Irish Daily Mail

AS THE GARDEN GRILLING WORE ON, MY GOODWILL FIZZLED OUT LIKE DAMP CHARCOAL

- JAN MOIR

HOW apt that it was perfect barbecue weather when Dominic Cummings appeared in the Downing Street garden for his media grilling.

The senior UK government adviser had been marinating in a sauce of molten opprobrium since his illicit lockdown dash to Durham became public news.

He had also been highly seasoned by the chilli rage of a nation who demanded – and deserved – answers from this white-shirted mutineer who laid down the rules only to break them himself.

One law for him and another law for us? No wonder everyone is so furious. Fire up the coals, people, it is time for the skewering. This was going to be juicy. And bloody, too? One could only hope.

To be fair, Mr Cummings started well. He read from a typed speech with the weary air of a man with better things to do.

Some passages were marked out with yellow highlighte­r, perhaps the ones that read DO NOT APOLOGISE UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTAN­CES.

For Dominic, sorry was indeed the hardest word, because he did not utter it once in any meaningful way.

Having never heard him speak before, I was rather pleased that he didn’t talk in a tinny vocal falsetto like a Smash potato Martian wondering what the pesky Earth people were moaning about now.

INSTEAD he has a warm lilt that makes him seem practicall­y human, almost likeable. Especially when he was earnestly presenting himself as the kind of caring husband and father only trying to do the best for his wife and child.

Why did he make the 420km dash? His wife was ill, he felt ill. He thought the best thing was to pack their four-year-old son in the car and make the long journey north. ‘In retrospect I should have made this statement earlier,’ he said, which was the statement about a statement that was the understate­ment of the century.

He admitted to ‘being conflicted,’ but felt there was ‘nobody in London we could reasonably ask to look after our child’.

The family had options, which included driving to an isolated cottage on his father’s farm. So that is what they did – and I don’t feel that the Cummings family should be punished by the politics of jealousy and spite for having those options in the first place. In the circumstan­ces, much of his behaviour seems reasonable and understand­able. Many parents might have even sympathise­d with his plight if Cummings had admitted to all this in the beginning.

His biggest mistake was trying to arrogantly tough it out, believing that somehow he alone is above censure and what he sees as petty politickin­g.

His second mistake was trying to blame the media in general for everything. And to explain away a day trip to a bluebell wood and Barnard Castle as an expedition to test his eyesight? Should have gone to Specsavers, Dom.

As the press conference wore on, my goodwill towards him began to fizzle out like damp charcoal. Under questionin­g from journalist­s, the clash of detail and explanatio­n began to tip the scales against him as he impressed upon the nation that he was right and everyone else was wrong. The public needed a reason to believe in him, some logic and thought that we could understand. We were yearning for the authentic and the real – but all we got was a lot of oily flannel about rather a lot of car journeys that seemed unnecessar­y.

Scant comfort for those of us who obeyed the lockdown to the letter, at great personal and emotional expense. And we can all recognise carefully calibrated bluster when we hear it. ‘With respect,’ he kept saying through gritted teeth. Instead of respect he was bristling with irritation, hating every minute, convinced of his own moral certitude.

ONE supposes he became a special adviser because he would be unelectabl­e as a politician. Too maverick, too much of a rebel for comfort, too haughty for the concerns of the common man.

Look at that great Cummings brain, pulsing under the tanned cranium of a man who’s recently spent a lot of time in the Durham sunshine.

‘I know that British people hate the idea of unfairness,’ he said. That’s right, Dominic. They do.

You made your own interpreta­tion of the rules, you don’t regret what you did – and for now you are just going to have to contend with the unceasing fury you have unleashed. With respect.

 ??  ?? Skewered: Dominic Cummings in Downing Street yesterday
Skewered: Dominic Cummings in Downing Street yesterday
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