Top marks to Hugo Rifkind for his column in today's Times and some highly insightful analysis of the Prime Minister.
Anybody can pile up the rebarbative adjectives and it's hard to miss or risk contradiction but once in a while somebody exceeds that 'shooting fish in a barrel' exercise and I dare say they feel temporarily better for it.
For a long time it was Matthew Parris who led the way with his brilliant 'incompetent scoundrel' but now Hugo is in with his analysis of how the Prime Minister is a 'credibility vampire' sending out ministers to defend the indefensible and undermining their credibility on his behalf, which sucks the credibility out of them, too. He cites Nadhim Zahawi as an example who might appear to be competent were it not for his ongoing dutiful defence of his line manager.
Hugo further explains how any of us who might try to unravel the rat's nest of Johnsonian fecklessness eventually become exhausted by the effort because no amount of reason or appeal to decency ever has any impact. The Prime Minister takes no notice and we begin to sound repetitive or even obsessive. Somehow it begins to look as if we are the weirdo. (I am paraphrasing here. I heard Hugo on Times Radio. I didn't expend £2.20 on a copy of a weekday Times.) One inevitably ends up feeling like banging one's head against the wall.
I've long got over any respect I had for Jacob Rees-Mogg's facade of punctiliousness now that he's been put into anything like a 'job'. I only ever found some peculiar accord with Victoria Coren-Mitchell when she broke with any decorum on HIGNFY and told him she found him 'strangely attractive' which outdid anything a Sex Pistol could say to Bill Grundy.
Dominic was always the evil svengali, using Johnson as the puppet to his own wicked ends but, like Dr. Frankenstein, he lost control of his monster. He might be trying to finish him off now but it's too late and he still hasn't succeeded.
So, while journalists, week after week, continue to predict 'a difficult few days ahead for no. 10', that becomes routine. That's what it's like. In such circumstances it might be difficult for any other Prime Minister but it's business as usual for this one. That is how he lives his life. He's been doing it for a long time now. The lying is a default setting. He's averse to 'the truth'. He prefers to tell the teacher that the dog ate his homework and get away with it because he always has done before.
Never a prolific poet, I'm almost maintaining my steady output of four finished poems per year but I need to count this recent doggerel to do so. It would be a shame to keep it private when I can make the slightest of contributions. I wish I didn't have to. I'd never have been tempted to put finger to keyboard on the subject of Theresa May.
Boris
after Hilaire Belloc
Boris told such Dreadful Lies,
It soon came as no surprise
The boorish, scandalous, uncouth
Yob had no concept of the truth
And yet we remained agog
That the likes of Jacob Rees-Mogg
Cared less for verisimilitude
And in fact could be quite rude
To those who pointed out this fault
Which, even with a dose of salts,
Was so plain for all to see
And had no credibility.
He lied to Parliament, the Queen,
Which is a crime so obscene
In olden days it was enough
To have got one’s head chopped off.
One untruth gainsaid the last
But that was in the recent past
And so to him now mattered less
As he created yet more mess
And dug himself deep into holes
And such complex rigmaroles
He forgot what he’d done and said
And where his inventions had led
And then thought he could extricate
Himself and perhaps also placate
Those who knew that he had lied,
Including lots on his own side,
By issuing apologies
Though they were less sincere than his
Though they were less sincere than his
Rococo version of events
And defied all common sense.
Sorry, sorry, sorry, sorry,
Change the subject in a hurry,
Change the subject in a hurry,
Say we have to wait and see
And then say it’s too late and he
Was getting on with the job
Or some other thingamabob
Because detail is not his thing
And he preferred to try to wing
It as he’d always done before
But surely there can’t be much more
And historians will soon write
How he went down with a fight
With all his boats and bridges burnt
But still with no lessons learnt.
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