News image
Page last updated at 23:36 GMT, Tuesday, 19 August 2008 00:36 UK

Miliband denies 'Labour cold war'

David Miliband
Mr Miliband has been touted as a possible future Labour leader

Foreign Secretary David Miliband has denied relations between him and the prime minister are frosty.

Mr Miliband, who has been touted as a potential leadership challenger, was asked about relations with Gordon Brown during a press conference in Georgia.

"There are no frosty relations at all", in the government, he said, adding that he and Mr Brown are "working closely".

In July he wrote an article on Labour's future but made no mention of Mr Brown, who returned from holiday on Tuesday.

The foreign secretary said he was prompted to write his Guardian article because of the sense of "fatalism" in the party after its defeat in the Glasgow East by-election.

In the article, Mr Miliband urged Labour to find confidence to make its case afresh.

He has stressed on a number of occasions that he is not planning a leadership bid.

Following talks in the Georgian capital, Tibilisi, the foreign secretary was asked whether, for all the Cold War rhetoric being used with regards to Georgia, there was a cold war within the Labour Party.

Mr Miliband said: "There are no frosty relations at all within the government. I'm working closely with the prime minister on this issue. Just yesterday we were talking about the next steps - he's been making a major contribution at head of government level.

"This is clearly an international crisis, which the whole of the important work of the Foreign Office is now focussed on, obviously, and the prime minister and I are working closely together on the issue."


SEE ALSO
Miliband denies 'leadership' bid
30 Jul 08 |  UK Politics
Harman denies planning leader bid
29 Jul 08 |  UK Politics
Brown should quit, says Labour MP
28 Jul 08 |  UK Politics
Is Brown seriously at risk of axe?
28 Jul 08 |  UK Politics
Prescott warns over PM challenge
27 Jul 08 |  UK Politics
Brown dismisses resignation calls
26 Jul 08 |  UK Politics
Labour rebels told to back down
26 Jul 08 |  UK Politics

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites


FEATURES, VIEWS, ANALYSIS
Has China's housing bubble burst?
How the world's oldest clove tree defied an empire
Why Royal Ballet principal Sergei Polunin quit

PRODUCTS & SERVICES

AmericasAfricaEuropeMiddle EastSouth AsiaAsia Pacific