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UK leader's mission: "Global New Deal" with Obama
The Hill ^ | 02 Mar 2009 | Bridget Johnson

Posted on 03/02/2009 6:30:39 AM PST by BGHater

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown arrives in Washington this week to press for a “global new deal” to rescue the world from recession.

Brown will be the first European leader to meet with President Obama when he sits down for talks with Obama on Tuesday morning, then addresses a joint session of Congress on Wednesday.

The embattled prime minister arrives at a delicate moment in Anglo-American relations, amid speculation that the “special relationship” between the two countries might be downgraded.

Brown gave a preview of what he will say to Obama in an editorial for The Sunday Times, where he laid out a sweeping vision for America and Britain to use their relationship to take the lead in stopping the global financial nosedive and lifting all nations by the bootstraps. “I believe there is no challenge so great or so difficult that it cannot be overcome by America, Britain and the world working together,” Brown wrote. “That is why President Obama and I will discuss this week a global new deal, whose impact can stretch from the villages of Africa to reforming the financial institutions of London and New York– and giving security to the hard-working families in every country.”

Brown’s plan focuses on containing the financial crisis, giving a “kick-start” to lending, shunning protectionism, tighter regulation and oversight of financial institutions, and approaching recovery efforts with a global frame of mind.

“It is a global new deal that will lay the foundations not just for a sustainable economic recovery but for a genuinely new era of international partnership in which all countries have a part to play,” Brown wrote.

While Brown may find support for his broad initiatives in Washington, where Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package was passed with other promised reforms for healthcare and education on the way, his global gather-round-the-campfire approach to stemming recession may not find a warm reception elsewhere.

European Union leaders, most prominently German Chancellor Angela Merkel, rejected a multibillion euro bailout for struggling eastern European nations on Sunday, even as Hungary warned that the lack of rescue was simply going to erect a new, financial Iron Curtain dividing Europe.

But this week’s meeting and invitation to embark on Brown’s ambitious plan also mark a crossroads for U.S. policy, as Obama starts his term by recalibrating bilateral relations – whether vowing to engage in sustained diplomacy with Iran and Syria, moving forward with a Mideast peace process as Israel still lacks a firm ruling coalition, or weighing just how special the relationship between U.S. and Britain will be in his administration.

After moving into the Oval Office, Obama returned a Winston Churchill bust that had been loaned to the U.S. as a sign of solidarity after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, refusing an offer from British officials to keep Churchill for another four years. The British press leapt on the eviction as a snub to the “special partnership,” as the White House coined the relationship in a statement announcing Brown’s visit.

The question also remains whether Brown and Obama would even have much time to forge a partnership and bring about global economic renewal together. While Obama is still enjoying high popularity just weeks after being sworn in, Brown’s footing is shakier at home. According to a Guardian/ICM poll last week, 63 percent of respondents felt the Labour Party would fare better at elections if Brown wasn’t at the helm, while the Tories hold steady with a 12-point lead over Labour in terms of public support.

So while Obama may sit down and plan global economic change with Brown, he could find himself next year attempting to continue that effort with Conservative Party leader David Cameron. The two leaders have campaigned on markedly different ideas of change, and after a July meeting with Cameron on the European campaign trail, Obama reportedly called the Tory leader a “lightweight.”

Obama met last week with Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso, who suffers from about 80 percent voter disapproval and will also likely be replaced in a September election or earlier, if snap elections are called. “The two leaders agreed to work closely and urgently, as the world’s leading economies, to stimulate demand at home and abroad, to help other countries respond to the global crisis, to unfreeze credit markets, and to seek concrete results from the April London Economic Summit and through the G-8,” read a White House statement released after last week’s meeting. “They agreed fully on the need to resist protectionism.”

On March 24, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd will also visit the White House to discuss the global financial crisis.

These meetings, especially the chat with Brown this week, lay the groundwork for the G-20 economic summit in London on April 2. Clearly seizing the opportunity to take a leadership role in the recession as his country hosts the roundtable, Brown has further detailed his “global new deal” in “The Road to the London Summit” report released last month. His appearances this week in D.C. could determine how much of a partner the U.S. will be on that journey.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Government; Politics/Elections; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: bho44; bhonwo; brown; globalism; gordonbrown; newdeal; nwo; obama
The NWO on the move.
1 posted on 03/02/2009 6:30:39 AM PST by BGHater
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To: BGHater

Good luck with that Obama. In the UK Gordon Brown is about as popular as amoebic dystentry.


2 posted on 03/02/2009 6:41:34 AM PST by agere_contra (So ... where's the birth certificate?)
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To: BGHater

England needs a bailout too.


3 posted on 03/02/2009 6:49:30 AM PST by Tarpon (It's a common fact, one can't be liberal and rational at the same time.)
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To: BGHater

Twenty years ago I used to hear these so-called one-world government "kooks" on Jan Michelson's show on WHO Radio in Des Moines, and thought these people were out of their minds. I was so wrong now; it is frightening their prophecy is coming true.

4 posted on 03/02/2009 10:39:48 AM PST by hawkeye101 (DO NOT READ THIS TAGLINE. WHY DID YOU READ THIS? I TOLD YOU NOT TO!)
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