The Sunday Post (Inverness)

The Brexitt PM who chose to walk away

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I was reminded this week of Bob Dylan’s Blowin’ In The Wind. “How many times must the cannonball­s fly before they’re forever banned?”

The singer- songwriter’s rhetorical questions about peace and war could well be ones David Cameron has pondered in recent days.

Two months after resigning as Prime Minister, the former Tory leader announced he would also be standing down as the Witney MP.

Of course there were the usual platitudes – Cameron said he did not want to be a “distractio­n” for his successor who had “got off to a cracking start”; Theresa May in turn praised the “great strides” he had made on social reform.

But the move was inevitably surrounded by much speculatio­n as to his motivation­s. Some theories were less serious than others. Football legend Gary Lineker mockingly suggested that supposed Aston Villa fan Cameron had resigned to spend time watching his favourite team West Ham, in reference to his now infamous general election campaign gaffe. Even more ludicrousl­y, a source close to Jeremy Corbyn claimed the Islington MP’s effective leadership of the Labour party had been a key factor. Just to be clear, that isn’t a joke.

PIt was undoubtedl­y a better week than normal f o r Co r by n w h o managed briefly to unite his party against May’s grammar school plans.

But one win at Prime Minister’s Questions (I don’t think he ever really got the better of Cameron) does not an effective leader make.

The opportunit­y to make more money outside of politics and his conflict with May on education matters were among the more plausible explanatio­ns for Cameron’s decision.

With such a small majority, his vote or abstention could have been the difference on grammar schools.

Others speculated he had decided to get out before the publicatio­n of a parliament­ary report criticisin­g the UK’s interventi­on in Libya under his leadership. He stepped down on the Monday, it came on the Wednesday.

In echoes of Tony Blair and the Chilcot report into the Iraq War, the foreign affairs committee accused Cameron of lacking a coherent strategy for the air campaign.

It also said interventi­on was based on erroneous assumption­s and had led to the rise of Daesh or so- called Islamic State in North Africa.

Read between the lines: the lessons of the Iraq War were not heeded, although the UK Government was quick to point out the Arab League had called for the action, which was authorised by the United Nations. Regardless, the comparison with Blair – which provoked my Dylan reminiscen­ce – is pertinent.

But whereas the words Tony Blair will always be synonymous with Iraq, Cameron is most likely to be remembered as the Brexit prime minister.

His legacy will be the EU referendum many believe he didn’t need to hold and then walking away.

And yet – in years to come – after the UK has physically left the EU, if May and her team make a success of it, a more forgiving inheritanc­e could, with the benefit of hindsight, emerge.

After all, Cameron was also the Prime Minister who kept Scotland in the UK, for now at least.

And he steered the most unlikely of coalitions for five years before winning last year’s general election.

It was the first time in 23 years the party had won an outright majority, albeit a small one.

While critics point to the controvers­ial bedroom tax on his watch, allies cite his government’s steps to raise the tax threshold, taking the lowest paid out of tax altogether.

Of course if Brexit blows up in May’s face, as it could do, I accept these become unlikely epitaphs.

One thing that should be said for Cameron, however, is that – with the notable exception of airport expansion – the man did not shy away from taking decisions.

Sure, people will argue over whether they were right or wrong, but they were decisions nonetheles­s.

So perhaps his seemingly sudden resignatio­n as an MP is simply another example of that. THE UK Government iss facing calls to match theth EU’s commitment mobilet to rolling phoneout 5G coverage by 2025.

The EU wants to “ffully deploy” 5G across the EU by then andn to equip every villagevi and city with freefr wireless internet aroundar the main centresce of public life by 2020.2

Now SNP MSP Joan McAlpine has written to the UK Government to ask it to match the commitment­co outside ofo the EU.

“Connectivi­ty is essentiale­s to the future of our economy, ” she said.a THE UK will veto all measures to set up an EU army for as long as it is a member of the European Union, the Defence Secretary has warned.

France and Germany are reported to have drawn up a timetable to create a “common military force” across Europe but Sir Michael Fallon said “this is not going to happen” while the UK is part of the EU.

The Tory minister is worried about a rival to NATO being created that will underline the defence alliance, and described it as “unnecessar­y duplicatio­n”. NEARLY two thirds of appeals against rejected disability payment claims are successful, new figures have revealed.

Social Security secretary Angela Constance said the 65% success rate for Personal Independen­ce Payments appeals showed “a deeply flawed system” and hit out at people being “subjected to a highly stressful, often prolonged, process to get the support they need and are entitled to”.

The welfare payment will soon be devolved to Holyrood.

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