Living former Prime Ministers – a species
of which the UK currently has a glut which is bigger than ever before in its history, the
size of which is projected to rise again shortly – can command handsome fees
for giving speeches based on their experiences and the wisdom it has allegedly
given them. We know, for instance, that Boris Johnson was paid
£276,000 (plus expenses) for one speech in the US (whilst also being paid for being an AWOL MP). We also know that he has
since given another speech in Singapore, although the fee for that one will
probably not become public until the next update of his declaration of
interests. The host for the second one has had to apologise to
those present to hear it, some of whom felt his robust remarks about China were
inappropriate and offensive. The words used by Bloomberg in delivering the
apology were that “…the presentation was meant as after-dinner entertainment
rather than serious discussion of important controversial and complex issues”,
implying that, whatever the fee was, it was being paid not for any expertise or
enlightenment, but for a very expensive – and not particularly amusing –
stand-up comedian. Overpaid, unfunny and offensive stand-up comic may be one of
the fairest descriptions of Johnson ever, but it is surely not what people
think they are getting when they pay an exorbitant price for a guest speaker.
It’s also interesting to read precisely
what Johnson said that so aroused the ire of those in attendance. He accused
China and Russia of being “… states that have been traditionally hostile to
immigration and that are becoming increasingly nationalist in their attitudes”,
of being “… willing to show a candid disregard for the rule of international
law”, and of having demonstrated “… the immense limitations of their
political systems by the disastrous mistakes they have made”. There’s not
much to disagree with in any of that, but any objective observer would
recognise that those same traits have recently been on display a lot closer to
home – and especially under the so-called leadership of Johnson himself and his
successors. It is that curious English exceptionalism which enables him to see
dangerous nationalism everywhere except in the mirror. Paying the pot to
criticise the kettle is obviously lucrative from the perspective of the pot,
but it provides little in the way of meaningful political analysis. Just as
well that one host, at least, recognises that he was overpaying a bad comic
rather than employing any sort of expert.
2 comments:
I remain astonished that anyone with an ounce of commonsense would pay more than a bucketful of rusty washers for the pleasure of listening to the "wisdom" of Boris and his kind. As a comedian he might be OK for the posh southern equivalent of a northern club(do they still exist?) but his blustering gibberish can only generate a limited amount of laffs before it become seriously tedious.
There is as you say a lengthy list of past ministers of the Crown, who are invited to give organisations a speech. The speech they give is not the important, it`s getting them there so they can have a one-to-one about the levers of power and that is why they are paying good money to increase their influence and knowledge.
If a speaker gave such a speech to the audience, he would devalue his brand overnight.
Post a Comment