Reviewing The Situation
The ascendancy of the Bullingdon boys is over and may, in retrospect, seem like a quaint wobble away from the principle- established in the Heath/Wilson era- that our rulers really ought to come from a background with which most of the electorate can identify- and not have daddies who were multi millionaires. May is a hard grafting grammar school kid- and the kind of person who should be getting to the top in a society that likes to think of itself as a meritocracy. Her first prime ministerial speech- delivered outside the doors of Number 10- might have been delivered by a Labour politician to the left of Tony Blair- and came as a pleasant surprise. I like it that she has sacked George Osborne and think it shows savvy to have promoted Johnson to a role which gives him a chance to show what he's made of- because most of us are still unsure. It was surmised that she was going to promote a lot of women- and she hasn't- which is a pity. I'm glad David Davis is in her cabinet; I've always thought he was real.
Meanwhile the Labour party is giving every indication of not wanting to exist any more.
Meanwhile the Labour party is giving every indication of not wanting to exist any more.
no subject
no subject
no subject
The worst weakness of a system with so few parties as in the UK is that there are no back-up plans if the two major parties decide to collapse simultaneously; there's no credible opposition at present, so I guess May is the best there is - though I really couldn't be less anti-Tory.
I actually think the UK needs either a giant upheaval or a period of stability and healing after the whole Brexit referendum shambles. It'll be interesting to see which it will be... Either way, the world has a way of regaining its equilibrium so eventually I'm sure things will be all right. Well, not SURE-sure, but it won't help anybody if I fret and worry, so I'll just pet a cat and harvest some grapes to bring back to town with me. That is more important.