Sunday, May 31, 2020

DOUBTS AND FRUSTRATIONS




We do not suppose anyone is actually enjoying Lockdown, perhaps merely congratulating themselves that they are still alive and coping as well as they can, in a gawd-awful situation. We can raise a rare laugh, of the gallows-humour variety, observing the antics of the local Covidiots as they crowd out the oldies from the pavements, party noisily with their friends - or take the long drive to Durham and Barnard Castle à la Dominic Cummings!


Lockdown London's deserted West End

We live on deliveries from supermarkets, as actually to visit one involves untold hassle, social-distancing, cheerless queueing and regular empty shelves. We sharpen up our expertise on video-conferencing and all manner of communications, as certainly working from home will be very common post-plague and pre-vaccine – will anyone ever want to get squashed into a fully populated, germ-jammed lift to the 15th floor of the office again? Public transport is by its nature very crowded and unadaptable, so you walk, or revert to the difficulties of taking your own car – costly just to enter city centres, let alone park. Even European holiday travel seems unlikely this season – German towels have already booked the best loungers by the pool – so the magnificent Bernese Oberland, delectable Florence, invigorating Athens and the serene Dordogne will have to be 2021 treats, if there are any airlines left flying. As for further afield, California, Rio and Capetown will fade away in our memories like Shangri-La, El Dorado and the remote Cathay of old.


Leave our dreams on one side; it is grim reality that we face today. A few timid steps towards loosening Lockdown have been badly received by our rattled population. We have been terrorised to stay at home these last 10 weeks, not much comforted by contradictory statistics, confused medical opinions and unseemly political controversy. So used has much of the working population become to living idly at the taxpayers’ expense that it will be hard to tempt them back to the daily grindstone. Social distancing takes away much of the joy of life – how can you woo your latest beloved, tell jokes or share bottles separated by 2 invasive metres?


The sad fact too is that our government has not inspired confidence. I am an ardent fan of Boris, who has the wit and cojones to run an effective administration, has championed the liberating Brexit policy and who won a deserved landslide election victory. But the Covid-19 pandemic has exposed his weaknesses. Poor chap, he had a brush with death in early April when he was rushed to intensive care with breathing difficulties. He has more or less recovered but he lacks his earlier bounce and self-confidence. He was always a great delegator and fatally he has not always mastered his brief, in the unfamiliar world of viruses, PPE and Lockdown rules. Under interrogation and scrutiny from Parliament and Press, too often he has brayed and blustered, and defended the indefensible. His handling of the Dominic Cummings affair has been clumsy; his chief adviser committed a technical but definite delinquency: Boris should have reprimanded him, reminded him to set an example and elicited an apology: if Cummings is indeed a vital adviser, he should be kept on. Instead a major furore was stirred up by Boris’ weak defence and unwillingness to engage. This was poor leadership.


Dominic Cummings, Boris' indispensable Svengali
                                     
Boris’ ministry has talented members – Raab, Gove, Sunak, Patel, Hancock et al are all people of ability. This ministry is beset by many bitter enemies. The list is long: a Labour Party, newly invigorated by sensibly forensic Keir Starmer and furious at the loss of their heartland: a fanatical rabble of LibDems, still trying to reverse Brexit: an SNP sustaining itself only with hate-filled forays against England: a sad band of sour Remainers unable to accept reality: Tory malcontents who lost office or whose hopes of office were dashed: the most biased media outside Russia, wallowing in denigration.


And yet all is not misery and conflict. The Lockdown has helped dispel old prejudices against immigrants working so effectively within our community; the Thursday evening NHS clap has broken barriers between neighbours who had never talked before: there is a warm new spirit of toleration growing. It is all grist to the mill. Maybe Boris can be fortified by the example of his hero Winston Churchill. While awaiting Dunkirk, Churchill was being dunned by his creditors, but he saw it all through past the fall of Tobruk, the loss of Singapore to desert victory, the D-Day landings and the German surrender.


May Boris overcome his setbacks and deliver a workable arrangement with the EU, a suppression of Covid-19, a restored economy and a contented nation. We can echo Hamlet -

‘Tis a consummation devoutly to be wish’d!



SMD
30.05.20
Text copyright © Sidney Donald 2020

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