When news happens, text LT and your photos and videos to 80360. Or contact us by email or phone.
11:10am Thursday 7th May 2009 in News
By Tom Moseley, Reporter
BLACKBURN MP Jack Straw is this week celebrating 30 years as the town’s MP. We spent a hectic day with Mr Straw in London to discover what life is like in the corridors of power for the Justice Secretary.
IN THE organised chaos of GMTV’s South Bank studios, a young woman is busily brushing make-up on to Jack Straw’s face.
“Is my hair OK?” he asks her, as cameramen and runners dodge around his two security guards.
It’s two minutes before This Morning goes on air, and the Blackburn MP is top of the show’s bill.
After a quick handshake with host Eamonn Holmes, he settles out of shot on the sofa as the theme music plays, waiting patiently alongside resident agony aunt Denise Robertson.
His cue arrives when Holmes and co-host, his partner Ruth Langsford, who have introduced the day’s programme, join them on the sofa.
The hot topic is family courts. It is the day when the media are allowed in for the first time to listen in on sensitive divorce, custody and care hearings.
But the measures announced by the Justice Secretary do not go far enough for many people.
Critics claim they will still allow injustices to take place in “secret”, and with the cameras rolling Robertson suddenly springs to life, accusing him of “gagging” families.
A Ministry of Justice official glances nervously at one of the TV monitors as the agony aunt, who claims she has received hundreds of letters from distraught families, asks him about a child who was separated from his parents for three years.
But Mr Straw, who admits he does not know the circumstances of that case, has been well-briefed on the way to the studio, and stays calm.
He fields questions from all three and pushes his view that the measures will make family courts more accountable.
The appearance on This Morning is his second interview on a busy news day which began at 6.15am when he was grilled by James Naughtie on Radio Four’s Today programme.
Later he is to make a statement to Parliament officially abandoning controversial plans for giant Titan prisons in favour of smaller jails.
The two stories had been the main items up for discussion in his morning meetings with advisers and officials earlier in the morning at Ministry of Justice headquarters.
Leaving the back exit of GMTV’s base, he is accosted by two government ‘groupies’. The two men, who call themselves Simon and Clive, add a photo of Mr Straw to their scrapbook which already includes Prime Minister Gordon Brown and other front bench figures.
A blacked-out Jaguar takes him back through central London to his offices, via a diversion around Parliament Square because of the Sri Lankan Tamil demonstrations.
With his day already six hours old, he meets, in private, the family of a man killed by a dangerous driver in the Midlands.
Then it’s time for another meeting. “I am never unbusy”, he says.
Lunch is a plate of sandwiches while Mr Straw joins officials and his fellow justice ministers, including former Pendle councillor Shahid Malik, to discuss the week’s parliamentary schedule.
It’s been a gruelling morning just shadowing the Justice Secretary – but then he is reaping the benefits of his regular workout in the House of Commons gym, where willing MPs submit themselves to classes including ‘Body Blast’ aerobics and weights sessions.
After a behind-closed-doors political briefing between the MPs, he returns to his office on the ninth floor of the MoJ’s sprawling headquarters, on Petty France overlooking a London panorama including nearby Buckingham Palace.
It’s a little different from Richmond Terrace, his constituency office in central Blackburn.
“I prefer Blackburn”, he says, insisting the pile of Lancashire Telegraphs on his coffee table is not just for show.
The office is decorated with a few family photos together with snaps of Mr Straw with some high-profile figures including former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who famously visited him in Blackburn in 2006.
With his parliamentary appearance fast approaching, a string of phone calls are lined up to brief people about his announcement, as advisers rush in and out bringing files of papers and cups of tea. He speaks to people whose areas will be affected by the prison plans, inclu-ding Birming-ham MP and Iraq war rebel Clare Short and a good-natured conversation with Tory London mayor Boris Johnson.
At 3.28pm there’s a murmur in the House of Commons chamber as Mr Straw replaces schools secretary Ed Balls on the front bench to make his announ-cement.
The prison plans had already appeared in the national newspapers the previous week, and shadow Justice Secretary Dominic Grieve accuses Mr Straw of showing “disdain” to parliament by leaking details to the press. “I did not appreciate the leaks that took place”, replies the Justice Secretary, who then faces attack from all corners of the House.
These include a Labour MP demanding answers about cuts to probation budgets in Leeds, and a Liberal Democrat who claims millions are being wasted on policies that do not work.
His fellow East Lancashire Labour MP Gordon Prentice, who represents Pendle, then weighs in, branding a policy “the worst kind of populist nonsense imaginable”, to laughter from the chamber.
“We share a valley, and much else besides”, replies Mr Straw - possibly while trying to work out how to answer - before pointing out the policy had been proposed by residents at one of his Blackburn surgeries.
As calls roll into the MoJ press officers about possible sites for new prisons, the department prepares for the arrival of a special guest, US Attorney General Eric Holder.
The two give a joint speech to MoJ staff and FBI officials silently join Mr Straw’s guards in the audience. But their arrival means the Lancashire Telegraph’s day with Jack Straw is over. Nobody is allowed upstairs any more for security reasons as they hold bilateral talks.
Later there was a meeting of the Parliamentary Labour Party at 6pm at the House of Commons and dinner with Mr Holder at Lancaster House.
When we left him, the streets around Westminster were rapidly filling with commuters heading for the tube at the end of their nine to fives - and Mr Straw showed no outward signs of tiredness.
It had been a “fairly typical day”, he said, as he was swept upstairs with the Attorney General - and suddenly body blast aerobics seemed like child’s play.
Comments(13)
Lifeinthemix
says...
8:58pm Thu 7 May 09
Lifeinthemix
says...
9:11pm Thu 7 May 09
Lifeinthemix
says...
9:15pm Thu 7 May 09
Lifeinthemix
says...
9:19pm Thu 7 May 09
Lifeinthemix
says...
9:24pm Thu 7 May 09
Ragnar Forkbeard
says...
10:40pm Thu 7 May 09
duke bar
says...
10:51pm Thu 7 May 09
Lifeinthemix
says...
10:55pm Thu 7 May 09
Old Timer
says...
11:37pm Thu 7 May 09
Old Timer
says...
11:48pm Thu 7 May 09
Political Watch
says...
11:51pm Thu 7 May 09
Lifeinthemix
says...
11:57pm Thu 7 May 09
Search jobs in and around Lancashire
Search Now »
Find the right person for you
Search Now »
Search houses, flats, and all properties
Search Now »
Search new & used cars in and around Lancashire
Search Now »
Ex-Darrener says...
4:55pm Thu 7 May 09