by RAY FLEMING
IN this space yesterday I reflected on the difficulty facing any Leader of the Opposition in the House of Commons who puts a question to the Prime Minister that can be interpreted as criticising policies which British troops are fighting to implement. The first question Michael Howard put to Tony Blair yesterday about Iraq did not quite fall into that category but the Prime Minister immediately tried to suggest that it did and that Mr Howard was reneging on the full support which his party had given to the invasion of Iraq. It was a low blow which Mr Howard countered effectively but its significance was that it showed how sensitive the Prime Minister is to criticism on Iraq. The implication of his answer was, that for as long as British servicemen and women remain in Iraq, no criticism should be made of the way the aftermath of the war is being handled. That is clearly nonsense, especially in the case of a military commitment that is thought to be wrong by a substantial part of the public.
A LOW BLOW
29/04/2004 00:00
Also in Holiday
- Spain wants Britons to show they have 113.40 euros, £97, per day for their holidays
- Sunloungers set ablaze in Alcudia
- Spanish pensioners stuck at Palma Airport for fourteen hours
- Over two hours for Britons to get through Palma airport queues
- Palma Airport passport control "collapse" put down to unscheduled flights
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