The tragedy of Theresa May

The tragedy of Theresa May

LONDON — And lo, it has finally come to pass. After months if not years in which British Prime Mini..

LONDON — And lo, it has finally come to pass.

After months if not years in which British Prime Minister Theresa May defied political gravity, clinging to office despite the seemingly insurmountable opposition of public, parliament, press and party, the end of May has at last brought about the end of May.

Like a toddler refusing to leave a party, she did not go quietly. The count of three was given more than once. There were warnings, threats, promises and enticements until finally the reluctant child was dragged bodily, screaming and with birthday cake still smeared across her face, from the soft play center that is 10 Downing Street.

The speech that ultimately precipitated her eviction, in which she overplayed her hand by detailing plans her Cabinet had not signed up to, contained perhaps the most honest statement May has ever given on her own feelings about the premiership.

Listing the exhaustive steps she took to find a way through the Brexit impasse, she said: “I offered to give up the job I love earlier than I would like…”

It is said that May was eager to beat former Prime Minister Gordon Browns tenure of two-years and 319 days in office, a feat she will reach on May 28.

In a less self-controlled politician it would have come across as the howl of outrage she must secretly have felt: The job I love! I love this job, and yet I would have sacrificed it, for you…

Because if theres one thing not to be forgotten about Mays time in office it is how badly she wanted to lead her country, and how reluctant she was to let go of power when the time came.

Listening to her passion for being prime minister, one was left wondering how it could possibly be so.

For most of her time in office — at least since her disastrous decision to break her promise not to call a general election — she has been a national figure of fun and the target of jibes. Most, such as “Maybot,” were cruel because they were so accurate.

Theresa May on the campaign trail in 2017. A disastrous performance effectively hamstrung her premiership | Pool photo by Justin Tallis/Getty Images

May never recovered from the humiliation of losing her majority in June 2017, and by the time she had begun seriously to grapple with the thorn in her premiership that was Brexit, it wasnt just the public that had fallen out of love with her.

Seeing her flail these last months has been like watching a magnificent but ultimately rather pointless exotic creature, a giraffe, perhaps, brought low by a pack of baying hyenas.

Whatever your politics, by the end there was something rather sad about this proud woman forced to endure the humiliation of taunts and disloyalty from not just her political enemies but, eventually, even those she had trusted to sustain her.

How could she possibly say she loved a job that involved being stabbed in the back, defied in private and mocked in public; losing vote after vote in the House of Commons, her authority in Europe and her grip on power, as her fingertips were prized inch by painful inch from the door of No. 10?

But love it she did. Before being made home secretary by then Prime Minister David Cameron in 2010, May had long nursed a grievance at being overlooked by a series of Tory leaders for the biggest frontbench jobs.

Even once she occupied one of the great offices of state, she continued to feel slighted by the Cameroons. Her exclusion from his tight inner circle was a running sore.

A pragmatist in a role where ideology and flexibility are less important than a firm grip and decisive leadership, she shone at the Home Office, further fueling her self-belief.

Mays Brexit deal suffered multiple humiliating defeats in the House of Commons | Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images

Becoming prime minister unopposed in 2016 was delicious affirmation. It was just a shame she wasnt very good at it.

If you look at her premiership by numbers alone, the verdict is damning: May has mislaid a staggering 51 ministers since polling day less than two years ago, including 34 resignations in which some or other aspect of her Brexit policy was named as the cause.

She failed at hRead More – Source

Politico
CATEGORIES
Share This