How close are Brown and Blair? This close
We put an end to the discussion
by Kieren McCarthy
During a week in which the relationship between Prime Minister Tony Blair
and Chancellor Gordon Brown was again under enormous scrutiny, one thing became
clear: that no one has a bloody clue how close they are, except perhaps Tone
and Gordon.
Until now that is. In a world-exclusive survey commissioned by The
Rockall Times, we have spoken in depth to well-placed sources, sources
close to the ministers, plain ordinary sources, good friends of both men,
insiders and a few drunks hanging around Charing Cross station and asked them
to judge, in TI units*, the different aspects of the men's relationship.
What we have discovered will shake the foundations of government to its
roots, reshape the way media will have to make vague comparisons, cause
well-informed and intelligent columnists to have to find another topic to drone
on about and probably ensure Life Will Never Be The Same Again™.
Here are the true figures on how the personal relationship between the two
most powerful politicians in the UK stands:
- Affection: Stands at the size of an egg, down from a grapefruit at
the last election
- Friendship: Stretches to four double-decker buses
- Trust: The size of five football pitches
- Enmity: One spoonful of it would kill three guinea pigs
- Respect: Blair's respect for Brown is as big as the BT Tower;
Brown's for Blair, the Empire State building.
- Understanding: As close as that as between three mothers and two
newly born babies.
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| And that just about settles it |
That should put an end to it until the New Year.
* Tabloid Issue units — set of international recognised units for
newspapers devised from two platinum measurements of the pun and the
over-exaggeration on 22 June 1799. Further developed in the 1980s under the
active leadership of Maxwell and MacKenzie through the British Association for
the Advancement of Journalese (BAAJ).