Friday, 14 February 2020

Philip Collins' Sour Grapes


Writing in the Times today, Philip Collins makes a determined bid for the Sour Grapes of the Year award.  Headlined, “Reshuffle shows weakness at heart of No 10, Collins predicts, for example, that Rishi Sunak will not be taken seriously at the Treasury and will be subjected to mockery in Parliament.  Collins lectures that, “the first reshuffle after an election is meant to show clarity of purpose and point the way forward.”  Quite so Philip, exactly the clarity of purpose that saw a Conservative landslide at the General Election?  In ridiculing the Prime Minister and accusing him of having, “no real idea what to do,” Collins betrays the real reason behind his discomfort.  A strong leader surrounded by similarly motivated lieutenants focussed on delivering a promised agenda is a complete anathema to sore losers and, particularly, those in the media who are ideologically committed to a cosy form of consensus politics hammered out by diversely balanced committees and taking account of every balmy minority interest.  In contrast we have a Boris team that showed it had nerve and clarity of purpose when faced with the threat from an emerging Brexit Party  - they stood firm and neutralised them rather than cobbling together an electoral accommodation that would have ended in tears.  And we are already seeing other tricky issues being dealt with rather than deferred for further consultation as Mrs May was so lamentably inclined to do.   As someone once quoted, in much more trying times than these:

"And not by eastern windows only,
When daylight comes, comes in the light;
In front the sun climbs slow, how slowly,
But westward, look, the land is bright."

No comments:

Post a Comment