Boris Johnson’s Partygate remorse lasts all of 30
seconds
John Crace
Wine stains, puke and brawling at No 10 – none of the
details in Sue Gray’s report are enough to flush out a PM devoid of shame
Wed 25 May
2022 18.13 BST
Well, there
we had it. It had been heavily briefed that Boris Johnson would be the model of
remorse for his statement to the Commons on the Sue Gray report. But that Boris
lasted barely 30 seconds and what we got thereafter was the classic
narcissist’s non-apology. A tawdry torrent of self-pity. A man more sinned
against than sinner. A good man cast adrift in a world he barely understood.
The Convict
began by saying he was grateful to Gray. I bet he was. There was little doubt
she had pulled her punches. She was a career civil servant, after all, who had
spent a lifetime covering up other people’s messes. Yes, there were some
telling details in her report – the wine stains, the puke, the brawling, the dodging
out of sight of CCTV cameras at 4am, the altered invitations – all of which
suggested that everyone knew they were acting against the law. But there was no
smoking gun. Or not one that could flush out a prime minister devoid of shame.
“I don’t
say this to absolve myself,” Johnson said repeatedly. Except he did. And time
and again he found himself worthy of total absolution. The fixed-penalty notice
he had received? That was for something that was never a party. But he accepted
his martyrdom. Not. He would go to his grave believing he had done nothing
wrong. Not least because as the police hadn’t busted him for any further
crimes, then he couldn’t have committed any.
Nor did
people understand quite how large No 10 was, so it was impossible to keep tabs
on everyone. Which was weird because other prime ministers have complained how
small the building is. And he had just been showing good leadership by turning
up to the illegal leaving parties. It had never occurred to him that some of the
parties might go on for hours. The Convict had always wondered why there was so
much noise and the cleaners were complaining about having to clear up so many
empties.
Johnson
ended by saying the bad old days were over. The entire senior management team
had changed – it hadn’t occurred to him that he might be in any way responsible
for the chaos and law-breaking in No 10 – and from now on he was going to be
extra nice to the little people. He might even speak to them.
“We are
humbled,” he said with a dismissive, regal wave of his arm. Except he wasn’t at
all. You need empathy and a state of grace to feel humbled. He didn’t even feel
humiliated. Which any normal person would have been.
There was
no hint of repentance or sincere apology. Just delusional ramblings. A man far
more dangerous than a serial liar. An amoral sociopath capable of believing any
falsehood to be true if it fits his solipsistic worldview. Nothing will shake
his belief that he never lied to parliament or anyone else. The truth is just a
matter of perception.
Keir
Starmer tried to prise open the gaping cracks in the Convict’s logic. That’s
how the light gets in. The report was a monument to hubris. Even though it
appeared to have been heavily edited in parts, it still had enough in it for
any reasonable person to expect the prime minister to go.
Did Johnson
never wonder why everyone was permanently pissed and it was impossible to find
anyone doing any real work after 4pm? How come he never looked at tables
weighed down with booze and wondered what the fuck was going on? And the idea
of the government’s ethics adviser bringing her own karaoke machine into work
was straight out of The Thick of It.
By now,
though, the Convict could no longer maintain even the facade of giving a shit.
He tugged at his toddler haircut and smirked. Couldn’t Starmer just let go of
his “sanctimonious obsession”? He was fed up with everyone droning on about
party this and party that. No one was going to take him down. Top of the world,
Ma. And Sue – Johnson lapsed into using just the first person – had
investigated the party in the Downing Street flat exhaustively. As in not at
all. Labour clearly believed she had been nobbled. But Johnson just wanted
everyone to move on. To a place where no one could eat or pay their fuel bills.
The Tory
response was muted. There were a few of the usual quarterwits – step forward
Peter Bone, Michael Fabricant and Craig Mackinlay – to say the prime minister
was a paragon of virtue and that no one could expect anyone to have obeyed the
rules as they were all so complicated – but only Tobias Ellwood called out the
Convict as a liar who was destroying the image of the Tory party.
“We will
lose the next election,” he said, as several of his own side heckled him. They
are as truth-averse as their leader. The rest of the Tory backbenchers made
their excuses and left. Anything to escape the scene of the crime. Within 40
minutes of the statement starting, the benches were less than a quarter full.
Though the stony-faced cabinet had to stay and take their punishment beating.
The question is what happens next. Do the Tories feel lucky enough to put their
letters in to the 1922 Committee? Or do they stick with the man who will drag
them ever further into the dirt?
A couple of
hours later, the Convict was giving a press conference in Downing Street. If
anything, he was now even more deconstructed. Just phoning it in and openly
laughing in journalists’ faces as he brazenly made no attempt to answer their
questions. As if he believed he had got away scot-free on a technicality. His
answer to allegations of lying to parliament and the country was yet more lies.
It was somehow a fitting symmetry. He can’t help himself.
The closest
he got to coming unstuck was when the Guardian’s Jessica Elgot asked him if he
was not bothered that his press officers had openly lied to the media about
parties they themselves had been at. It was like this. His media team were like
him. They genuinely believed their own lies. The vomit in their waste bins was
work vomit.
“My job is
to serve the country,” Johnson said. In which case, why doesn’t he do us all a
favour and bugger off. “I’ve got to love you and leave you.” Something he’s
said to every wife and lover. He looked at his watch. Past four. Past wine
o’clock. Time for a drink. There was going to be one hell of a party in the
Downing Street flat tonight.
.webp)
.jpg)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário