London’s occasional Mayor Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson
has, during his political career, had to live down the kind of gaffes that
would have finished off lesser men: whether it was being sent to Liverpool to
apologise for his notorious Spectator
editorial, getting the sack from the shadow cabinet for lying to Michael
Howard, or getting skewered on The Andy
Marr Show (tm), he came bouncing back.
Haircut, chaps? Yikes, couldn't be arsed!
So it is possible that today’s foot-in-mouth episode, in the
latest instalment of his Maily Telegraph
column, which generates a mere £250,000 of “chicken
feed” a year, will be similarly laughed off with a few exclamations of “cripes” and “oo-er chaps”. But the confused nature of his argument, which holds
that we should be prepared to quit the EU, although it won’t do us any good,
will remain.
“We
must be ready to leave the EU if we don’t get what we want”
trumpets the headline, but then Bozza asserts that “As it happens, I think the question of EU membership is no longer of
key importance to the destiny of this country”. So why write the sodding
column? Couldn’t The Great Man dream up anything else to justify being bunged his
weekly £5,000?
But Bozza then rallies: perhaps this coincided with the
serving of antipasti at yesterday’s luncheon appointment. He now talks up Young
Dave: “David Cameron is therefore the
only leader of a major political party to be asking the British people to have
a say on Europe, and for the first time since 1975”. But sadly, this is
complete crap, unless you believe Harold Wilson was not the leader of a major
political party.
It gets worse: Bozza then lists his reasons for staying in
the EU, but manages to miss the freedom of movement and residence, open skies,
the free market, the increased clout gained as a member of the EU – trade deals
with the US (in preparation) and China (next), for instance – and things like
consumer protection, the kind of detail that matters to ordinary people.
Then comes the goof: “most
of our problems are not caused by ‘Bwussels’ [sic], but by chronic British short-termism, inadequate management, sloth, low
skills, a culture of easy gratification”. That would be the “culture of easy gratification” typified
by a London Mayor who has to have a welter of deputies and advisors to cover
for him, because he pays so little attention to the job.
And, as for his calling out his fellow Britons for their “sloth and low skills”, that won’t go
down too well with those commuting a hundred miles or more every weekday and
spending much of their spare time and money garnering the qualifications that
will make them a more marketable proposition in today’s flexible labour market.
It’s just recycling a decades-old stereotype.
Unlike his own “sloth
and low skills” generating £5,000 a week. What a hypocrite.
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