Is this the time for a mea culpa, or as our outgoing Prime Minister might have once put it, even a mea maxima culpa, for supporting Boris Johnson three years ago? The answer, dear readers, is an emphatic “No”, and not only because I’m not a Roman Catholic. …
Johnson’s tragedy is that he outlived his usefulness so quickly and turned from an exceptional asset to a prohibitively costly liability in record time, which is why so many erstwhile Johnson loyalists and voters turned on him decisively. [bold, links added]
He misunderstood his early luck and success and refused to build a proper structure around himself, rather than a dysfunctional court made up of warring factions.
His staggering lack of self-awareness extended to the moral realm: he didn’t seem to grasp that voters are allergic to double standards, hypocrisy, and downright lies.
His lack of a guiding ideology, other than personal ambition and self-interest, meant that he failed to understand why so many of his supporters feel ideologically betrayed by his high-tax, high-spend agenda.
It became apparent well over a year ago that there would be no lengthy Johnsonian era, as I fleetingly thought might have been possible in the immediate aftermath of the election, no new economic and social model named after him, no great project to remodel Britain a la Thatcher.
It is a bitter disappointment, a catastrophic waste of an 80-seat majority, a seismic defeat for the forces of conservatism in an increasingly Left-wing culture, the ultimate proof of the futility of purposeless ambition, of the idea that charisma, slipperiness, and off-the-cuff verbal dexterity beats principle, thoughtfulness, organization, reliability, focus, and managerial ability.
Johnson’s performance went downhill almost immediately after the General Election, with his decision to approve HS2—the first of many errors.
His greatest failure was to make fools of those of us who believed his assurances that he was broadly a Reaganite, freedom-loving supply-sider, albeit one with an unfortunate weakness for Keynesianism, municipalism, Helseltinian central direction, and grand projects.
For a short while, at least in the second half of 2019 and until the start of Covid, it felt as if there was some sort of plan, a fusion between his ideas and those of his advisers.
I didn’t like all of them by any means, but it felt as if we would end up with a mix of tax cuts, deregulation, a radical reform of the Civil Service and procurement, the end of the license fee, a semi-libertarian embrace of freedom, a semi-consumerist, conservative (rather than collectivist) approach to environmentalism, as well as lots of extra spending in many areas.
We ended up with massively more spending, a vicious series of tax increases, global corporation tax harmonization that made a mockery of Brexit, a hard-Left green agenda that is barely less authoritarian than that of Extinction Rebellion, and a war on consumers, including drivers, meat-eaters and anybody with a suburban lifestyle, a full-on paternalist agenda, more red tape and bureaucracy, no planning reform, an unleashing of the Civil Service and further gains for the woke classes.
None of the good things have been delivered, and all the bad ones have happened, and worse.
His management of Covid was middling, average even by global standards, but no less disastrous for that. Yes, he faced difficult choices, but he refused to follow his supposed principles.
Why did he not conduct proper cost-benefit analyses? Why didn’t he tell the public that furlough was strictly temporary? Why all the mendacious, demagogic nonsense about the NHS?
The vaccine’s success was one of the few positive outcomes, but even that was squandered when Johnson returned control to the bureaucracy.
The British state has learned none of the right lessons from Covid when it comes to future pandemic management.
Covid would have damaged any PM, but it permanently derailed this one, and not just because he suffered so badly from it.
It gave Johnson a taste for unlimited spending and state power from which he never recovered. It also exposed the hypocrisy of an elite that thought it could party while the rest of the country was locked down, destroying Johnson’s greatest political advantage: the idea he was different and on the side of normal people.
Perhaps Johnson’s most perplexing failure was to misunderstand the purpose of Brexit, the policy that will define him forever more.
Instead of a traditionally Eurosceptic pro-growth agenda, he chose to ape the continental economic model we had struggled so hard to escape.
Instead of renewing our institutions, he happily embraced the technocratic status quo.
His semi-socialist economic model is incompatible with growth, and will now need to be scrapped if his successor is to have any hope of rescuing the Conservative Party and the Brexit legacy.
Now that his Government has imploded in a sordid, chaotic mess of resignations and frustration, Johnson will soon have a lot more time to reflect on how it all went so pathetically, absurdly wrong.
Read more at Daily Telegraph
By “violent”, I mean war-mongering.
Johnson is a puppet. May was a puppet. Cameron was a puppet. Brown was a puppet. Blair was a puppet. Major was a puppet. And Thatcher wasn’t worth the adulation she still receives. Maggie helped kick off the carbon crusade in the public conscience and played her part in the sometimes violent and, constantly, almost comical puppet theatre that has been the office of Prime Minister in the UK during the whole of my adult life.
When the right blames the left and the left blames the right, people are agog at the theatre and don’t notice those pulling the strings, namely, the uber-Capitalists who want to introduce Communism for everyone else and have almost done so.
Labour doesn’t know what work is any more and the Tories are a story without a hero. Brexit was just a chapter for desperate readers before all their books were burnt. As such, Boris the Buffoon was perfect for the job, but now his job is done and the puppeteers will have a new character to introduce to their Punch the Judy out of People show.
The UK needs new PM right away this Johnson is leading them into Socialism they need another Churchill or Thatcher not some Globalists Lacky
The United Kingdom has been socialist since WWII. Orwell’s “1984” was published in 1949, four years after Animal Farm. The UK was on its knees after the wars and personal sacrifice, going without, was necessary. They’ve never broken free from “we’re all in this together” . Thatcher was a black swan. We may never see her likes again, sadly.
Boris is a goof compared to her or Churchill. He’s a goof compared to anyone.