The Mail on Sunday

Did our leaders have to pass a stupidity exam to get into Westminste­r?

- Peter Hitchens Read Peter’s blog at hitchensbl­og.mailonsund­ay.co.uk and follow him on Twitter @clarkemica­h

IN 30 years it will be much easier to say this, but this must be the stupidest era there has ever been in British politics. Oh yes, some modern politician­s can make classical allusions or dance nimbly about when interviewe­d, but they do not really know anything, or understand anything.

They live entirely in the present. They know little of other countries and less about the past. They idolise Winston Churchill but are in fact ignorant about him or his era and the huge price in power and wealth which he rightly paid for our survival in 1940.

Worse still, they think they are clever. This has something to do with the way we pick our leaders.

I have long suspected that they have to pass an examinatio­n in stupidity before being allowed into Westminste­r. But in fact the selection procedures of the major parties achieve the same thing.

They demand servile conformity with the idiotic beliefs which now govern our country.

Show the slightest sign of spirit or independen­t thought, on any topic, and you are out.

So here we are, fresh from six months of determined self-harm and illiterate panic over the virus, on the brink of making it even worse.

Anyone who knew anything about the EU issue said years ago (as I did) that our best way out of Brussels rule was to copy Norway – stay in the Single Market and get rid of all the political and legal baggage.

Zealots, who treasure the delusions that Britain is still a major power with a thriving economy, derided this. No, they said, we must have a total breach, and then we will soar free, our Victorian greatness restored.

Few of them ever grasped what it will mean to leave the Single Market, into which our economy has been totally integrated for decades, but they will shortly have a fascinatin­g lesson in that.

The trouble is, the rest of us will have to have that lesson too.

And it is hardly surprising that France, which has so long resented our standing in Europe and the world, sees this as an opportunit­y to take us down a peg or two. But before complainin­g, remember that we gave them this chance.

It means trade with our nearest neighbours suddenly becomes far more complicate­d, expensive and difficult. The snaggled knot of Great Britain’s new relations with Northern Ireland gives some hint of the problem, but only a small one. Dover is going to be quite an interestin­g place for some time to come.

What interests me about this, as a powerless spectator, is that – as with the Covid crisis – there has never been any opportunit­y for sensible thinking to find its way into Westminste­r and Whitehall.

The debate has always been between hard- leavers and hard-remainers. The whole i dea of intelligen­t compromise has been drowned by militant, angry passion. And here I am, dismissed as an extremist or worse by much of our culture and by the BBC, and presumably as a ‘traitor’ by many on my own side.

Well, I did try to tell you.

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 ??  ?? HARMLESS: Members of the Wimborne Militia in action
HARMLESS: Members of the Wimborne Militia in action

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