Loading... Please wait...

In defence of Dawn Butler

Though not quite as scandalous as the Zinoviev letter, a lot of flack has been flying around the internet over the last couple of days with reference to what we shall term 'the Obama letter', the letter hosted on up-and-coming MP Dawn Butler's website which is signed by Barack Obama.

Unity has been kind enough to provide us with a Photoshop analysis of what went up on the website, but it seems rather inconclusive.

We thought that all of this prompted a bit of further investigation, so we went to Brent to have a chat to the team behind Dawn to find out what exactly happened. Not only did we interview the team members who were meant to be behind all of this malarkey, we also took a look at the scan of the letter itself. But we don't have a copy though, I'm afraid, so I'm afraid Unity is going to have to trust us on this.

The artifacts around the signature on the page pretty much replicate everything else on it. The original scan is covered in them; not just the portcullis logo, but also the words. This is either a problem with the settings on Dawn's scanner, or her office staff have somehow compressed the picture.


We went on to ask one of Dawn's staff members how the situation with regard to the letter had unfolded. Apparently Dawn's team had already asked and obtained a quote from Obama's people prior to them knowing that she would meet him and that his people were more than happy to give a quote to the first black female MP to ever serve in a British Government.

Now this is the boring part: they were told at very short noticed that she would be meeting the now President during his whistle stop visit to the UK, and say that as soon as they knew she was meeting him, they printed off the quotes ready for him to sign. They used the letterhead of the parliamentary crest to print it on as it was in the printer at the time but later removed this from the website when they became aware (presumably via Iain Dale) that it was actually present.

There were two slightly different statements signed by Mr Obama (yes, they were actually signed by him), one of which was for press purposes, and another for communicating with constituents.

The team acknowledge that the staff member responsible forgot to edit the portcullis out of the picture and had been planning to do this anyway, so that website visitors would look at the content of the note rather than the crest.

OK, so slightly slapdash stuff, but the mistake was an innocent one, and has now been rectified.

We're often tempted to distrust politicians because they are politicians. This can be healthy, but it often leads us to unreasonably assume the worst. This is often not fair. In this particular case, we're not even talking about the politician, but a member of her staff who simply made a mistake.

It's a lot more boring when we find stuff like this out, but it's encouraging too.

Posted on Jan 23, 2009 at 06:05pm


12 Comments · Show / Hide
Leave a comment »   show trash comments ·
So Obama approved a quote that begins "Having met Dawn Butler ...", having never actually met her? And somehow formed the opinion that she was "bright, intelligent and determined." This kind of thing really gives politics a bad name.

As for making a big deal about it - it's on the front page of her site. "Look at me! I got an endorsement from an important guy I'd never met! Credibility! Yay!" The desparation in the Labour party to get some Obama-magic rubbed off on them is a bit sickening...

Tom - do you really not see that things like this make politicians appear shady, grasping and fake?
Troy Smith @ 79 weeks ago
"It has just been announced we are in a recession, people are losing jobs and across the world people are worrying about their future and some right-wing chinless bloging wonders try to scrape out a few political points over a signed piece of paper"

Well, Tom took time out to investigate the story - and I'm just querying an odd statement in his piece. Sorry. I didn't go either to Eton or Oxford, honest guv.
Matt London @ 79 weeks ago
That wasn't aimed at you Matt or the posters on here.Apologies if it came across that way. However if you were to read a few right wing bloggers sites in the last 24 hours this non-story has been so controversial to them it is their blogging headlines.
RED RAG ! @ 79 weeks ago
Christ on a bike. It has just been announced we are in a recession, people are losing jobs and across the world people are worrying about their future and some right-wing chinless bloging wonders try to scrape out a few political points over a signed piece of paper.Oh for the froth within the bubble of Westminster.
RED RAG ! @ 79 weeks ago
"the first black female MP to ever serve in a British Government" Really - she's a minister?
Matt London @ 79 weeks ago
Not a 'full' one but she serves in the government yeah. Low down - she got promoted when those people resigned last Autumn.
Alex Ross @ 78 weeks and 6 days ago
You don't think its at all cheesy or crass then?
Chris Gilmour @ 79 weeks ago
Yep...
Paul Pinfield @ 79 weeks ago
Yes, I do.

But the issue is whether or not he actually signed it; that's what the article I was referring to questioned. So I thought I'd do some digging.
Tom Miller @ 78 weeks and 6 days ago
Anyone with half a brain can see Dawn Butler's piece of self promoting nonsense for what it is. Even if it was genuine it would be wholly inappropriate and crass. The fact that she removed the letter from her website when she was found out and then replaced it minus the HoC letterhead and changed spelling says it all. How very, very New Labour.
Ian Clark @ 78 weeks and 6 days ago
It's dam sight easier to blame a member of staff something New Labour is getting an expert at.
Robert Naether @ 78 weeks and 5 days ago
It doesn't say a lot for Mr Obama, that he is prepared to sign any piece of paper that crosses his path without bothering to check what he is signing.

Ms Butler comes over as a real charmless chancer. She ought to remember that old adage: "self-praise is no recommendation"
Alan Giles @ 78 weeks and 1 day ago