Christopher Caldwell's* diary in the latest edition of the print magazine is good fun and I look forward to reading his new book. This part was especially entertaining:
And therein lies the difference between a political system in which the Prime Minister stands or falls on the support he can muster in parliament and a system in which the chief executive is, to some great extent anyway, considered above - and immune from - such concerns. Furthermore, if such "personalisation of political opposition" does happen more frequently in monarchies** than republics then, dash it, that leaves the monarchies one up and the republics one down.For many years, the ingenuity of the British press in exploiting the Brown-Blair rivalry story amazed me. What a gift the papers had for conveying that, this time, it was really about to blow. It was good to see last week that this old journalistic warhorse can still be saddled up, with the help of Hazel Blears’s remarks about the Prime Minister’s ‘lamentable’ failure to communicate. To an American audience, Blears’s insistence that she was 100 per cent behind the prime minister would have sounded wholly credible. For us, describing a politician as ‘failing to communicate’, or (in Americanese) ‘not getting his message out’ is what loyalists do. It’s a way of avoiding the alternative explanation, which is that the public hates him. Funny that the press does. Ninety per cent of them were drumming up Brown’s candidacy in the old days. Now, to someone who’s been away only a few months, their contempt is unfathomable, even irrational. On Monday, two daily newspaper cartoonists filled their frames with caricatures of the prime ministerial bum. Maybe this sort of personalisation of political opposition happens more in monarchies than republics.
There is, I grant you, a corrosive quality to the (often warranted) scepticism with which this country views its parliamentarians and it is possible that that this is a Bad Thing, but I confess I find it more appealling and vastly less worrrying than the notion that any American president should be given the benefit of the doubt merely by fact of being President and, thus, the elected Priest-King of All the States. Scepticism and a proper dollop of cynicism should be features, not bugs.
*Yes, I was somewhat disobliging about his most recent Weekly Standard piece, but so what? He's always worth reading.
**Yup, my 17-year-old self would be appalled by the extent to which I've become a monarchist.
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Paul B
May 8th, 2009 10:45am Report this commentI agree with you Alex, we can metaphorically place our CEO- the PM- in stocks and throw large amounts of manure at him/her, whilst the Non Executive Chairman can stay immune from it all. As you state ,its most resoundingly 1-0 to the Monarchy. My 17 year old self, would have also regarded me with unashamed contempt and hatred.
Gaw
May 8th, 2009 4:47pm Report this commentHe's certainly ambitious - aiming to mirror de Toqueville's achievement for Europe and echoing Burke in his title. Blimey.
Craig Strachan
May 9th, 2009 8:23pm Report this commentYes, we shouldn't revere Obama simply because he is elected President.
We revere him because he is The One.
Philip Martin
May 10th, 2009 1:13pm Report this commentStrange that you can move so far from your 17 year old selves and think a monarchy such as ours is OK. You can still have a figurehead president above the fray providing continuity without the ridiculousness of our fairy-tale racists sitting on the top of the constitutional pile. These people who require servants for everything, have no contact with daily ordinary life, who cannot marry Catholics (the biggest denomination of Christianity by far), who still see themselves as there by the grace of God...and on and on.
I would have liked your seventeen year old self...they at least still had some balls and a brain to go with them...
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