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Economic Development

Sell Birmingham - don't talk it down, Sir Albert Bore told by former council deputy

Birmingham City Council leader urged to start selling Birmingham instead of talking about hardship

Albert Bore

Birmingham Council leader Sir Albert Bore has been accused of talking down the city by one of his former deputies.

Writing in this week’s Birmingham Post, Labour veteran Hugh McCallion warned him to start selling Birmingham instead of talking about the hardship of budget cuts.

Mr McCallion specifically raised Sir Albert’s famous and said such rhetoric was at odds with the council’s ambition of making the city the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s enterprise capital.

“When he uses phrases like ‘the jaws of doom’ and then talks about encouraging industry and investment, he doesn’t seem to appreciate that one can easily cancel out the other,” Mr McCallion said.

“The ‘jaws of doom’, by no means an original phrase, is highly descriptive and memorable but, unfortunately, it is memorable to those individuals and organisations he is asking to invest in Birmingham.”

Mr McCallion, a former council deputy leader, continued: “I saw a television interview when he was effusive about the kind of industries we need to attract.

“I was in agreement with him up to that point.

“When the interviewer asked him if he was withdrawing his ‘jaws of doom’ comment, he said the situation was, in fact, a lot worse than when he said it and would deteriorate going forward.”