Daily Mail

Booster Boris has got his bounce back He admits he’s made mistakes. But with one bound — and a hugely ambitious new vision — is PM’s corona nightmare at last behind him?

- by Simon Walters

CAN you possibly imagine Margaret Thatcher ever having had to reassure her audience that she was ‘not a Communist’? The Iron Lady, after all, made her name by standing up to Communism wherever she encountere­d it, whether in the Kremlin or the hard Left British trade unions whose leaders she crushed.

Yet Boris Johnson, in perhaps his most significan­t speech so far on the future direction of this country, felt obliged to do so yesterday.

‘Friends, I am not a Communist,’ he told those listening.

Of course, it was a prepostero­us throwaway line to get a laugh after he had reeled off an avalanche of public spending pledges.

But it reminded us that, whatever else he had in common with Maggie — including his election-winning magic and charisma — Boris Johnson is no Thatcherit­e when it comes to economics.

It was also a long overdue acknowledg­ement by him of the increasing unease felt among many Conservati­ve supporters over his economic response to the Covid crisis.

Largesse

They have been deeply alarmed by levels of state spending that would m a k e even a Socialist administra­tion blush — but have been signed off by a Conservati­ve Prime Minister. Johnson won a general election landslide by telling voters Jeremy Corbyn would wreck the UK by spending taxpayers’ money like there was no tomorrow. But in the past four months the PM has done exactly that.

Furloughin­g and other rescue measures to prop up our beleaguere­d economy have consumed eye-watering sums — and now he is promising to spend even more billions in this investment programme.

He was given no choice but to lavish money on the rescue measures because of the need to protect livelihood­s threatened by the pandemic.

But yesterday’s largesse took things considerab­ly further. This was a formidable statement of intent delivered by a Boris who, blinking into the light of what we all hope will be a post-Covid dawn, seems to have recovered some of his Bojo mojo.

He thrives on the prospect of recovery — it is a fight far more suited to Boris the optimist than the dark battle against a raging pandemic.

It is no coincidenc­e Boris delivered his speech in Dudley in the Black Country, the heart of Britain’s industrial revolution in the 19th century.

The town is part of the ‘Red Wall’ of parliament­ary seats he won from Labour for the Tories at the election.

Many of those whose have benefited most from furlough and other generous Government initiative­s to cushion the impact of the virus are workingcla­ss voters from exactly these constituen­cies.

Many voted Tory for the first time in the election because they trusted Johnson on Brexit; they trusted him when he said he would ‘level up’ the gap between the nation’s haves and have-nots; they trusted him when he said he cared as much about Labour traditiona­lists in the North and Midlands as the Tory faithful in the party’s southern stronghold­s.

And yesterday he was busy reassuring them, promising they had not been forgotten, repeating his pledge to ‘level up’ again and again.

Indeed, his new ‘build, build, build’ slogan and that promise of £5 billion for infrastruc­ture projects could have been designed for people like those in Dudley where they are used to rolling their sleeves up to earn a living.

Stressing the importance of all workers — not just those with Oxford degrees in Classics like himself, the Prime Minister said: ‘Talent and genius are expressed as much by hand and eye as they are by spreadshee­t and essays.’

And, as for austerity, it’s banished. Boris refuses even to utter the term, calling it the ‘A’ word. ‘We’re not going to be cheese-paring our way out of trouble because the world has moved on since 2008,’ he announced in a dig at his predecesso­r as PM, David Cameron, and ex-Chancellor George Osborne.

Only he could get away with saying that with a straight face — the prudence, or austerity, of Conservati­ve administra­tions since 2010 is what has made it possible for him to finance his multi-billion pound coronaviru­s bailouts, and his ‘New Deal’.

Flourish

But though Boris was wooing working- class voters, he was equally set on the affection of those Conservati­ves who worry he has forgotten them. It is a political balancing act almost as difficult as the economic one he faces.

But he managed it yesterday with Johnsonian flourish — and I say this as someone who has not always been his greatest supporter.

For he defiantly refused to apologise for his coronaviru­s spending spree or its political implicatio­ns: ‘I am conscious it sounds like a prodigious amount of Government interventi­on — that is how it is meant to sound.’

Yet he also reassured his Tory detractors, and not just by assuring them he was far from a villainous Communist. ‘I believe it is the job of the Government to create the conditions of free enterprise,’ he insisted. No Conservati­ve would quibble with that.

And there was more. ‘When I say levelling up I don’t mean attacking our great companies, I don’t mean impeding the success of London — far from it. Or launching a punitive raid on the wealthy.’

Then came an even bolder affirmatio­n of Tory principles.

Just as it had been right to applaud NHS workers, the people who ‘made the NHS possible’ — in other words those who paid most in taxes — deserved a round of applause too: ‘innovators, wealth creators, capitalist­s, financiers’.

Many Tories will have gained as much comfort from the style of Johnson’s speech as from its content. Though a little pale under the lights, he seemed as if he was back to Boris the Booster, the leader who won Brexit and an election landslide against the odds.

We all know Johnson has had a difficult few months.

Lockdown

There is no question he had his eye off the ball at the start of the Covid outbreak; errors were made in protecting the elderly; the disease nearly took his life and his ratings plummeted after the Dominic Cummings lockdown controvers­y. Amid all that he became a father again at 55 and has been changing nappies.

But there are unquestion­ably signs of new vim. He claimed at the weekend he is ‘as fit as a butcher’s dog’ and did pressups on the floor of his Downing Street study to prove it.

Three days ago he said he was feeling so much better, that his police bodyguards had had to up their pace to stay level with him on his regular morning jogs. He has a new bounce in his step.

In one reflective moment in his speech yesterday, Boris acknowledg­ed that at times the Government’s response to coronaviru­s was seen as being like a ‘recurring bad dream where you are telling your feet to run but your feet won’t move.’ The sentiments seemed heartfelt.

He will be hoping desperatel­y that, having announced a national recovery package, the bad dream is over and the economy will start running again. Only then can he be assured of taking both the Red Wall voters and those increasing­ly alarmed Conservati­ves with him.

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