David Miliband's General Election Tweet Branded Cryptic By Damian McBride Who Tells Him To 'Shut Up'

David Miliband Told To 'Shut Up' After Cryptic Tweet
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David Miliband - whom many in Labour believe could have won yesterday's general election had he beaten his brother for the Labour leadership - has been attacked for being cryptic in a tweet he sent about the result that implied he could seek a return to British politics.

Miliband quit parliament in 2013, ending speculation he might seek to return to the Labour frontbench or even try to challenge his younger brother to be party leader before the election.

After Ed Miliband resigned, David tweeted his thoughts of how the Labour party should recover:

The tweets fuelled speculation among political journalists that he might seek to return to parliament as Labour politicians prepare to launch campaigns to become the next leader.

But Damian McBride, former spin doctor to Gordon, Brown was angered and attacked Miliband for his comment, saying he should stop asking "media cryptographers to tell the public what you're saying".

In an update to his memoir of his spin doctor days published last year, McBride wrote: ""Labour currently has no clear idea who its target audience is, no positive messages to communicate to anyone about why they should vote for the party, no policies which will persuade them, and is being run in a totally dysfunctional way."

He added: "What, at present, is the common denominator of their policies? A great, steaming pile of fudge."

Miliband senior has repeatedly refused to rule out a return to British politics. In December, The Financial Times asked whether he would and he said: You just don’t know, do you?"

John Rentoul, the Blairite columnist, wrote that David Miliband could have won the election for Labour.

"Instead, Labour is one of three parties that emerges from last night facing questions about its viability," he wrote.

"When Neil Kinnock welcomed Ed Miliband's election as leader, saying, 'We've got our party back,' he spoke true. The party went back to the past, and back to the kind of election results it won in the past."

Louise Mensch, who, like David Miliband, stood down as an MP to move to New York, told Channel 4 on election night that she expected to "lose David Miliband as a neighbour very soon".

When Ed Miliband was grilled by Jeremy Paxman in March, Paxman said: "A lot of people when they look at your candidacy for the most powerful job in the land, they look at you and they say, “What a shame it’s not his brother."

Miliband said: "That's obviously not the way I see it. You need a toughness in this job. People have thrown a lot at me but I'm a pretty resilient guy."

Immediately after the interview ended, Paxman asked Miliband: "Are you alright?"

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)