The lesson that any normal empathic human
would have learned from the Barnard Castle eye-test fiasco is that government
messages can be seriously undermined if senior members or officials of the
government are seen to be non-compliant with government guidance, even if that
non-compliance can potentially be interpreted by some as ‘merely’ stretching a
point rather than an outright and undeniable breach. All the evidence shows
that Cummings’ jaunt had a serious negative impact on public willingness to comply,
and left an unpleasant feeling that there’s one law for ‘them’ and another for
everyone else. However, the lesson that Johnson appears to have actually
learned is that toughing it out works. Not in terms of such minor questions as reinforcing
government messages and protecting lives of course, but in the more limited but
much more important – to him, anyway – sense of fending off a potential threat
to his own position. To paraphrase an old saying, there are two rules
concerning the world king: 1) the world king is always right, and 2) in the
event of him being wrong, rule 1 above applies.
There seems to be no doubt that, in the
black-and-white matter of what the letter of the law says, taking himself off
for a bike
ride seven miles from home was not illegal under English lockdown rules
(and that’s still true, even if, as seems likely given Downing Street’s apparent
reluctance to either confirm or deny it, he and his security entourage drove
that seven miles rather than riding it). But there is equally no doubt that, at
a time when his own government’s ministers and the health experts are saying
that the law is a maximum, not an entitlement, and that people should be
avoiding any travel at all unless it is absolutely essential, let alone the
continual hints that he and the government believe that current rules may not
be strict enough, his trip was directly contrary
to most of the messaging coming from himself, let alone those around him. It
might be arguable that, for his security (to say nothing of the safety of other
road users), having the PM and a posse of security officers riding their bikes
in wobbly fashion through the roads of the capital is not the most brilliant
idea that anyone ever came up with, and that it was therefore reasonable to use
the lack of precision in the law to allow him some safe exercise. With a bit more
self-awareness, to say nothing of a willingness to express a degree of contrition
or regret, he might have tried that line, and many might even have sympathised.
But feelings like contrition are alien to Johnson’s character – and anyway, the
world king is always right.
How damaging it will be in the coming
weeks and months remains to be seen – the Cummings effect is still strong after
many months. One of the strangest aspects of the whole affair was that
apparently, in a stark display of his own lack of self-awareness, the PM was so
surprised at how many other people were at the park where he went for his ride
that he took that information back to the cabinet for a discussion on how the guidance
could be more strongly enforced. This, in turn, may well have led to the
otherwise inexplicable decision to deploy
the disastrous Priti Patel at yesterday’s press conference to promise draconian
police action against all those mere plebs who dare to emulate the PM’s lack of
compliance with what is mostly guidance rather than law. There is little doubt
that stronger enforcement will be popular amongst the overwhelming majority who
are attempting to follow the ever-changing rules and guidance and don’t like
seeing others ‘getting away with it’. It’s a poor substitute though for
encouraging a greater sense of social solidarity where people genuinely feel
that the action taken is collective rather than simply individual. Johnson’s words
and actions directly undermine such solidarity as does exist rather than
increasing it. But then world kings don’t require solidarity, merely obedience.
4 comments:
Lot of fuss and hot air being generated in USA about getting Trump off his perch ahead of schedule, yet he's down to his last 7 days anyway. Here we are lumbered with our own imbecile and his entourage for another 3 years and 11 months, unless the Tory party implodes and wrecks its parliamentary majority or decides to depose the imbecile. However that most likely will only lead to another imbecile like Gove taking the job. At times like this one ends up wishing for independence tomorrow although that would probably give us our own local version of a dimwit at the helm. Any scope for a sharp improvement in the quality of our elected politicians ?
.. and for more evidence of the "superiority" of Westminster's talent pool check this out.
https://nation.cymru/news/tory-minister-didnt-read-brexit-deal-because-she-was-organising-nativity-trail/
Now that may not be exactly typical of Tory ministerial choices as normally they prefer to engage in some seriously deviant behaviours in their spare time. However at that point in time it illustrates clearly that this thick panto dame had no grasp of her personal ministerial mandate.
I think the title of your post is spot on.
There are only two observations I have on the broadcast.
The first is poor Priti- awful Patel having to reading from a script created by a committee which just added to the confusion, as it called issues of Law, Regulations and Guidelines as ‘The Rules’ – no wonder Mr Plod is in trouble trying to figure out what all that means.
The man who stole the show was the Army chap who was not dressed in the usual uniform showing red tabs, sam brown and fruit salad on the right chest, but they dressed him in a type of desert combat gear, which I suspect they wanted to send out the psychological message of action, intimidation, and those that do not comply are enemies of the Queen -it all looked a bit odd.
I might be entirely wrong, as he might be leaving straight after to parachute into the Syrian theatre to visit the troop.
Spirit,
"poor Priti- awful Patel having to reading from a script created by a committee which just added to the confusion" I suspect that you don't really intend to imply that she might have done better without a script...
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