At Eton with Orwell.
At Oxford with Waugh.
He was nobody after
And nothing before.— Cyril Connolly (of himself)
“Boris will have to play a blinder to…” oh God, spare us the cricketing metaphors. Boris de Pfeffel Johnson has become leader of the UK Conservative Party, as everyone thought he would. The shambling, blond, mop-haired, Billy Bunterish MP defeated his run-off rival Jeremy Hunt by two to one, gaining 92,000 votes to 46,000 of the party’s 160,000 members, an 87% turnout.
That was a higher vote for Hunt than expected, but it didn’t matter a damn. Boris was never in danger, and the run-off was never a Leave-Remain contest; more like a kamikaze v dive bomber choice on delivering Brexit. There was nothing that Boris could have done to lessen his vote, except to be less crazy-resolute about leaving the EU.
Over the months-long campaign — in which one party’s leadership tussle became a de facto national election, an elision conforming to the UK’s anti-democratic core — Boris’ blustering act started to come apart somewhat, like an old vaudeville hoofer burning a 20-year-act with a single TV appearance. This was the culmination of an act that Boris — the urge is to call him “Johnson” but there’s so many goddamn of them in politics that the folksy nominal persists — has honed for two decades, if that verb can be applied to a calculated decision to not stop being shambolic.
Out of Eton via Oxford, and into The Daily Telegraph in the standard manner, he was a lazy, incompetent and wilfully falsifying journalist, whose boss at the time now says he should have been sacked. He was responsible for many of the “EU gone mad” stories — banning bent bananas etc — when he was Brussels correspondent. MP for Henley, then mayor of London, then MP for Ruislip, he got the editor’s chair of The Spectator more or less as a signing-on gift. There he was buttressed by a solid staff; at City Hall by civil service continuity, and an utter lack of media scrutiny of London politics.
Advised by Lynton Crosby, he perfected and advocated the “dead cat on the table” strategy, and put it at the heart of Tory strategy at the national level. That has had mixed effects, but Boris has sailed on by… well, how? By using his quickfire wit, and a literary style that Waugh called (of Churchill’s) “sham-Augustan” prose — Boris mixing in a fair amount of Wodehouse and not a little Python — he became a null-set at the heart of politics, a politician sous-rature, crossed out.
This is not the same as US or European populism; a Boris Johnson mass rally would collapse in the middle like a wedding marquee in the rain. By actually becoming an entertainer who happened to be an MP — like the new Ukrainian president, but in exact reverse — Boris has been able to create a force-field in which he is not only rewarded for lying, but doubly so for being caught lying. Anti-Muslim or anti-working class slurs become part of an act, like a beloved ’70s sitcom you can’t watch anymore because PC gone mad. For his faithful, he is a pure value, simply by being himself. Nothing, to date, that he actually did, detracted from it.
On the party hustings, he was skewered again and again for cheerful falsifying; and on TV by Andrew Neil, Newsnight and others. He simply adopted a grinning caught-out pose, like he was on a “call my bluffs” style panel show to which, as with weak sweet tea, the British are addicted.
That pose allowed him to be caught out, prior to the referendum, and then the previous leadership contest that elected Theresa May, backing both the Remain and Leave cases, and waiting to jump. He left May to try and manage the impossible task, was briefly an incompetent foreign minister, and went to the backbenches to undermine. When all was chaos, de Pfeffel strolled in and picked up power like a de’feather. But in doing so, in nailing the leadership — neutralising a loud domestic barney with the latest girlfriend, after being thrown out by his wife for multiple infidelities — Boris had to push the rhetoric to new heights of impossibilism.
Achieving a brilliant Brexit – an October 31 departure, but with a better deal, and no northern Irish “backstop” to put an EU border within the UK — would simply be a matter of will, of optimism, of cheerfully telling Johnny foreigner all bets were off. By the final weekend, he was comparing this messy and very ordinary process to the moon landings. Loon meanderings would be more like it, and they now have an imminent expiry date.
As mayor, Boris turned himself into a semi-competent leader — though wasting hundreds of millions on a failed garden bridge and a cable car over the Thames, as if Sir Arthur Streeb-Greebling had suddenly become town planner — emerging as such from the first month of chaos simply because no one was watching. Now, the world is. Boris faces an EU that is cheerfully refusing to make any further changes to the final May-negotiated deal. True, France aside, it doesn’t want the UK to leave because it needs to smoothly “export” to it. But the commission will rely on an anti-no deal parliament to pass a motion banning a no-deal exit, and then offer an extension.
Boris will then have to either prorogue parliament ahead of such a vote, ignore it claiming unconstitutionality, or accede and ostensibly “muddle through” to an eventual exit, hoping that he can charm supporters to stay away from the one-policy Brexit Party.
By then he may well have ditched much of the Billy Bunter act, to reconnect with the Victorian liberal-conservative traditions which inform his real politics: a commitment to global free trade and the “animal spirits” of capitalism contained within a patriotism worn far more lightly than the union jack capes and boaters the Leave fanatics drape themselves with.
But that presumes he makes it to October at all. With three cabinet ministers resigning, and a handful of Tory MPs making noises about supporting a no-confidence deal, anything is possible in the coming days and weeks.
For the country, it’s a question of whether they head towards an unknowable, damaging exit from a union they’re deeply entangled with. For Boris — who is waiting for history to tell him whether he’s Winston C or Neddy Seagoon — it is far more serious than that.
I believe his first name is Alexander
So do his family, which is why they call him ‘Al’. Apologies to Paul Simon.
How about we refer to him as de Piffle ?
Alexander is a great name. Bit common though, which is I why I use the Persian variant “Iskandar” in my comments here. Perhaps Al Johnson thought the same and uses his second name “Boris” for that reason. But then, “Johnson” is also pretty common. He could have been “Boris de Pfellel” I suppose. Something of the sort worked for Twiggy’s boyfriend, I seem to remember. “Karloff” maybe?
Still, for the short time he’s likely to be around I expect he’ll be more entertaining than that granite-faced moll with chains and ball-bearings around her neck who actually took herself seriously.
‘loon meanderings’ – brilliant.
And spare a thought for ER11 who not only has to anoint Bunter as her PM but then suffer through a weekly audience for the duration.
Billy Bunter badly wanted to be PM. Oz singer/composer Peter Allen wrote some sage advice back in 1977:
‘Don’t wish too hard for what you want
Or then you might get it
And then when you get it
Then you might wish you never got it at all’
She survived Thatcher. She’ll survive Johnson as well.
Trifecta of trash: Johnson, Trump and Morrison.
ScoMo, BoJo, and DT (the good old delirium tremens) – what a world we live in.
People once had such high hopes for the 21st century, but look where it is taking us….
Larry, Curly and Moe will do me.
Wise guys, woop woop, nyuck nyuck nyuck.
its Rupert wot done it..
Agree completely!
Exactly as I said when Johnson was elected Prime Minister by the members of his party, having Trump, Johnson and Morrison as leaders. What is the world coming to. And there doesn’t appear to be any answers because Trump will no doubt be re-elected next year and we have Morrison for another 3 years. Politics in 2019 and for the next few years is very dismal indeed.l
“into The Daily Telegraph in the standard manner, he was a lazy, incompetent and wilfully falsifying journalist, whose boss at the time now says he should have been sacked.”
Shades of Scott Morrison who was sacked, repeatedly, until handed a safe seat by Howard, that is, after Morrison and his machine branch stacked and defamed their way to a safe seat.
‘Morrison sought Liberal pre-selection for the Division of Cook, an electorate in the southern suburbs of Sydney, which includes Cronulla, Caringbah, and Miranda, in the 2007 election following the retirement of Bruce Baird, who had served as the member since 1998. He lost in the ballot 82 votes to 8 to Michael Towke, a telecommunications engineer and the candidate of the Liberals’ right faction.
However, allegations surfaced that Towke had engaged in branch stacking and had embellished his resume.The state executive of the Liberal Party disendorsed Towke and held a new pre-selection ballot, which Morrison won.
The allegations against Towke were subsequently proved to be false, and The Daily Telegraph was forced to pay an undisclosed amount to settle a defamation suit filed by Towke’
Good old Daily Telegraph, isn’t accurately named the Daily Terrorgraph for no reason.
Even Steve Bradbury only did a Steve Bradbury once.
Totally unfair comparison. Bradbury was a brilliant skater who won his way to an Olympic gold medal through extremely hard work and dedication.
And his opponents falling on their arses.
Boris, another politician, got tobe PM by serially falling on his own arse.
At last, people are starting to comment on how ‘good bloke’ Morrison, the Christian spived his way into parliament. Another miracle? The people or media haven’t sussed the PR man out yet.
Winston Churchill comparisons are misplaced.
Trump comparisons are however apt.
Just what a planet in it’s ‘Eleventh hour to Midnight’ does NOT need.
Yet ANOTHER ‘MKR’ level intellect!!!
‘Idiocracy’ being played out.
As a recent wit aptly described it, “this is the way Britain ends, not with a bang, but a wanker.”
Another climate change waffler. Johnson’s campaign recently received £25,000 from the mob that invites Abbott over to display his ignorance and play with his Willy. Be optimistic people, don’t pray for rain like Morrison has been doing since February, smile though your heart is breaking…….
Beautiful song and good advice in its time, but Nat goes on:
“Smile and maybe tomorrow
You’ll see the sun come shining through…”
which mightn’t be quite the thing, these days.
… actually, I see Charles Chaplin is co-credited with the lyrics. Nat just sang it.