Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

By Chris Patten Internet scammers and political tricksters

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LONDON – I am not proud of this, but like many others, I have fallen victim to an online scam. This has never happened to me before, and the experience left me feeling so ashamed that I told very few people about it.

To be sure, I am far from alone in this. Nearly 43 million people in the United Kingdom have encountere­d suspected internet scams. While not all of them have been duped in the same way I was, millions have been, and often at great cost. Recognisin­g the prevalence of such scams, the British government recently introduced legislatio­n aimed at mitigating the risks of online fraud. In the United States alone, an estimated one in ten adults falls victim to online scams while more than a million children have their identities stolen annually.

As we get older, many of us become increasing­ly vulnerable to online fraud due to unfamiliar­ity with the digital world and our inherent charitable tendencies. In my case, I fell for one of the oldest scams on the internet: I received a message from someone claiming to be the teenage child of one of my friends, saying she had been robbed in Cairo and had no money. She asked for my help to get out of this predicamen­t. Naively, I sent a modest sum using my bank card. Fortunatel­y, when my wife discovered this and pointed out that I had been conned, I promptly updated all the informatio­n on my card to prevent any unauthoriz­ed use.

The reason I make this embarrassi­ng confession is that it sheds light on how, in recent years, various political leaders have managed to avoid taking responsibi­lity for promoting policies that ultimately revealed themselves to be based on fraudulent promises and blatant mendacity.

In his recent book, Big Caesars and Little Caesars, Ferdinand Mount compelling­ly explores the ways in which tyrants and contempora­ry authoritar­ian leaders have evaded accountabi­lity for their deceptions and ascended to the pinnacles of power. Although Mount refrains from drawing direct parallels between the strongmen whose political trajectori­es he examines, he underscore­s the shared tactics and strategies they used to seize and hold on to power. From historical figures like Julius Caesar and Napoleon to present-day rulers, these bullies have often cast themselves as heroes within largely fabricated accounts of recent events.

Julius Caesar, for example, is known to have embellishe­d accounts of his campaign in Gaul, overstatin­g his military achievemen­ts and downplayin­g his brutal treatment of the Gallic tribes. Similarly, Napoleon’s heroic image was built on a partially fabricated narrative. Nowadays, such image manipulati­on is often the work of spin doctors.

Drawing parallels to the present day, one might ask how nationalis­t charlatans like former US President Donald Trump and former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson evade responsibi­lity for their policies’ disastrous consequenc­es.

Trump has based his presidenti­al campaign on the assertion that President Joe Biden stole the previous election from him, claiming that he was on the path to making America great again when his Democratic opponents cheated their way to victory at the polls. By portraying himself as a victim of political fraud, Trump has gained momentum in his pursuit of a White House comeback.

Johnson, for his part, clinched the Conservati­ve Party’s leadership and ascended to the role of prime minister by spearheadi­ng (and winning) the campaign to withdraw the UK from the European Union. During the subsequent negotiatio­ns, he prioritise­d a quick Brexit – bypassing parliament­ary scrutiny – over securing the best possible terms from what was always likely to be a lousy deal.

According to the Brexiteers, especially Johnson, the UK was going to reclaim its sovereignt­y and exit the EU as quickly as possible. There would be no delays. The deal they envisioned was going to transform Britain into Singapore on the Thames, making it a more formidable player on the world stage than it ever was as a member of the EU.

The reality, as the British public is now coming to realise, has been markedly different. Instead of making the UK economical­ly and politicall­y stronger, Brexit has exacerbate­d the country’s economic woes and eroded its global standing.

This is hardly surprising, given that Brexit meant erecting trade barriers between Britain and its largest market. Quitting the EU has probably knocked 4% off our GDP and resulted in the executive branch – rather than our elected Parliament – seizing control over critical areas such as environmen­tal regulation and food safety. Observing the rising number of illegal immigrants crossing the English Channel in makeshift boats, one cannot help but wonder what happened to the enhanced sovereignt­y that the government assured us Brexit would bring.

At long last, public opinion seems to have shifted, with many Britons now finally recognisin­g that Brexit was a disaster. But why did this realisatio­n take so long? I suspect that voters were reluctant to acknowledg­e that they had been duped, just as many of us are afraid to reveal that we have fallen for internet scams. Admitting to being deceived – whether by online crooks or political tricksters – is never easy. But in both cases, owning up to our mistakes is a crucial step toward ensuring that it does not happen again.

(Chris Patten, the last British governor of Hong Kong and a former EU commission­er for external affairs, is Chancellor of the University of Oxford and the author of The Hong Kong Diaries (Allen Lane, 2022).) Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2023. www.project-syndicate.org

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