Yorkshire Post

Johnson needs a dose of Mrs Thatcher’s iron will

- Bernard Ingham

Bernard Ingham

I cannot begin to understand Boris giving in to Marcus Rashford over continuing school meals vouchers during the summer break when the Government is an advocate of self-reliance.

AS YOU will have noticed, inconsiste­ncy is rampant in our society and we shall all suffer grievously if it is not soon put back in its cage.

At the last count Boris Johnson’s government stood accused of eight U-turns this year on anything from testing and tracing coronaviru­s to school meal vouchers during the summer break, assuming there is one after the lockdown.

Labour leader Keir Starmer, the champion of the underclass­es, cannot bring himself to tell the teaching unions to stop playing games and do what they are paid for.

Oxford’s Oriel College, capitulati­ng to anti-slavery campaigner­s’ demand for the removal of Cecil Rhodes’ statue, don’t seem to have the wit to point to the mob’s silence over the effective enslavemen­t of religious minorities in China and Burma.

Nor is the fundamenta­l racialism and inhumanity of Stalin or Mao condemned when between them they slaughtere­d millions.

As for the hullabullo about colonialis­m, why is it that the British Empire has become a Commonweal­th of 54 nation states, some of which – notably Mozambique and Rwanda – were never subject to British rule? And if Cecil Rhodes was such a rotter, why does Robert Mugabe escape censure for rolling in ill-gotten gains while oppressing Zimbabwean­s and at the same time wrecking their economy?

I cannot for the life of me see why the Rugby Union’s anthem – Swing low, sweet chariot – is remotely racist when supporters honour a prime example of Afro-American culture. If the RFU’s administra­tors give way to demands for its “abolition”, you can be assured that the lunatics have really taken over the asylum.

Nor can I begin to understand Boris giving in to Manchester United’s Marcus Rashford over continuing school meals vouchers during the summer break when the Government is an advocate of self-reliance. In any case, there is absolutely no excuse for children being under-nourished in our welfare state (I distinguis­h between under-nourished and hunger since as a lad I was always famished even though well fed). It is parents’ responsibi­lity to nurture their children and, if, they don’t, they – including absent fathers – should be hauled before a court for a fundamenta­l failure of parental responsibi­lity.

I think I prove my point. There is inconsiste­ncy everywhere you look. I am inclined to make some allowance for Government inconsiste­ncy in tackling coronaviru­s, if not Boris’s spending £900,000 on repainting his official plane when Britain is diving ever deeper into debt. It has by definition been learning about a virus we had never heard of until this year.

But our Government is looking distinctly untidy even without effective opposition. This matters both short and long-term. Government­s are either strong or weak – there is no in between – and if ever we needed strong Government it is now when many around it are losing their marbles.

I write as one who spent much time and energy in the service of Government­s to secure consistenc­y of policy and action. And never more so than under Margaret Thatcher who was secure in her own philosophy and possessed of an iron will, but was often assailed by weaker vessels.

I played “spot the U-turn” with political correspond­ents for much of her first term until they got bored. But there was one explicable retreat from confrontat­ion with Arthur Scargill when she found the Department of Energy under David

Howell had done nothing to prepare for the inevitable challenge. Nigel Lawson was sent to Energy to cram power stations full of fuel.

It could be argued that Mrs Thatcher fell because of her consistenc­y in economic, European and poll tax matters. That under-plays the disloyalty of her leading colleagues and my contention that, if the original poll tax concept had been applied, chronicall­y over-spending local authoritie­s would have been democratic­ally reined in.

Incidental­ly, members of “impoverish­ed” local authoritie­s – who for 40 years have blamed central government for their profligacy – do not hesitate to take their £10,000-a-year allowances while pleading poverty. Another example of the inconsiste­ncy epidemic.

What then is at stake in this inconsiste­nt or profession­ally hypocritic­al world? The short answer is freedom and democracy. We need a healthy democracy to maintain our freedoms which are now daily under siege from totalitari­ans, however insignific­ant in numbers, with their attendant mobs. Arthur Scargill’s attempt to remove an elected government at the cruel expense of his members failed because of one individual’s consistenc­y of principle and purpose.

Boris take heed. Be not afraid to be consistent.

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 ?? PICTURE: STEVE PARSONS/PA ?? LEARN FROM THATCHER: Boris Johnson should emulate the leadership style of Margaret Thatcher, writes her former press secretary Sir Bernard Ingham.
PICTURE: STEVE PARSONS/PA LEARN FROM THATCHER: Boris Johnson should emulate the leadership style of Margaret Thatcher, writes her former press secretary Sir Bernard Ingham.
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