“When
Sir John speaks, others listen” mused Benedict “famous last words” Brogan at the bear pit that is Telegraph blogs yesterday. Former Prime
Minister – and the last one to lead a majority Tory Government – “Shagger” Major had just spoken at a
Press Gallery lunch. All the pundits made approving noises, and not only the
likes of Brogan: Simon Hoggart at
the deeply subversive Guardian also
approved.
A not inconsiderably good speech. Oh yes
But there is an immediate problem with Brogan’s observation,
and it is simply this: saying that “others
listen” may be superficially true, but the reality is that for both his
fellow Tories, and the press, most of what he said yesterday has gone in one
ear and straight out the other. And while the Coalition harbours the likes of
Iain Duncan Cough within its cabinet, the politics part is unlikely to change.
So what is it that is not being heard? Simples. Mostly it is about the one subject where Major could not
persuade his increasingly fractious party to speak with one voice, and that
subject is the EU. “The threat of a
federal Europe is now deader than Jacob Marley” he told them. Give it a
couple of days, and the same paper where Brogan has his berth will have
forgotten such wise words.
He gave the Tories the hard word on appealing only to core
voters: the only benefit this secured, he emphasised, was the wooden spoon. MPs
and hacks churning out their hate campaigns aimed at foreigners, the
unemployed, the disabled, followers of The Prophet, and those with the dubious
pleasure of customer facing employment in public transport will soon chuck that
in the bin.
Major very deliberately floated the idea of a windfall tax
on the energy companies, instead of the price freeze pitched by Mil The
Younger. This is not a new idea – Tone and Pa Broon hit suppliers with that one
in the early days of the 1997 Government – but already it is either being
ignored, or shouted down. He didn’t make the suggestion by accident. They would
do well to listen.
But perhaps Major’s most severe pronouncement was on the
appalling Duncan Cough: “IDS is trying to
reform benefits. But unless he is lucky or a genius, which last time I looked
was not true, he may get things wrong ... If he listens only to bean-counters
and cheerleaders only concerned with abuse of the system, he will fail”. He
was right, and once again, they won’t take a blind bit of notice.
No, all will soon revert to howling anti-Europeanism,
cheering on of heavy-handed pursuit of illegal immigrants, NHS bashing, and talking
up every utterance from the Tory fringe, all of which will ultimately alienate
the very people who could produce a sufficiently broad coalition to get Young
Dave into power on his own. And this will be appropriately reported by the
sympathetic part of the Fourth Estate.
And then they wonder why the public thinks so little of
them. No change there, then.
1 comment:
Spot on. Glad to see a politician not afraid to put his head above the parapet. But, as you say, who is listening? IDS is going to cost this country an absolute fortune and he is going to blame everyone but himself.
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