Thursday, November 12, 2020

A Crisis Of Relevancy

Now that Donald Trump has been served his eviction notice, Brexit Britain finds itself in a lonely place. Afua Hirsch writes:

After the election of Donald Trump in 2016, an American friend compared the nativist populism of the United States with the state of Brexit Britain. “You think it’s bad that Britain voted to leave the EU,” he told me. “America has voted to leave itself.”

Following the American example, Boris Johnson's government took a similarly outrageous turn:

Under cover of the past four years of regression, the British government has been running riot. However badly our leaders behaved, though, they knew there was a larger, more powerful democracy behaving even worse. Conservative attacks on the independence of the judiciary, for example, may represent an unprecedented assault on our constitution. But for Trump, lashing out personally at individual judges on Twitter became routine.

The British government’s relaxed attitude about violating international law has prompted the condemnation of nearly all living former prime ministers. But Trump led the way in tearing up international agreements and withdrawing from multilateral organisations.

And, just as Trump stoked long-simmering racial divisions, Johnson did the same:

In Britain we have had to endure an equalities minister who suggests anti-racism reading materials are illegal in school, a foreign minister who derided Black Lives Matter as a Game of Thrones spoof, and Boris Johnson himself, as ready to insult black children in Africa as he was the black president in the White House. Vice-president-elect Kamala Harris is said to “hate” Johnson for claiming Obama held a grudge against Britain because of his “part-Kenyan” heritage. The prime minister’s comments have not aged well.

The Kenya reference was not accidental. Much of Johnson’s political strategy rests on foundations of imperial pride and colonial nostalgia. That was compatible with the “special relationship” when the American president was, like him, similarly smitten by an imagined great white past. Lamenting the decline of this relationship has become a national pastime in Britain – traditionally at just such moments as this, when a change of guard in the White House threatens the status quo. What is clear is that, insofar as the special relationship does exist, it’s rooted in “shared cultural values”. This phrase, whenever deployed by Britain, is almost always code for: “We colonised you once, and how well you’ve done from it.”

Tories pumped with pride from this same history – gloriously bragging in song that “Britons never shall be slaves” – are unlikely to find its seductive power holds much sway within the incoming US administration. The government ignored British ethnic minorities when we offered the truth of our own lineages to counter this propaganda. Ignoring the president and vice-president of America is slightly harder to pull off.

That leaves Johnson looking particularly fragile and exposed. This week one of his predecessors, John Major – no stranger to strained relations with America when he was in office – warned that “complacency and nostalgia are the route to national decline”. Britain needed a reality check, Major cautioned. “We are no longer an irreplaceable bridge between Europe and America. We are now less relevant to them both.”

Both the United States and Britain now face a crisis of relevancy. Mr. Johnson would be wise to rethink his whole project.

Image: businessinsider.com


10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Mr. Johnson is not wise, and never had been. Like Trump, he's an ignorant narcissistic blowhard. I'm surprised Trudeau's claiming we'll have a trade deal with Britain before the end of the year. Why the rush? Why not gang up with the new Biden administration and take advantage of BoJo's incompetence?

Cap

Owen Gray said...

It's never been wise to encourage Donald Trump, Cap. Likewise, it's not wise to encourage Johnson.

The Disaffected Lib said...

The best BoJo put down came from David Letterman. After a bit of mandatory chit chat, Letterman paused, stared at Boris and asked, "do you cut your own hair?" I suppose that was more diplomatic than calling him an idiot.

When you look at the succession from Cameron to May and now Johnson, it's an unbroken chain of incompetence, hubris and idiocy. The best thing the Tories had going for them was Labour in chaotic disarray. Boris doubled down on a rigged Brexit referendum that magically morphed from non-binding to mandatory and then bungled the pandemic, leaving the UK's Covid numbers worse even than America's. The country, if it can still be called a country, now faces a pandemic nightmare plus a hard Brexit. BoJo has brought Britain low.

I agree with Cap. It's hard to see the wisdom of rushing into some free trade deal while Britain is in chaos.

rumleyfips said...

You can hear the band play the Colonel Blimp march ' Bullroar was all the band could play, bullroar they played it night and day ".

It's tempting to say that the bad brits ( House of Lords, royal family, tory party, etc ) deserve what they get butwhat about the rest of the population who are going down with them

Owen Gray said...

It's remarkable, Mound, that modern democracies can elect idiots to the highest office in the land. It's surely not a sign of wisdom.

Owen Gray said...

Good question, rumley. The damage done is not contained to just a few twits.

Anonymous said...

Fear not. Rupe the Murdoch will ride in on his kangaroo to leverage his media ownings and rescue the US/England relationship. He has already put a picture of a smiling Grandpa Joe on the front page of the NY Post, thus causing some of his Fox TV news cockaninnies minor heart attacks by not being completely down on the Dems, just 80%. Apparently Rupe has decided the Donald must go. It's peculiar that interviews with the media mogul have been quite easy to get recently, a bit of a sign I'd say. But he has a hard go ahead of him.

I say US/England relationship, because Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are basically letting Boris screw up his own country and protecting theirs where possible. Biden, with his Irish background, is having none of this fake Ireland/Northern Ireland border at sea the idiotic Boris has come up with as part of Brexit. So Murdoch will have to be at his most persuasive to get Joe on board, because Biden has zero time for Boris. Harris's umbrage with Johnson's useless remarks about Obama's Kenyan ancestry is small potatoes compared to that.

https://www.irishnews.com/news/brexit/2020/09/17/news/biden-warns-northern-ireland-peace-deal-must-not-be-casualty-of-brexit-2069871/

There won't be any US/England trade deal if Boris continues with this particular idiocy.

I was born in England, but became a Canadian in 1965 following my parents immigration with kids here. I suppose that means I'm still British and could absentee vote there, though I have not the slightest interest in doing so. Boris reminds me of a certain kind of small boy I met while in English private school before I came to Canada. The jolly prankster and happy racist, having read too many John Buchan adventure novels. No doubt he'd cheer if Robertsons put the Golliwog decal back on the top of its shredded marmalade preserves under the cap. Calling him a complete bumbling idiot, who apparently is as averse to actual work as is Trump, I believe is entirely fair.

BM

Owen Gray said...

It continues to amaze me, BM, that both of these men are so utterly clueless.

Trailblazer said...

Blogger Owen Gray said...
It continues to amaze me, BM, that both of these men are so utterly clueless.

As are those that elected them.

TB

Owen Gray said...

Absolutely true, TB. The clueless vote for clueless leaders. The result is a confederacy of dunces.