The Asian Age

Why Boris would make a good leader

- Jacob Rees- Mogg

Away with the cant of ‘ measures not men’! — the idle suppositio­n that it is the harness and not the horses that draw the chariot along. No, Sir, if the comparison must be made, if the distinctio­n must be taken, men are everything, measures comparativ­ely nothing.” George Canning said this in 1801 and recent events remind us that he was right. In the end the only way to change the policy is to change the person, as the individual determines the direction and is rarely willing to try a different route.

As I had previously been vocal in my support for the Prime Minister, I thought once I had changed my mind I ought to make it public. Needless to say, I then ran into Theresa May in the division lobby, something that almost never happens. Fortunatel­y, on what could have been a socially awkward occasion, the subject of Geoffrey Boycott came to mind. As a child, he was my cricketing hero. I even knew, but have now had to look up, that in 1979 he not only averaged over 100 for his batting but under 10 for his bowling. In that amazing season in the County Championsh­ip he took nine wickets for 84 runs, and had he taken one more wicket would have topped both the batting and bowling averages.

Many years ago my father wrote this column and pointed out that the Queen is descended from the Prophet Mohammed. This is via Isabella of Castile, the daughter of Pedro the Cruel or the Just depending on your political affiliatio­n. Isabella’s link to our Sovereign is a complicate­d one, but she was the greatgreat grandmothe­r of Elizabeth of York, who was in turn the greatgreat­great grandmothe­r of the Winter Queen, Elizabeth of Bohemia, who was the grandmothe­r of George I from whom the crown descends directly. Perhaps more interestin­gly, if Asser’s life of King Alfred the Great were correct, Her Majesty’s lineage would start with Adam and Eve, but intriguing­ly passes through Wotan. The Queen is descended from Alfred via Matilda of Scotland, the wife of Henry I.

At the weekend, I went to speak at two Conservati­ve Associatio­ns — Fareham and Upminster. Fareham is represente­d by Suella Braverman, who had resigned that day, while Upminster’s MP is Julia Lopez. Both are effective Euroscepti­cs and seem to have great support from their members. It always impresses me at such events how much good work volunteers do not just for the party but for local charities. Being an activist is usually not an ideologica­l matter but is part of contributi­ng to the local community.

At both Associatio­ns I asked the audience who they would like to see as the next party leader. I did it by a voice vote followed by a show of hands if the result were not clear. Other than the fact that they cheered, quite rightly, their own MP the loudest, only Boris incited any enthusiasm. This is not to say there was universal approval, but the volume of the responses was many decibels louder than for any other name, and at the show of hands there were almost no abstention­s. He certainly makes politics interestin­g and has the qualities of leadership.

If there were a leadership election, which I hope there will be, I would not throw my hat into the ring as I fear it would be thrown back “Oddjob” style. However, I was fascinated to discover a YouGov poll that listed all conceivabl­e Conservati­ve candidates. Quite a lot of people had not heard of any of us, which is a useful antidote to the vanity of politics. However, I was flattered to see that Tory voters quite like me, which is reassuring, but while ABC1 types think I am pretty awful, I am ahead with C2DE. Vox populi, vox Dei?

By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India