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Boris Johnson is a prime minister under pressure. Public disapproval of his government is drifting upwards. Confidence in the economy has collapsed. His approval ratings have shed more than 20 points in two months. The ‘rally effect’ that saw his support surge to nearly 70% has long gone. Former advisors are criticising the inner workings of his government. MPs openly complain about U-turns and indecision. The Conservative Party’s lead in the polls has crashed from more than 20 points to just five. And Keir Starmer now has the highest rating for any leader of the opposition since Tony Blair led Labour in 1995 and (What’s the Story) Morning Glory was topping the charts. Life comes at you fast, as my students say.
To be fair to Johnson his premiership has turned into something that neither he nor we expected. The theorist Michael Oakeshott once talked about politics being an interplay between two distinct styles. On one side stands the politics of faith, which yearns for national renewal, salvation and utopia on earth. On the other is the politics of scepticism, which is cynical of grand claims and more interested in process — in management and competency. These two styles continually compete. When sceptics fall into dry technocracy their opponents ask: “where are the people?” When the politics of faith demands that we “take back the control”, the sceptics reply: “yes, but how?”
Johnson, we all assumed, would speak to the politics of faith, a Prime Minister who would deliver national salvation and renewal by freeing the country from the European Union, building Global Britain and touring the Red Wall to cut red ribbons as we built a more egalitarian settlement. But Covid-19 had other plans. Here was a crisis that unfolded simultaneously on not one but two fronts: health and economics. Such complexity called for qualities that have rarely been on display in Johnson Land.
Crises demand competency over grandiosity, detail over vision, scepticism over faith. Walter Bagehot once remarked that the great qualities that are needed in these moments of crisis — a rapid energy, eager nature and imperious will — usually become impediments once normal times resume. With Johnson it is the other way around; his great qualities in normal times appear to have become impediments during a crisis.
This is what encouraged the sceptics to walk away. Ever since the referendum the Conservative Party has been haemorrhaging middle-class professionals and graduates. Already alienated by Brexit, the fumbled response to the Covid crisis and what they see as populist amateurism has pushed these former Tory voters further away. In the past six months alone Labour’s share of the Remain vote has jumped by nearly 10 points, with Remainers slowly but steadily starting to align in the way that Leavers did six months ago.
This is why Johnson simply cannot afford to alienate his true believers, who practise the politics of faith. And for a while he has managed not to. Ever since the Great Lockdown arrived and despite a wave of criticism his party has not once fallen below the 40% threshold — a threshold the Conservative Party barely broke between the ERM crisis and the Brexit vote. It is the increased tribalism of British politics that has so far handed Johnson a get-out-of-jail-free card. But things might be starting to change. Cracks are starting to appear.
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