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“Bad work for your lot in the Lords, hey!” says I, and Mr Disraeli lowered his lids at me in that smart affected way he had. “You know the Jewish Bill getting thrown out. Bellows to mend in Whitehall. Bad luck all round, what?” I went on. “What with Shylock running second at Epsom. I had twenty quid on him myself!“
I heard Loch mutter behind me “Good God”, but friend Disraeli just put his head back and looked at me.
“Indeed,” he said. “How remarkable. And you aspire to politics do you, Mr Flashman?“
“That’s my ticket!” I said.
Flash for Freedom, book two of The Flashman Papers, by George MacDonald Fraser
Golly gosh, I-I-I — phwoar! But for the last time? Boris, the blond bombshell, the Beano omnishambles — gone at last? Yes, it was last week, but your correspondent has been away and wants a piece of it. The man who once told his sister, aged 10, that he wanted to be “world king”, has cratered out. With his extended “caretaker” period taking his term into three years in office, he may pass James Callaghan, embattled Thatcher precursor (3 years, 1 month), and he has cleared Neville Chamberlain (2 years, 348 days) which must be a relief. He will also pass Theresa May (3 years, 11 days), which was pretty much the whole point of getting a caretaker period.
But for all this nonsense talk about him being “the most consequential [UK] prime minister of our era”, his tenure is an obvious failure and a joke. He’s down there with Anthony Eden and Gordon Brown, Campbell-Bannerman and a dozen or so forgotten others. He is permanently exiled from even the middle reaches, the Balfours and Camerons, and the higher reaches — Blair, Thatcher, Churchill, Attlee — are peaks in the far distance.
There remains something of a mystery as to how this failure occurred. One had assumed that, once in power, he would modulate from the clownish, chaotic persona he had developed to hide the nastiness of his Manchester liberal economic politics and become more of a One Nation Tory in the Harold Macmillan style, judiciously presiding over a post-Thatcher mixed economy and gaining the sustained loyalty of the “red wall” Labour-to-Tory seats.
With that formula in place, he could have had a decade in power, and made his clown’s makeup a mere prelude. In a decade it would have been as amazing to many that PM Johnson had once been a panellist on Have I Got News For You, as a young Winston Churchill leading street protests in 1899 (to opposing the banning of high-class streetwalkers from Leicester Square theatre bars).
That Johnson couldn’t manage it is no great mystery; that he made no effort to try is something of one. Like two other recent figures — Tony Abbott and Donald Trump — there was no sense that there was any prize beyond winning the election. Everything after was a burden and a bore. What the professional politician wants most of all — to be in power and stay in power, to simply govern in crisis and calm — appears to have held no attraction for these men whatsoever.
What the professional politician craves most of — more work, more decisions to make, in the UK parlance more “red boxes” — was anathema to these men. They were loyal to the imaginary aspects of the life, the perks of office, the triumphal appearances as the flashlights pop, but could make no emotional connection to the dull aspects of government, which is what professional politicians find most exciting.
It seems sufficient to call all three of them narcissists, and to ask what it is that makes them such. The “clinical narcissist” has become the villain of our time, just as the problem the term describes has become a more general one. In a world in which media, image and manufactured culture in a global setting have become overwhelming, narcissism — an excess of self-regard and self-obsession that makes impossible an integration with “the real” and “the social” — has become to our society what tuberculosis was to an earlier one. Given that narcissism is a disorder of the mirror, it’s inevitable that we fling the accusation at everyone else rather than identify it in ourselves. It lies at the base not only of many of the dilemmas we have as adults, but at the fractured and excessively miserable state of much adolescence, and the anxiety and identity dilemmas that arise from it.
The degree to which this has become a wearying and irritating feature of modern life has created another paradoxical feature: we look to certain figures to be clear of it, to represent a unity of purpose and self-regard, which would infuse us with something of the same. That simply makes many of us prey to the most delusional narcissists of all, those who have absolutely no self-awareness, or no desire for such, and whose appearance of confidence and competence is thus adamantine.
Yet no one can fail to notice that, in our time, these great political skywhales have all come from the right. It is not something that afflicts the centre-left we have now. If anything, they don’t have enough of it; these parties now have leaders who are more diffident than not. What one would do for a bit of flash on our side!
But not what the other side have had. Their affliction over the past decade has been that of leaders who suggest the glories of the recent past, after a time when these battles have been won, or fought to a draw. The “conservative narcissists” who emerged did so in imitation of the previous heroes — Thatcher, Reagan, Howard — whose personalities had been shaped in an earlier era. The first two of these in particular were fighting real battles: to overcome the powerful political-ethical system of democratic socialism that had arisen from World War II and dominated the post-war period.
Yet even here there was an asymmetry. Post-war social democracy had a powerful and consistent ethic, to modernise the world and give everyone the chance for a fully human life. The new right’s offer of such was to be achieved through the market, where social democracy had failed. But it would also require the state’s affirmation of traditional values beyond the market — character, integrity, the sacred — which would ground the culture, while market dynamism ran on.
Holding this contradictory double act together was possible only for the period when the memory of social democracy’s failures was fresh. That new right only ever subsisted as a counterfeit value system in the absence of a real one. Because the right has never understood how society works — that meanings, structures and personality forms change as technology and economy change — it was able to see neither the contradictory nature of the new right, nor the absolute farce of its successors. With the right (in both major parties) having pushed capitalism and atomisation into every area of social life, it has produced a world in which conservatism can only be expressed as a narcissistic performance, a fantasy that nobody really believes.
Thus, in The Australian, both Paul Kelly and Planet Janet Albrechtsen had a go at diagnosing the conditions of the fall of Johnson, the man whose collapse appears to have broken their hopes that some new order combining capitalist dynamism, pro-Western assertiveness, patriotism and anti-wokeness would arise.
But those who believe that such an ensemble could actually emerge from conservatism become totally lost when they see the actual result. Their belief that there’s an underlying base of reality and plain common sense that the mad modern world obscures, and which can be made visible again by a great leader, means they are uniquely incapable of seeing that it is only conservatism that could produce these people, and that, for a period, that was all they could produce. The failure to acknowledge the absolute demolition of continuity and tradition on which conservatism depends created a desperate and blinded desire to believe in these people long after their flim-flam nation was obvious.
If Thatcher and Reagan were copies of earlier figures fighting for a conservative order before the 1960s dawned, then Boris, Tony and Donald are copies of copies after it has all happened. They differed in many ways, but they had a common appeal to some notion of solid and unchanging values outside the present, outside themselves. We won’t see their likes again. Not in that specific constellation anyway. There was still, in the cultural-historical system, enough memory of a traditional culture to suggest that some sort of continent version of conservatism might be possible. They themselves have burst that bubble.
The relations have reversed. The anger and contempt felt for the likes of Johnson and Abbott are now substantial. Trump alone retains a total commitment at the core. We were over it all before anyone else, with Abbott’s brief turn being the farce preceding the tragedy of Trump and Johnson. Much as people try to assimilate Scott Morrison to the company, especially given his recent remarks on God and the state, it doesn’t work. Morrison was the first of the new generation of rightists, presiding over a fairly centrist politics, and sneaking in a bit of Christian proselytising on the side.
The current crop of political opportunists vying for the Tory leadership are uniquely uninspiring to both the party faithful and the northern Labour voters they hope to retain. Boris, Abbott and Trump were all on the horizon for years, as saviours of the movement, before they had their brief successes and momentous failures. Now no one is. When right-wing faithful look around, they see no one who could represent them in the way these men have.
So what happens next? The progressive parties are busy making themselves the sensible centrist parties who gain support by crushing people’s dreams, not enabling them — by being the party to tell you, honestly, how little can be changed and how little you can expect from modernity from now on. Anyone willing to challenge that in a way that can win power will have to remake their populism from elements of both left and right. They will have to be economically nationalist in a way that mainstream-right parties will not be able to manage.
But they’ll have to be politically and culturally nationalist in ways the left won’t go. It’s possible such will only emerge from a full and deep crisis, and anything less will simply generate a politics of “indefinite dissatisfaction”, in which the idea that politics might represent us, enact our demands and hopes, yields to an idea of politics as administration. As a third possibility, this very becalmed public space and edgy dissatisfaction will itself produce a new politics of action, a sort of reaction to the nothingness.
There’s no way of knowing. But one can safely say that indefinite dissatisfaction will be Boris’s lot for quite a while. He will rake in the millions as many have said, though it may not be quite as lucrative as many think. There needs to be a certain amount of respect and gravitas for the really big bucks. What he will have with him always is the sense of what he could have become had he possessed sufficient of the self-knowledge and self-direction a classical education is supposed to imbue.
In the end, he was a thoroughly modern man, a creature of the ’60s as much as any rock star who ever drove a Rolls-Royce into a swimming pool, someone who not only lived off his desires but could imagine no other way to live. He will hear the chorus mocking his hubris for the rest of his life. Phwoar.
Thanks GR for a very thought-provoking piece. I will need to read it a few times to absorb all its aspects. However the first reading caused much head-nodding and many “yeahs” to be muttered.
It’s why I subscribe – for something more that the glib reporting of day-to-day politics that has so bedevilled recent “journalism”.
“But for all this nonsense talk about him being “the most consequential [UK] prime minister of our era”, his tenure is an obvious failure and a joke.”
It is not nonsense. There is no contradiction between being consequential and an obvious failure and a joke. Johnson is all of these, although for many millions in the UK who have experienced the consequences of his failures the joke is not very funny.
The damage during Johnson’s political career is not entirely down to him because he had many helpers. Attributing responsibility to Johnson, one of the least responsible public figures one could imagine, is a paradoxical exercise. But he is consequential, and the accelerating, perhaps irreversible, decline of the UK in almost every aspect is his great legacy.
Boris was and is dangerous because he is without the ability to understand the damage he has done.
Will we also hold him responsible, if he kicks off the “troubles” again due to his stupidity regarding the EU/ Northern Ireland border and the reduction of the UK economy by 25%.
These facts may give weight to the term “consequential” being used in regard to his name.
“Consequential” in the sense that the Charge of the Light Brigade was consequential…..
No, the charge of the Light Brigade was inconsequential for the course of the battle and for anything beyond that. It did not matter much to anyone except those killed in the action and their close acquaintances. (But it can be noted as the subject of one of the first examples of journalism by a professional war correspondent and, as a result of that report, services to popular balladry. Which is the only reason anybody still remembers it.)
There’s a Flashman story about that …
Pretty bloody consequential for the poor toilets who got sent to their doom by total incompetence………….
……..which is where the Johnson reference comes in.
The (quondam) UK will be utterly buggered thanks to Johnson & his clique for decades.
Brexit had been voted up before Johnson became PM. Some version of it wld have been got through eventually. Tony Blair created a certain type of neoliberalism in the UK, which, under a different PM, could have gone very differently. Cameron cemented that in, and called the Brexit referendum. Both less spectacular but more consequential
Really? Citing Brexit being voted on before Johnson became PM as though that makes him a minor player completely misses how it worked. When it was voted on, nobody knew what it was. The best guidance available during the referendum and for some time afterwards was the gnomic utterance, ‘Brexit means Brexit’. We only found out what that really means when Johnson supplied the details.
As a journalist, Johnson worked for years on propaganda for what became Brexit before he became PM, and it was remarkably effective in preparing the ground. As Foreign Minister he continued to damage relations with the EU. As PM, he ensured Brexit took the most destructive form possible, which includes making it as dangerous as it could be for the unity of the UK. He has taken the Tory Party much deeper into the cess pit of dodgy money, selling its services and influential positions to anyone who pays, including the UK’s enemies, while promoting the most talentless and grubby loyalists he could find to all the top positions. Certainly Johnson cannot get all the credit for the ruin – as I said he accelerated the decline, he did not cause it – but he stands head and shoulders above the others you mention. He is consequential.
Am no fan of Johnson or the Tories but as I recall Johnson was not a supporter of Brexit but backflipped in order to rise in party which he did. Will willingly admit my memory might be imperfect however that backflip if I recall correctly is very clear evidence of his mercurial, opportunistic and narcissistic nature.
Johnson has been consistently hostile to the EU all his adult life. He did not backflip, because he was never for the EU. You are confused by his (alleged) dithering over which side to support in the referendum, before he decided to go with the leave faction. The chief evidence for that he drafted two newspaper articles, one for and one against leaving, before choosing which way to go. This is poor evidence he really had any inclination to back the stay side, it could just as well be a way of marshalling the arguments as a help to debating the issues. Given Johnson’s education, that sort of debating preparation would be routine. It probably reflects his opportunism (as you rightly say) and lack of any principle except self-service. He was maybe trying to work out which option at that moment best served his ambition, or he was just working out what the stay arguments looked like when they were written down. The latter is Johnson’s own explantion; he described the unpublished column as “semi-parodic”; but of course it is not easy (or wise) to simply take Johnson at his word. Anyway, there is nothing to suggest Johnson has ever supported the EU.
I think today’s “conservatives” are actually attracted to chaos. They so hate the world that they have created that it seems to them better to throw everything into chaos rather than put up with the world as it is any longer.
Why are so many hard right politicians including their spruikers shock jocks like Bolt, Jones, Hadley and Dean so SOUR, BITTER and ANGRY?
In simple language – In a neocon society they profess to worship at the altar of competition. Like any contact sport they embrace cheating and violence encouraged by the masses. Rule of law (Referees/Umpires are there to get deceive and get around). Thus to win one has to be nasty. This then flows through their personality.
They hate countries like opposing football teams. ie Manley = China and Cronulla = Russia. Similarly for the other various codes. Our foreign affairs are based more on aggression than cooperation and consensus.
Competition has replaced community.
That’s because they’re not true conservatives, but anarchic libertarian extremists. The rich and powerful prefer the anarchy/plutocracy of the Wild
West forms of social organisation – they can ride rough-shod over whomever they like. They preach virtues and values, but they practice greed, selfishness and violence.
Remember when Trump created chaos by saying Obama was not born in the U.S.A? Then Trump, and only Trump, solved the problem he made – Obama was an actual U.S. citizen.
Create chaos, triangulate, get the attention, solve the problem, and get more attention—America’s unwavering belief in the power of the individual.
Why does (covert) narcissism – something so destructive, still exist in the genome? Because it fits in so well with capitalism. In the same way, Christianity regulated behaviour to benefit capitalism in the past, so narcissism helps the individual and the capitalism of the present.
In fact I believe our current conservatives do want chaos. One of the features of being narcissistic is that they want everything your way. Failing that they are content if no one else gets their way, hence chaos. Expect more chaos as they work feverishly to stop every one else getting anything they want.
Morrison was not a centrist with a bit bible bashing on the side.
Smirko was a full blown psychopath wearing a cloak of a prosperity cult with no conscience needed to steal from all of us to favour his supporters with riches borrowed.
Now that he has decided that his god has a plan for him, I hope that his passport will soon be revoked.
That is of course, if his god believes that one must pay a price for acting dishonestly and misusing our money so egregiously.
Boris was and is a classic narcissist, whilst Trump is a malignant narcissist or in real time a pschopath
no, Morrison presided over a govt with socialised medicine, unlimited unemployment benefits, extensive govt assistance during Covid, no attacks on abortion rights (such as they are), etc etc. On the US spectrum he’d be a centrist Democrat. Yes he was a liar, but so was Clinton, so was Hawke. I dont think funnelling money to mates makes him psychopathic. Just somewhat more cynical….
Without disagreeing with those points, they’re observations about the government over which he presided, rather than his personality.
Very good point. Morrison was a realist about his and the party’s limitations until his elevation of Deves exposed what another term of Morrison and the “crusaders” in his inner circle might mean. The rest is history.