Boris Johnson’s special adviser, Dominic Cummings, arrives in Downing Street with the appropriate headgear for a December election. Photograph: Mark Thomas/REX/Shutterstock |
General
election 2019
Brexit
reduced to a petty squabble. Classic Dom
John Crace
Johnson and
Corbyn only cared about election timing – leaving this parliament to expire as
it had lived. A laughing stock
@JohnJCrace
Tue 29 Oct
2019 21.14 GMTLast modified on Tue 29 Oct 2019 21.20 GMT
It came
down to a matter of days. Once Lindsay Hoyle, the deputy speaker, a man with
both eyes on the top job had – as expected – chosen not to select amendments on
EU citizens and votes for 16-year-olds, the only issue was about timing.
The Tories
wanted 12 December because that was the day they had first thought of and
didn’t want to look like they were making any concessions. So tough. So brave.
Classic Dom. Not wanting to be looking like the only leader too timid to vote
for an election, Jeremy Corbyn muscled in on the Lib Dems and the SNP to insist
that it took place on 9 December instead.
Nine was
the magic number. The only day that could possibly do. Partly because it would
get darker three minutes later. But mainly because it wasn’t the date the
Conservatives had picked. Too bad – 12 December it was. Brexit reduced to a
petty squabble over something entirely trivial, because it was far too hard to
consider the things that really mattered. This parliament was determined to
expire as it had lived. A laughing stock.
Proceedings
had begun with Jacob Rees-Mogg putting forward a truncated programme motion to
allow the government to pass its general election bill inside six hours. It was
a simple matter, he said. For once he was almost telling the truth, as all the
opposition parties had already indicated they would pretty much vote for
whatever was put in front of them. Many MPs are now so Brexited out, they are
incapable of rational thought. Rather, it’s become a race to be the last party
to lose consciousness.
Once Stella
Creasy’s amendment to allow further amendments at the committee stage of the
bill had been passed, it was over to Boris Johnson to open the debate. The
Chronicle of a Death Foretold. The death in question being that of the entire
UK, which was about to get six weeks of the same mediocrities telling the same
lies and making the same unverifiable claims. The cruellest of punishments for
a country hellbent on slipping out of the G7.
In his
dreams – those private moments he spends in front of the mirror, serenading the
person he loves best – the prime minister is the master orator. The man with
the golden voice who can charm all those with whom he comes in contact. The
reality is that he struggles for coherence, his voice barking out subconscious
pleas for help via morse code. A speaker who can just about scrape by as a
feelgood after-dinner turn, recycling the same tired gags, but lacks the
sincerity and concentration to survive sustained scrutiny. The only thing he
really cares about is himself.
Johnson had
opened on auto-pilot. Labour had blocked Brexit by forcing him to have a
massive sulk once MPs had insisted on having more than three days to debate his
withdrawal agreement. The extension to the end of January would cost the UK an
extra £1bn per month. Both statements blatantly untrue, but sure to be dragged
out in every stump speech throughout the election campaign until enough people
– possibly even Boris himself, if his lack of conscience allowed – came to
accept as fact.
As so
often, Johnson then began to get bored with saying the same stuff he had said
the day before and the day before that. So he just ad-libbed. The Commons
chamber is really only an extension of the Oxford Union for him, with Tory
backbenchers merely fawning acolytes. If anything, his contempt for his own MPs
exceeds that for the opposition. There was no apology for breaking a commitment
he had made to leave – “do or die” – by 31 October. Just a long moan about how
difficult Brexit had become. It was the most passionate argument in favour of
remain anyone was to make all day. Classic Dom.
Corbyn had
more than enough fantasies of his own. It was a complete lie that Labour had
consistently resisted the chance to contest an election. The party had been
gagging for one all along and it was only the absurd contortions of the Tories
that had prevented one. Then he went into full stump mode. This wasn’t an
election about Brexit. It was an election about public services and austerity.
No one on the Labour front bench could quite bring themselves to break it to
their leader that the entire reason the election was taking place was because
of Brexit. The other stuff was nice and worth a mention but this was a Brexit election.
Unbelievably,
these opening speeches were pretty much the highpoint. Ian Blackford merely
shrugged and said an election was a win-win for the SNP. If the Tories were
defeated then all well and good but if they won then Scottish independence was
one step closer. Bill Cash merely gave the edited highlights of all his
speeches over the past 40 years. He won’t be missed. Not even by himself.
“I’m going
to carry on with my thoughts,” declared the Tory Vicky Ford to the astonishment
of the five MPs left in the house. Because it hadn’t been obvious up till then
that she had had any. One can only feel sorry for her constituents. Bob Seely
wondered out loud why no one appeared to trust Boris before realising he had
answered his own question. Because he’s Boris.
The one
standout moment was a passionate defence of futility from Labour’s Jess
Phillips. The coming election would not answer any of the questions that had
precipitated it. People would interpret the results to suit their own ends, she
argued, and Brexit wouldn’t be resolved for years.
All that
was happening was that MPs had run out of ideas. An election was an admission
of collective failure. Unable to resolve their differences, MPs had turned
their sights on each other. A collective act of self-harm. We were heading for
the Gunfight at the OK Corral. There would be blood. Many MPs wouldn’t be back
in December. But everyone was banking on the fact it wouldn’t be them.
John Crace’s
new book, Decline and Fail: Read in Case of Political Apocalypse, is published
by Guardian Faber. To order a copy go to guardianbookshop.com or call 0330 333
6846. Free UK p&p over £15, online orders only. Phone orders min.
p&p of £1.99
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