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Whatever else they may be Dave, Nick and Ed are lucky. Only
Dave occupies the hot seat, but Ed has a chance and although Nick has no chance, all
three are lucky.
They aren’t talented, charismatic, far-sighted or statesmanlike. They don’t know what is going on in the world or what to
do about it. They know only what they are told by those with enough money to do
the telling. That's what serious money buys - the right to tell.
They are where they are because the impossibly complex ebb
and flow of circumstance washed them up on the golden beach of opportunity.
It’s like winning the lottery and if they are careful and
keep their noses clean it’s a route to a good life on a scale most of us can
barely imagine. All the little trappings of power, influence, and wealth will
be theirs for life as they float high above the hoi polloi they currently claim
to represent.
They didn’t earn all this because they really don’t have the
talent to earn it. Hardly anyone does. The thing just happened. They were born
into the right class, went to the right schools, said the right things at the
right time and with some effort and persistence the great tombola of political
life popped out their largely unearned reward.
Dave, Nick and Ed will know that. They will know how
fortunate they are notwithstanding the pressures, the failures and the impossibly
elusive nature of real political achievement.
They won’t care though. Why should they? Lady Luck is a fragrant
old girl. We grab her with both hands if ever she deigns to smile in our
direction. All Dave, Nick and Ed had to do was grab hard enough to keep her on
their side.
This means playing to the power brokers and the money men
which they already knew. That’s what skewed things in their favour to begin
with - plus a juicy slice of luck. So they don’t intend to rock the boat now.
In May the voters decide how lucky is lucky. Our golden trio know that but voters generally don’t and that’s another bit of luck.
In May the voters decide how lucky is lucky. Our golden trio know that but voters generally don’t and that’s another bit of luck.
3 comments:
On 9th April 1992 I met Screaming Lord Sutch at lunchtime in the bar of The George in Huntingdon where he was opposing John Major in the General Election. Since then I have often thought that he might well have been a better Prime Minister than any of those then and since.
You have to choose your parents carefully, and know what to kiss, and when.
Demetrius - that's my impression too. I see one of his early parties was Go To Blazes. If it was a prediction then he was right.
Chuck - yes, choosing your parents carefully via a pre-conception agreement could be helpful to those with high aspirations.
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