
Both MPs were forced to apologise over these particular PR 'stunts' although this article does suggest that this incident 'highlights the way that the desperate battle for popularity between Mr brown and Mr Cameron in the run-up to the next election can backfire.'
Political 'spin' gives PR practitioners a bad name, always scoring more media coverage when PR activities go wrong rather than when things run smoothly. Can we really ever expect the PR profession's own reputation to improve when political spin doctors seem to hit the headlines almost as often as the Party they work for?
The phrase 'all publicity, is good publicity' has become a line that gets banded around frequently, especially when a PR opportunity has turned sour, when there are no positives to be found or when 'straws, clutching, at' ring true.
Both leaders, in my opinion, never want to lose face and by the media catching out Brown and Cameron 'at it' shows they are waiting to pounce on any potential scandal to fill space and sell papers. But really, is there a scandal here? An admin error yes, a misjudgement maybe but a deal-breaker... I don't think so.