Boris Johnson ushers in the
most right-wing British government since 1832, writes Craig Murray.
I can only imagine that
the media people who are saying Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s cabinet is the
most right-wing since the 1980s were not sentient in the ‘80s.
Former Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher never had a home secretary remotely as illiberal as Priti Patel, never
had a foreign secretary remotely as xenophobic as Dominic Raab, never even had
a chancellor as anti-state intervention as Sajid Javid (though she came closer
there) and never had a defence secretary as bellicose as Ben Wallace.
Even Thatcher’s final and most
right-wing cabinet contained figures like Ken Clarke, Chris Patten, John Major,
Virginia Bottomley, Douglas Hurd and William Waldegrave. All Tories with whom I
have fundamental disagreements, but every single one of them is far, far to the
left of virtually all of Johnson’s appalling cronies.
Thatcher deliberately and
cruelly wrecked the social democratic society in which I grew up, with the aim
of destroying any ability for working people to be protected against the whims
of the wealthy. But Thatcher never introduced privatization into the National
Health System or state schools – that was her acolyte Tony Blair. She
maintained free university education in England and Wales. That was destroyed
by Blair too. We should be more rigorous than to accept Thatcher as the
definitive most right-wing government possible. It is not only lazy, it
obscures the fact we now have the most right wing British government since
1832.
Pritti Patel is a home
secretary who admires the approach to law and order of Benjamin Netanyahu and
voted against a measure to prevent pregnant asylum seekers being slammed into
immigration detention pending hearing. Savid Javid is a chancellor who
materially caused the problems of British Steel by, as business secretary,
vetoing in Brussels tariffs against dumped Chinese steel. Dominic Saab is a foreign
secretary who negotiated a deal with the EU then resigned because it was so
bad.
This is the biggest political
shock to hit the U.K. in my lifetime and it is potentially worse than Thatcher.
Here in Scotland, we need to move immediately for independence. The time for
talking really is behind us.
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