The New Zealand Herald

Maverick Johnson has no easy task

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Five years ago, it would have seemed unthinkabl­e that the United States and the United Kingdom could be led by such mavericks as Donald J Trump and Alexander Boris de Pfeffel Johnson respective­ly. But the Western democratic world’s new normal was confirmed late Tuesday night (NZ time) when the Conservati­ve Party’s 180,000 members voted to replace Theresa May as British PM with Johnson, rather than his rival for the top spot, the traditiona­l “safer bet”, Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt.

It is easy to make all manner of comparison­s with the two trans-Atlantic leaders, to dismiss and lampoon them as caricature­s. Yet their standing as two of the world’s most powerful men demands acceptance — even if only as symptoms of a global malaise, an immense dissatisfa­ction with the political status quo. But it is much harder to accept that, in the process of establishi­ng a new world order, once-fundamenta­l values such as truth, integrity and often human decency have been rudely and roundly relegated to the sidelines.

Is someone often described as a dishevelle­d, gaffe-prone buffoon — albeit a well-educated, politicall­y experience­d, charismati­c and apparently charming one — really the best person for Britain’s top job? It certainly won’t be a convention­al first 100 days of office, either. Instead, Johnson has one primary box to tick in that time: to deliver Brexit (although he has also set himself the task of uniting a country riven by frustratio­n, uncertaint­y and no small amount of fear — and defeating Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn in the next election to boot).

There will be many in the Conservati­ve party horrified by Johnson’s appointmen­t — he acknowledg­ed as much during his acceptance speech to the party faithful — unable to quell the personal and profession­al warning bells given some of the legacies of his time as former journalist, London mayor and foreign secretary. But it is likely some party members voted for him purely for the reasoning: if he can’t do it, who can? Some must wonder whether depth or long-term thinking are really essential to the immediate task of Brexit — is it instead the unconventi­onal that is now required? Could Johnson in fact be the very man for the job?

There is no doubting he has been handed a poisoned chalice, even as a champion of Brexit. If he can negotiate a successful divorce from the EU — whatever that might look like — it would be a personal and political triumph. In times of trouble, a nation certainly needs a figurehead. There are no few references to a modern-day Churchill mantle. Cometh the hour, cometh the man . . .

First, however, Johnson must unite his own party, stem the outgoing tide of dissenters, form a stable Cabinet without making more enemies, and do what Theresa May has found hitherto impossible: get a divided Parliament to agree on a divorce deal with the European Union, then get the EU to do the same — or drag the UK out with no deal as he threatens. Believe it or not that’s actually the plain sailing part; from there it’s uncharted waters.

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