Boris johnson is getting the coronavirus crisis wrong | thearticle

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Boris johnson is getting the coronavirus crisis wrong | thearticle"


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Crisis — it is one of the most overused words in the English language. A top football team loses three games on the trot — crisis for the club. The boss of a big brand dies — crisis for the


company. A Cabinet minister gets caught up in scandal — crisis for the government. In truth there are few major crises. The run of bad form might be a temporary crisis for the football


manager, ending in his sacking, but then a chance for a new man to turn things around. The company has to find a new boss, and does. Depending on the nature of the scandal, and its impact,


the minister might get sacked, which could be a good thing for the department of which they are in charge. Crisis over. There were literally hundreds of situations described as “a crisis” by


the media when I worked for the Labour government under Tony Blair, but around half a dozen that really were: foot and mouth; the fuel protests; Kosovo; 9/11; Afghanistan; Iraq (at various


points;) and of course under Gordon Brown came the Big One — the global financial crisis (GFC) of 2008. The current coronavirus crisis is different. It is a crisis for every government,


every company, every major organisation in the world, and every family will be affected by it. Its reach and its potential implications are greater than any and all of the above, including


the financial crisis. The backdrop against which the crisis is unfolding makes it greater still: a US President who shows little regard for his role as global leader; the rise of populism


and with it the undermining of institutions and the denigration of expert opinion; and a transformed, angrier, faster, more difficult media landscape. So I do not for one second minimise the


enormity of the responsibility facing Boris Johnson, his ministers and his advisers. They are human beings, with the same 24 hours in the day we all have, but with the need in those hours


to make decisions of enormous import. These are life and death decisions, for people, for families, for entire communities. However, just as before Covid-19 he seemed to be finding it hard


to switch from campaign mode to government mode, now Johnson seems to be finding it hard to switch from normal government to crisis management government. He needs to make that switch


quickly. This is a crisis that requires the full weight of government thrown behind it, right across all departments. As the leader of that government, Johnson’s role is to devise, execute


but also narrate the strategy to get the country through the crisis. The role of his ministers is to support in the devising, execution and narration of the strategy in so far as it relates


to their areas of responsibility. The role of experts and officials is to support them and, where sensible, take the lead in the explanation. In such a time, whatever the country may feel


about its leaders, most reasonable people will make allowances because of the scale of the challenge, and will trust those leaders more than they otherwise might. But that trust must be


two-way. People must be taken into the confidence of the government. The basis on which decisions are made, not just the decisions themselves, must be properly and consistently communicated.


It was hard to understand why it took so many days for Johnson to see that, no matter how radically the media landscape may have changed, there remains a place for old-fashioned press


conferences, a daily, detailed explanation of the crisis, and the measures being taken to deal with it. There is no shame in admitting that “we don’t know at this stage” will be the answer


to some of the questions. But no question should be asked where the answer has not been anticipated and the response fully thought through in advance. Yesterday, on financial support for


badly hit businesses, on whether or not people should visit loved ones in care homes, in urging people not to visit pubs and clubs, restaurants and theatres and what this meant in practice,


Johnson was at best vague, at worst confusing. And when he claimed that once we were through this, the economy would come “roaring” back, he was slipping into his comfort zone of campaign


rhetoric mode. Several weeks in, the overall strategy to deal with coronavirus remains unclear. Much of the confusion flowed from what appeared to be sanctioned briefing that “herd immunity”


was the goal. This has subsequently been denied, not least following the incredulity expressed by other governments deploying very different strategies, and epidemiologists concerned it


amounted to the acceptance of death on a vast scale. So, with many other countries closing schools, and explaining the dangers of keeping them open, our government’s decision to keep them


open has two principal effects. First, it leaves headteachers, teachers and parents to make decisions based on conflicting guidance signals. On the one hand, all social contact is


potentially dangerous; on the other, it is OK to send your children to schools, where social distancing is anathema. As one of our local headteachers put it this morning, many teachers live


together; many children live with a grandparent; what is he supposed to tell them about the decision they should make? Teachers may have complained when Michael Gove was Education Secretary


that he was too active, too interfering, too high profile; but today they are wondering what his successor, Gavin Williamson, actually does. Schools are flying blind. It also leaves people


wondering whether, despite saying the aim is to avoid the spread of the disease, the government does actually want more people to get it. It is the sort of confusion that can only be cleared


up by a clear exposition of an overall strategy, in language everyone can understand. It should be the focus of Johnson’s next major public intervention. Similarly, it is only a few days


ago that the banning of major events was seen as counterproductive. Now it is essential. Even accepting that these can be fine judgements, two such diametrically opposed decisions, announced


with similar conviction and certainty, do not combine to build trust and confidence. The same goes for the confusion created by Johnson’s message about pubs and restaurants, theatres and


cinemas. When France announced a ban, a shock though it was to those whose livelihoods depend on these businesses, the often querulous French appeared to accept it. Clarity worked. President


Macron has been clearer too about the role of the state in supporting those businesses. One of several mixed messages from Johnson yesterday was this — do not go to pubs and restaurants


because this is dangerous. But no, we are not telling them to shut down. Today, it is falling to the Chancellor, Rishi Sunak, to set out economic measures. These are clearly crucial, given


that so many livelihoods risk being shattered by the economic slowdown. But across the whole of our national life, the public will only come behind the government in its management of the


crisis if all the difficult questions are pre-empted, difficult choices put forward and debated, difficult decisions explained. The issues in schools and hospitals are evident, and will


continue to command a lot of attention. But think for a moment of how many other major areas of national life may become the source of a crisis within a crisis. Local authorities. Prisons.


The courts. The homeless. Sport. Culture and the arts. Domestic violence and abuse. Loneliness. Anxiety and depression. Scams of the vulnerable and elderly. We can all think of so many more.


The government has to have a strategy for every one of them, and bring the public with them behind those strategies. There can be no such thing right now as too much planning, and no such


thing as too much information. Government has to dominate the debate in a time like this. When ministers and officials are tired of saying the same thing, and making the same arguments, that


is the point at which they are beginning to reach the outer ring of public consciousness. Keep going. Organise every part of every day, and organise your communications as far as they need


to go. But also, do not forget internal comms inside government, which all too often get neglected in times of crisis. Rebuttal matters more than ever too, because of the speed with which


conspiracy theories and falsehoods spread. Put extra effort into the big moments. That was the problem with yesterday’s event. It left too many unanswered questions, which suggested to me


that it had not been fully thought through. It is definitely right to do at least daily briefings, and to have them established as go-to moments for the public. There should be little or no


briefing outside of these events, and certainly a complete halt on the briefing of major developments by anonymous sources to favoured journalists. But the format of three men in suits


talking behind lecterns will not hold the country’s attention in the way it might have done even in my time. Film and graphics should be added to the mix, not least for how they can then be


used on social media. One final point. The crisis is being exacerbated by the confusion created by the seeming lack of an international response. Donald Trump is a real problem in this,


symbolised by the ludicrous USA baseball cap he wore at one of his White House briefings. Trump is not going away any time soon. Added to which, the power of the UK’s voice has been weakened


by Brexit. But we remain a major power, and just as Gordon Brown showed a global leadership role in the GFC, so it is open to the UK to seek to do so now. Johnson has had a bad start to


this crisis. But it is a crisis that will be with us for some time yet. It is not too late for him to turn things around, provided he and his team can find the new mode to do so.


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