COMMENTARY
Boris Johnson’s manner of going was in keeping
with his character
Even Margaret Thatcher ultimately understood when told
her time was up — Johnson had a very different view and tried to hang on.
Boris Johnson had form when it came to defying
inconvenient norms of British political behavior |
BY JAMIE
DETTMER
July 7,
2022 2:04 pm
https://www.politico.eu/article/boris-johnson-manner-keep-character/
Jamie
Dettmer is opinion editor at POLITICO Europe.
“Nothing in
his life
Became him
like the leaving it.”
These
lines, from Shakespeare’s “Macbeth,” are of Malcolm telling King Duncan how the
traitorous Thane of Cawdor confessed to his treasons, implored pardon and
offered deep repentance before his execution.
But this
week, Prime Minister Boris Johnson didn’t apologize, didn’t ask for forgiveness
and wasn’t repentant. He remained defiant to the end, and his manner of going
was utterly in keeping with his character.
After a
24-hour period of unprecedented political turbulence, which saw over 40
government resignations, Johnson tried to brazen out yet another one of the
many tempests to have rocked his premiership since the moment he stepped into
No. 10, Downing Street as national leader.
Throughout
his career in media and politics, Boris Johnson reveled in his reputation as an
escape artist
This was
the most front-rank ministerial resignations in a 24-hour period that any prime
minister has suffered in British history — the previous record was set in 1932,
when 11 senior ministers quit.
But
throughout both his career in media and politics, Johnson reveled in his
reputation as an escape artist — a political Houdini, defying rules and
conventions and getting away with it. At least this week he remained
consistent.
Only twice
before had he suffered punishment — once, being sacked by the Times for making
up a quote, and in 2004, when then Conservative leader Michael Howard sacked
him from a party job, after one story too many about his shambolic private life
appeared in the press, with newspapers carrying yet more allegations about
tawdry infidelity.
His skill
as a roguish, gravity-defying escapologist was part of his appeal for many
Britons who voted for him in the past. But the shine wore off, and this week,
his daredevil qualities appeared more darkly Trumpian than rash, good-natured
Prince Hal — and more dangerous for both his party and the country than at any
other time in his tumultuous premiership, buffeted by endless toxic scandals,
unforced errors and sleaze.
Britain has
never seen such a chaotic prime ministerial exit before. Margaret Thatcher
sought to hang on in 1990, after only narrowly winning a parliamentary party
confidence vote. “I fight on, I fight to win,” she told reporters crowded in
Downing Street. But even the Iron Lady turned and heeded her timid Cabinet as
its members, one by one, traipsed into her House of Commons office to tell her
gently that time was up.
At her
final full Cabinet meeting the following day, her nervous ministers expected to
be collectively upbraided. Instead, they found a philosophical, reflective
prime minister who remarked at the start, “It is a funny old world.”
But there
were no signs of anything philosophical about Johnson. Westminster was aghast
Wednesday night upon learning he’d given short shrift to a group of senior
Cabinet ministers who told him it was time to quit. The group included
“loyalists” as well as Nadhim Zahawi, who Johnson had only appointed Chancellor
of the Exchequer the day before amid a cascade of resignations.
In modern
times, other departures while in office have been much more orderly affairs. In
1940, Neville Chamberlain resigned while in office in the early months of World
War II, when it became clear that the opposition parties — as well as many
Conservatives — would not join a national government if he were leading it.
Chamberlain
took the devastating hint from Conservative grandee Leo Amery, who told him in
the House of Commons: “Depart, I say, and let us have done with you. In the
name of God, go.” He was quoting what Oliver Cromwell had said when dissolving
the so-called Long Parliament.
In January,
veteran Conservative lawmaker and former Cabinet minister David Davis quoted
Cromwell at Johnson too — but to little avail. Johnson doesn’t respond to
hints, however scorching.
This was a
problem for British governance, which is built largely on a jumble of norms and
conventions and Acts of Parliament that are mostly held together by tacit rules
rather than hard-and-fast regulations codified in a written constitution. And
in both theory and practice, since the 19th century, overriding power has been
held by the Cabinet, made up of the party that can command an effective
majority in the House of Commons.
“The
cabinet, in a word, is a board of control chosen by the legislature, out of
persons whom it trusts and knows, to rule the nation,” noted scholar Walter
Bagehot. And as time has marched on, the interplay between prime minister, the
Cabinet and parliament has shifted and been tested many times over. In recent
years, prime ministers have become more powerful, Cabinets more docile and
parliament weaker, with the trend given a sharp push by Thatcher and Tony
Blair.
But even
Thatcher had ultimately understood when her time was up. Johnson, on the other
hand, had a very different view until today— as brushing off his ministers Wednesday
night demonstrated. His presidential view was that he had a mandate from the
general election, which gave the Conservatives a thumping majority, and that
even his own lawmakers have no right to override the British electorate — a
highly eccentric and ahistorical reading of parliamentary conventions and
practice.
But Johnson
had form when it came to defying inconvenient norms of British political
behavior.
In 2019,
for example, he asked the country’s monarch to suspend parliament for a month,
complicating attempts by opposition parties and rebel Conservative lawmakers to
thwart his Brexit plans. He was accused of mounting a “coup against
Parliament.”
Until then,
the suspension of parliament, known as prorogation, was seen as a
constitutional formality in which the legislature is suspended for a few days —
generally every autumn — ahead of the government setting out a fresh
parliamentary agenda in a speech delivered by the monarch.
The
suspension was seen as a hardball Johnson gambit, which not only added another
twist to the country’s long-running Brexit saga but risked upending the
relationship between government and parliament. Britain’s Supreme Court quashed
the prorogation, ruling unanimously that it was unlawful.
Three years
later, Johnson’s Trumpian exit — his resistance, initially, to his own Cabinet
— will likely have electoral consequences for the Conservatives. But it has
also shone a blazing light on how dysfunctional government can be when
underwritten by tacit rules and norms.

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