Miliband urged to dump 'blundering' aides after Sun row
Ed Miliband should fire the “schoolboy” aides who told him to pose with a copy of The Sun newspaper unless they put a halt to a string of "elementary blunders", a senior party figure has said.
Mr Miliband faces defeat at the general election unless his media advisers stop making “unforced errors”, Tom Watson, a former member of the shadow cabinet, said.
The affair has added to concerns in the shadow cabinet that Mr Miliband is poorly advised and his office is not up to the job of fighting a general election, Mr Watson said.
He told BBC Radio 5 Live: “They've either got to lift their game - or move on and get people who can do the job.”
“It was a serious mistake and it's done a lot of damage to our base."
“He was very badly advised. It was his ultimate responsibility to do it but I just cannot believe the paper ended up in his office and someone ending up taking a photograph of it, and it ended up on the internet.
“The people around Ed, they're not civil servants. They're very powerful political people. They carry a lot of power in the Labour party. A lot of Labour members raise funds to pay their very good salaries and to make elementary blunders like this in the week that the Hillsborough inquests were taking place - I think it's a problem.
“I'm sure they'll be a lot of shadow cabinet members who are holding their counsel on this, but they are worried about the way Ed's office operates, and particularly the press operation."
Asked whether such mistakes would cost Labour the election, Mr Watson said: “I think Labour can win. But they've got to sharpen up. I'm saying that we've got the right message on the cost-of-living crisis, we've got some of the very best people at the top of the party, but these unforced errors cumulatively leave us in difficulty and it needs to stop.
“We had a leader of the Labour party who was publicly embarrassed on Thursday because whoever was in charge of press let him go through a process where we had councillors in Merseyside resigning. It was a schoolboy error from someone who doesn't understand the Labour party.”
Mr Watson was one of the most powerful figures in Labour as the party’s election co-ordinator, but he resigned last year in the row over allegations unions were rigging parliamentary candidate selections.
He is a vocal critic of Rupert Murdoch’s business.
