Daily Mail Claims Miliband Wanted To Carve Election Pledges Into Cheddar Gorge, Labour Says It's 'Untrue'

Mail Stick The Boot Into Miliband With Cheddar Gorge Story
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The Daily Mail stuck the boot into Ed Miliband’s ribs on Sunday, publishing a story claiming the outgoing Labour leader wanted to chisel his election pledges into a cliff face at Cheddar Gorge. According to the newspaper, the plan was dumped in favour of the (arguably) less ridiculous eight-foot block of stone graced by six key promises, which Miliband unveiled to fanfare and bafflement in Hastings ahead of his election defeat.

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Did Miliband want to carve these pledges into Cheddar Gorge?

According to the newspaper, the cliff face plan was abandoned because the party could not find anywhere suitable. A source told the tabloid: "They asked someone to allow them to carve the letters on their land. People were very excited about it. The letters would have been huge - same wording as appears on the stone. But the problem was, they couldn't find a suitable location or anybody to allow it." The source added: "After the discussion, none of us could stop thinking about Ed's face glaring down, Lincoln-like, from a mountainside."

However, a Labour spokesman told the Press Association the story was "totally untrue and utter rubbish". Over the weekend it was reported that the "EdStone" is being stored at a warehouse on the Westminster industrial estate in Woolwich, south-east London. It was produced by masonry specialists Stone Circle at the company's factory on the outskirts of Basingstoke, Hampshire.

Ed Miliband's Potential Successors
Andy Burnham(01 of05)
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A senior Labour source told Mehdi Hasan, formerly of HuffPostUK that Burnham, who also stood in 2010, "will be the unions' candidate tomorrow". (credit:Yui Mok/PA Wire)
Yvette Cooper(02 of05)
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Unlike her husband Ed Balls, the shadow home secretary didn't run in 2010 for the party leadership. Now could be her chance and her husband would be unlikely to challenge her. (credit:Nick Ansell/PA Wire)
Liz Kendall(03 of05)
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Kendall, the Shadow Minister for Care and Older People, was deemed to be launching a leadership bid when, in January, she told The House magazine the private sector had a role in the NHS because "what matters is what works". (credit:John Stillwell/PA Wire)
Chuka Umunna(04 of05)
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After boosting his own majority by more than 10,000 in this election, Shadow Business Secretary Umunna must want to move on to bigger things. Having entered parliament 2010, he doesn't have the damaging association with New Labour that Miliband and Balls did. (credit:Matt Dunham/AP)
David Miliband(05 of05)
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If Miliband senior sees a by-election he likes, he could return to parliament and seek to be his party's leader in time for 2020. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)