Georgia Gould - Labour's "red Princess"
Meet the Labour MP for Queen's Park and Maida Vale
Have you heard of Georgia Gould, the new Labour MP for Maida Vale & Queen's Park?
According to Tatler sheās the āāred Princessā who everyone is talking aboutā.
Really?
Perhaps this is the case in Westminster - but I suspect others around the country may need an introduction.
Labour Royalty
Tatler had a point when it deemed Gould the āred Princessā. Sheās the daughter of Philip Gould (Baron Gould of Brookwood, who passed away in 2011), royalty as far as Blairites are concerned. As the publication explains:
Appointed by Peter Mandelson to lead the partyās strategy and polling for over two decades, Lord Brookwood was a close confidant of Tony Blair, a noblesse of New Labour associated with modernising the rose. Georgiaās mother, Baroness Gail Ruth Rebuck, is Chair of Penguin Random House, a Labour peer since 2014, and (according to Womenās Hour in 2013) the 10th most powerful woman in the country.
Gould Junior - although not a household name - is one of the most well known figures in Labour circles, not only because of her family connection to New Labour (of 90s fame), but having carved out her own career in Labour-run Camden Council, where she worked for over two decades.
Starting off as a councillor in 2010, Gould rose to become Camdenās leader for seven years, as well as becoming the Chair of London Councils (2020-24).

When she resigned, comments flooded in from people telling her how wonderful sheād been in the role:
You get the impression Gould thinks sheās rather wonderful too. Upon resigning she said:
Leading Camden for seven years has been the absolute honour of my life. I have worked everyday to protect our communities. We have done so much. Iāve been so proud to lead this amazing diverse group of councillors, who are doing an amazing job for the borough.
ā¦before reassuring that she was āleaving Camden in safe handsā.
Looking at photos on her social media, you might feel youāre reading a Huffington Post article about inspiring womenā¦
⦠or had stumbled upon local governmentās answer to Meghan Markle. Thereās something of a āwannabe Princess Dianaā vibe about Gould, as if youāre supposed to think āthat Georgia; sheās so good at connecting with ordinary peopleā:
Why have I singled out Gould, anyway?
Gould was elected MP around the same time I made two visits to Camden (in June and July) and was shocked by its state (think Danteās Interno). Therefore I was a bit perplexed by the hype surrounding the āred Princessā.
Gould had barely been an MP for a week when Starmer promoted her to Parliamentary Secretary at the Cabinet Officeā¦
⦠and she was being quoted in the media on the relationship between local and national government. Itās clear that, due to her experience as leader of Camden Council, the political Establishment sees her as the authority on how to make these two areas of governance work together more effectively:
But does experience = expertise?
Like Gould, (who is from Kentish Town) I am a North London girl originally. I grew up in Islington (moving to Kent when I was 13) - and Camden has a somewhat special place in my heart. Aged 11 my mum would take me to the market on the weekends. I loved everything about it; the incense, the little market stalls and hunting for delicious noodles afterwards. You get the picture; I have lovely memories of a vibrant area.
Fast forward 20 or so yearsā¦
⦠and Camden looks completely different - as if Tracey Emin had been commissioned to turn her 1998 āMy Bedā installation into a whole borough. When I visited this summer I thought of those mother-daughter days out - and concluded that we would have never gone if it had looked like it does now.
My photograph from June:
And some from mid-July of a homeless encampment under the bridge:
The same day (that I took the photos above), my friends and I went for lunch at a pub in Camden. While inside the restaurant, we were accosted by a man asking for money. Long story short, it was quite alarming as he wouldnāt go away (and appeared sober - aka cognisant of his actions).
*Incidentally, the food at Camden Road Arms is DISGUSTING. Itās a miracle Iām still alive (seriously, the sauce on my burger tasted like the sort of thing a medieval king might poison a rival with).
If you havenāt seen Camden recently, and went purely by Gouldās social media feed, you might be convinced itās āsuch a special placeāā¦
⦠where thereās āso much love & commitmentā:
You might even believe that Camden is tidy:
Whereas this is the actual reality:
Given the state of Camden, if I had been its leader for seven years, I would probably hide in a bunker in the Isle of Wight (which is actually my plan if Putin invades or Britain has a civil war) out of sheer embarrassment - never mind despair over the boroughās disintegration. Letās not forget, Gould is also the former Chair of London Councils (the collective of local government in London), so she has proved herself incompetent on multiple counts.
But the red Princess appears to be living on another planet, clearly believing that the whole country needs her political skills. Putting herself forward in June for the General Election, she promised āmuch needed national changeā.
Upon winning her seat, Gould said āToday is the start of building a better future for our community and country.ā
Youāve got to admire the self-confidence, really.
A socialist plea
In her maiden speech, Gould emphasised austerityās impact:
My inbox and my surgeries are full of people facing the homelessness crisis and skipping meals to feed their familyāall in walking distance of the Chamber.
Elsewhere, in her capacity as Parliamentary Secretary at the Cabinet Office, she discussed āa perilous economic situationā, before making the case for investment in public services:
Value for money is critical to this Government. We want to make sure that every pound of taxpayersā money is spent wisely. We are inheriting a perilous economic situation, and we need to invest in public services, but we also need to deliver social value, which includes workforce standards and environmental standards. That is how we deliver good growth.
But hereās what Gouldās idea of āInvesting public servicesā looks like.
While people were āskipping mealsā, Camden Council - the administration Gould led for seven years - spent Ā£190,000 on an LGBT+ hate-crime charity whose activities include ārainbow kayakingāā¦
⦠and art workshops to celebrate āqueer joy and creativityā:
You can read all about it here:
Islington and Camden Council's woke splurge on "Rainbow" kayaking
Like most people, the sight of a utility bill through the door fills me with dread. Council tax is one Iām none too keen on. I pay around Ā£107 per month in Islington - and thatās with a āsingle person discountā. Itās quite a lot on top of everything else.
No one - in the mainstream media, at least - has asked why weāre supposed to be so impressed with Gould, nor what public sector reform we can expect from someone who left Camden looking like a crack den.
Best not to ask questions, I find. āThings can only get betterā, after allā¦
On the other hand, give me the name of one politician who is NOT full of sh*t. They are all of a kind - a species that would not acknowledge reality even if it hit them in the face.