it matters
Classic gaffes caught on tape
Reaction to 'bigoted' comment
Your views on Brown's comment
In pictures: how it unfolded
Eyewitness: PM's day of horror
Brown's apology to activists

He had already phoned Mrs Duffy to apologise after the tape was played to him during a BBC Radio 2 interview.

After listening to the recording, with his forehead resting on his hand, he said: "I do apologise if I've said anything that has been hurtful."

Mr Brown later made an even stronger apology to Labour members, saying he "profoundly regretted" the incident.

The comments were made after the conversation with Mrs Duffy which ended with him complimenting her and her family.

As he went to get into his car, Mr Brown told her: "Very nice to meet you, very nice to meet you."

But off camera, and not realising he still had a Sky News microphone pinned to his shirt, he was heard to tell an aide: "That was a disaster - they should never have put me with that woman. Whose idea was that? It's just ridiculous..."

Asked what she had said, he is heard to reply: "Ugh everything! She's just a sort of bigoted woman that said she used to be Labour. I mean it's just ridiculous. I don't know why Sue brought her up towards me."

'Ordinary people'

Mrs Duffy said after hearing of Mr Brown's comments: "I'm very upset. He's an educated person. Why has he come out with words like that?

"He's supposed to be leading the country and he's calling an ordinary woman who's come up and asked questions that most people would ask him... It's going to be tax, tax, tax for another 20 years to get out of this national debt, and he's calling me a bigot."

Mrs Duffy, a widow who has a daughter and two grandchildren, said she used to work with disabled children for Rochdale council before she retired.

Gillian Duffy: "I want to know why I was called a bigot"

She had earlier told reporters she was a lifelong Labour voter and described Mr Brown as being "very nice".

Mrs Duffy has not made any comments since Mr Brown's personal visit but asked before whether his phone call would in any way make up for the comments she said "no - absolutely not".

BBC political editor Nick Robinson said it was a disaster for the prime minister because it showed the gap between his public and private face.

"For those of us who have known Gordon Brown for many years, what we have seen is no huge surprise. He has got better and better at handling himself in public, but quite often he flares up in private, expresses frustration," he said.

He said it was impossible to say what impact the incident would have on voters. But with Labour trailing in the polls, he added, every day left in the campaign needed to be a good day for Mr Brown and this clearly was not.

Speaking on Radio 2's Jeremy Vine show, Mr Brown said: "Of course I apologise if I've said anything that's been offensive and I would never put myself in a position where I would want to say anything like that about a woman I'd met.

"I blame myself for what is done, but you've got to remember that this was me being helpful to the broadcasters, with my microphone on, rushing into the car because I had to get to another appointment and they have chosen to play my private conversation. These things can happen, I apologise profusely to the lady concerned."

Brown: "I apologise if I've said anything that has been hurtful"

Mr Brown also apologised to Labour Party members, acknowledging the incident had "dominated" the news and could impact on their campaigning.

He said: "I am under no illusions as to how much scorn some in the media will want to heap upon me in the days ahead."

The Conservatives said Mr Brown's comments spoke for themselves.

Shadow chancellor George Osborne said: "That's the thing about general elections, they do reveal the truth about people."

Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg said the incident was "just wrong", when someone had asked him a "perfectly reasonable question".

"Of course we have differences of opinion, that's what a democracy is about, but just because someone disagrees with you it doesn't mean you should insult them. Whatever people say you try to treat them with the respect they deserve," he said.

Mr Clegg later said the prime minister had "gone out of his way to apologise and that's that".

'Heat of the moment'

Business Secretary Lord Mandelson said Mr Brown was "mortified" over the hurt he had caused Mrs Duffy.

He told the BBC: "I'm afraid that sometimes you get picked up by a microphone in this way, saying something that yes you don't believe, but you say in the heat of a moment.

"We all do it, we all regret it and, how people I think should judge him is by how he's responded, by 'phoning her immediately and giving her an unqualified apology."

And Alastair Campbell, Tony Blair's former communications director who met Mr Brown after the incident, said his remarks were a "mistake".

"To say he was mortified is an understatement," he wrote in his blog. "I don't think I have ever seen him so angry with himself. And he was angry less about the obvious media frenzy he had unleashed than the fact that he said what he did.

"She was clearly not a bigot and he knew that."

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