Sunday People

WHAT’S THE FUTURE FOR TIME, LORDS PM’S Project Vanity

Peril of Britain ‘fixed’ just to glorifyjoh­nson

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TAKE a deep breath, swallow hard and ask yourself this question: Is it about time we started to take Boris Johnson seriously?

No, I don’t mean forgetting that he is a charlatan, liar and political trickster. The Prime Minister’s personal character is a given.

He’s cocked a snook at any sanction that might once have brought down a PM and got a parliament­ary majority with a licence to do what he wants.

What requires deeper examinatio­n is his determinat­ion to get things done and what he wants to do.

He is not the cack-handed buffoon of pre-downing Street but a politician with unfettered power on a mission. A mission that carries a hidden danger.

The man who played such a prominent part in government­s that championed the crushing of the less well off under austerity is now pledged to “level up” and tackle the massive wealth gap – between regions and between the richest and poorest.

Nothing less than to fix “broken” Britain, the nation he helped break.

There are signs he means it. In the almost child-like enthusiasm for building things, in the oft repeated pledges to look after the “left behind” in the Midlands and Northern seats whose votes were “lent” to the Conservati­ves at the election.

It’s there in the green light for HS2 and further plans for the railways, in the extra public spending that will be seen as a One Nation splurge in next month’s

Budget. Evidence of

THIS is not a wind up. Just don’t ask any passing peer the time of day. The answer might be confusing.

Their Lordships have been addressing the momentous question of whether Britain, irrespecti­ve of Brexit, should

Mr Johnson’s determinat­ion came in the reshuffle as delicately lacerating as a butcher’s bluntest knife.

It will be there in the rewriting of the Treasury rules to switch spending from the wealthy South East to the more deprived parts of Northern England.

The myth that the rules on public spending are politicall­y neutral, a precise scientific formula, are about to be busted. They’ve always been open to

political direction and fall into line with European time. That is, no spring forward and fall back, as far as the clocks are concerned.

It’s been a thorny question for years and a final decision should have been taken a year ago. So what conclusion have

Boris – sorry, Mr Johnson – is about to perform a hand-brake turn with a tax raid on higher earners.

Wearing Labour’s clothes is going to be uncomforta­ble for many traditiona­l Tories in the cosseted shires.

But what obstacle will they be to a leader who is prepared to expel such party stalwarts as Ken Clarke and Michael Heseltine?

For them it will be a price to pay for ten, or more, years of Tories in power, restored to their old claim of being the “natural party of government”.but the the peers come to in their report Clock changes: is it time for change? Baroness Donaghy who chaired the inquiry says Government needs more time to “fully examine” the implicatio­ns. How much time?

We’re still in the dark. traditiona­l low-tax, low-spenders and the Treasury’s formidable power will ensure the richest keep a firm grip on their end of the scales.

That’s where Labour comes in. It has to be forensic in exposing Mr Johnson’s mission as one devoted to power, not a true desire for fairness or greater democracy.

It won’t if it doesn’t itself adjust to a new political landscape.

Boris may be deadly serious. But it doesn’t mean he should be taken at face value.

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