sally cinnamon wrote:
This will be exactly the characterisation of the Tories that brings them down in years to come, like it did in the 1990s.
They have campaigned on the basis of peoples disillusionment with the decline of their areas and of their services (which is largely driven by Conservative cuts anyway), and portrayed themselves as being on the side of the people not the establishment/business interests, to get people to vote for them.
The voters will expect a return on that and if the Tories revert back to dismissing their concerns with a variant of, "life isn't easy, deal with it" then it will undermine their whole narrative about being the ones 'in touch' with traditional working class communities.
Johnson is, from a policy perspective, an empty vessel. The cabinet is disempowered, having accepted the hegemony of Cummings stable of SPADs.
On balance i’m looking at this as better than it could have been. Cummings isn’t a Tory and oddball though he is, if it keeps Raab and Patel from pulling the levers then so much the better - I can live with that particular democratic deficit.
There’s a question over how well Johnson’s ego will take being widely seen as a ‘comedy clown mascot’ PM. If things start to go badly, then that’s bad by definition and Cumming’s programme will be chucked overboard pdq. On the other hand, if things go well and Cummings is getting the credit, will that slake the thirst that has driven Boris Johnson, a man of basically no political conviction, to pursue his current role?
If this is to have any longevity, then Laurel has make sure Hardy gets applause.