To the Prime Minister’s mind, when the voters delivered an inconclusive result in 2010, they expressed a desire to see less politics, not more. What they wanted was for politicians to put country before party and to devote themselves to solving the nation’s problems, not to compete to score points off each other. Mr Cameron has a clear sense that his duty is to stay clear of politics as much as he reasonably can.Whatever drugs Mr Brogan's on, I'll have some too...
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
Deluded
From Benedict Brogan at the Daily Telegraph:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Once again, from inside the bubble, we see the fatal confusion between "politics" and "party politics". In the minds of the Broganites (if such creatures can be considered to have minds), only the latter qualifies as "politics".
ReplyDeleteMore seriously, we have here a fundamental failure to understand what politics actually is.
Even in its most basic definition, politics is about the application of power, the process of government. Politics is government, government is politics.
But then, possibly, Brogan might just have it right. If Cameron "has a clear sense that his duty is to stay clear of politics as much as he reasonably can", that is what he is actually doing.
Evidently, he is staying clear of government, not least - one supposes - because he is incapable of it.