With his political survival hanging in the balance, what should boris do now? | thearticle
With his political survival hanging in the balance, what should boris do now? | thearticle"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
Boris Johnson would be wise to make the most of Chequers this weekend, while he still can. As he awaits the report of Sue Gray, the mandarin who may decide his future, the Prime Minister’s
position remains precarious in the extreme. Yet there are signs that his support has solidified since the defection of Christian Wakeford, the dubiously honourable Member for Bury South, to
Labour. Though the air is still thick with treasonous talk, if he can somehow regain the initiative, Boris may yet bounce back again. A cabal of mainly marginal Red Wall MPs are crying foul
over their rough treatment by the whips. Apparently nobody told them what the rules were in Westminster: whatever else you do, stick up for the party leader. Stab him in the back and your
constituents can wave goodbye to that promised Treasury largesse. Pork barrel politics is a novelty to the so-called pork pie plotters. Meanwhile, a larger but unknown group of more senior
malcontents have stayed their hands until the Gray report, publication of which is expected to coincide approximately with the next Prime Minister’s Questions — a quintessentially British
institution that is now competing with bullfighting as the world’s most popular blood sport. At last Wednesday’s Spanish Inquisition the first of these former ministers to break cover was,
of course, David Davis. “In the name of God, go” duly captured the headlines and delighted the Boris-hating elites. Yet for such a blow to be mortal, grandees must do more than
grandstanding. It was Oliver Cromwell, not Leo Amery, who first uttered these words in that place. Did the great champion of civil liberties really mean to imply that a military dictatorship
might be preferable to the present duly elected Government? Davis’s more explicit comparison of Johnson to Chamberlain did not really work either, not least because it reminded the Tories
there is no Churchill waiting in the wings. Moreover, the row over Downing Street parties, serious as it may be, is scarcely comparable to the Blitzkrieg. On reflection, even Boris sceptics
smiled at Sir Edward Leigh’s plea during the later debate about lifting Covid restrictions: “For God’s sake, keep going.” Battered but unbowed, the PM shot back: “I have not sat here quite
long enough — nothing like it, in my view.” One can’t quite imagine Neville Chamberlain seeing the funny side of his situation — and it is not Boris but his would-be assassins who recall the
“factious crew” of the Rump Parliament whom Cromwell dismissed. For the Johnsonian fightback to win over the waverers, however, two things need to happen. First, Sue Gray would have to
deliver a report that, however damning about the drinking culture in 10 Downing Street, at least provides wriggle room for the man who presided over it. If she so much as raises the question
of whether the PM lied to Parliament, it is difficult to see how he could survive. Secondly, the Government must not only start delivering on its election promises, but make its top
priority addressing the cost of living crisis. That means belatedly getting a grip on inflation. In the first of a series of major essays for TheArticle, Mrs Thatcher’s former adviser Brian
Griffiths first raised “the spectre of inflation” here in August 2020. For well over a year, the Bank of England ignored his and other warnings. Not only was the Bank guilty of culpable
neglect — so was the Chancellor of the Exchequer. As custodian of the public finances, it is his job to ensure that the Bank performs its prime function of keeping inflation below 2 per
cent. That figure is now well above 5 per cent and rising. For the first time in many years, the average family is enduring a wage cut — and the Treasury is about to compound the crisis by
raising National Insurance, which hits the just-about-managing harder than the well-off. If the Tories lose the next election, it is much more likely to be because voters feel poorer and
their prospects look bleaker than on account of a PM whom they knew when they elected him to be more of a Merrie England man than a guardian of Victorian values. And the blame for ignoring
the familiar risks of unleashing inflationary forces lies squarely with Rishi Sunak — the man whom most Tories apparently believe would be most capable of restoring their popularity. Indeed,
what irks the electorate most is the very fact that it was Boris Johnson, of all people, who was appearing nightly at the coronavirus press conference to tell us all to put our social lives
in cold storage. He was, with hindsight, the wrong person to play that part. If, on the other hand, he can not only engineer a successful and early exit from the pandemic, but demonstrate
to the country that their sacrifices were worthwhile, that the freedom of manoeuvre conferred by Brexit can deliver tangible benefits, that in spite of everything the British people have
recovered their joie de vivre, then the PM’s Woosterish, boosterish, bumptious bonhomie will have been vindicated. Other things being equal, given the choice between an optimist and a
pessimist, voters will choose the former. One final thought. Boris Johnson could do a lot worse than to go back to his Thatcherite roots. Whether he likes it or not, he is a product of the
1980s and some of the problems we face now would have been familiar to Mrs Thatcher. He could start by reading _A Tiger by the Tail_, a brief synopsis of the thought of Friedrich Hayek,
which explains the fallacy of the Keynesian (and neo-Keynesian) nostrum that we can simply spend our way out of the economic crisis created by Covid. A close reading of the Brian Griffiths
essays for TheArticle would be time well spent. Or, if getting through even the briefest of reading lists on economics feels like a luxury at a time when he is struggling to get though every
day, he could always invite Lord Griffiths to Chequers for a chat. The question to ask is not what would Mrs Thatcher have done — she, after all, could and did invite Professor Hayek
himself to brief her — but what would she do today? She never forgot that she was not only Prime Minister, but First Lord of the Treasury, too. If he is to get on top of the cost of living
crisis, Boris Johnson needs to take back control of his Government, starting now. A MESSAGE FROM THEARTICLE _We are the only publication that’s committed to covering every angle. We have an
important contribution to make, one that’s needed now more than ever, and we need your help to continue publishing throughout the pandemic. So please, make a donation._
Trending News
Leeds chief angus kinnear says it is time to ‘deliver a solution’Leeds chief executive Angus Kinnear has claimed it would be a “national embarrassment” if England’s top two divisions co...
Hmrc to send out letters over state pension back paymentsHMRC has announced that it will be contacting people who may be entitled to state pension back payments due to a histori...
Smart glasses upgrade your vision, help you hear better“We’re not a medical device. Insurance doesn’t even cover hearing aids, (so) it’s a long shot to get covered by insuranc...
Fcc approves certification for smart tech devicesSome consumers have been hesitant to embrace “smart” fitness trackers, fridges, home monitoring systems, microwaves, bab...
Saturday sports: wnba all-star game, kansas city chiefs aim to get third-time luckySCOTT SIMON, HOST: And at last, it's time for sports. (SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) SIMON: WNBA All-Star Game. And the Kansa...
Latests News
With his political survival hanging in the balance, what should boris do now? | thearticleBoris Johnson would be wise to make the most of Chequers this weekend, while he still can. As he awaits the report of Su...
Deal of the day: anti-ageing mother's day giftsLuxurious skincare is a treat to receive, and Augustinus Bader's products would make great Mother's Day gifts....
Ireland's eurovision 2025 hopeful emmy's real name, job and famous brotherIRELAND IS ONE OF THE COUNTRIES TAKING PART IN THE SECOND SEMI-FINAL OF THE EUROVISION SONG CONTEST 2025 ON MAY 15, WITH...
Urban safety management: guidelines for developing countries. Annexe 2. Applying the urban safety management approach in cirebon, indonesia: a case stURBAN SAFETY MANAGEMENT: GUIDELINES FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES. ANNEXE 2. APPLYING THE URBAN SAFETY MANAGEMENT APPROACH IN...
Judas’s coins to krishna’s pot: list of 'antiques' that con artist monson claimed to haveMonson has a mini library of holy books and he makes different claims in different interviews. A handwritten Bible in wh...