Leader comment: No need for Gordon Brown to apologise for being serious

Gordon Brown was a serious politician who dealt with serious issues, and seemed from another age now that we live in the social media era.Gordon Brown was a serious politician who dealt with serious issues, and seemed from another age now that we live in the social media era.
Gordon Brown was a serious politician who dealt with serious issues, and seemed from another age now that we live in the social media era.
Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown is not exactly a politician made for the Twitter age. A dour intellectual, sometime awkward in the company of others, Mr Brown could never quite do 'touchy-feely' the way other political leaders can.

Critics from within Labour often cite the former PM’s temperament for their loss of the 2010 election.

In a new book – My Life, Our Times – published next week, Mr Brown admits that, as PM, he was uncomfortable with the modern vogue for politicians to connect with voters through public displays of emotion.

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Though it is just seven years since Mr Brown left Downing Street, British politics has changed radically. A new generation of campaigners seems sometime to value the volume of their leaders’ anger over the quality of their arguments.

Mr Brown had many flaws as a leader but even his critics recognised in him a sincerity about his political mission. Now, with social media dominating our discourse, he appears like a figure from a forgotten age. He might not have been king of the selfie but he was a serious politician dealing with serious matters. That, when all is said and done, is more important than any number of “likes” on Facebook.

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