The Buffoon Wins

  • Posted on the 3rd May 2008

After second preference votes were taken into account, Boris Johnson has been declared Mayor of London, defeating Ken Livingstone by 53% to 47% which was roughly what YouGov predicted.

The other day I heard someone say of the now newly elected Mayor of London that behind the thin veneer of a buffoon lies… a buffoon.

Yet, Simon Heffer writing in the Telegraph on Tuesday believes that behind the clever façade of a buffoon lies a calculating and ruthlessly ambitious individual. He says of Boris:

I want to dismiss a prejudice about Mr Johnson, and I do so as one who has known him for the past 20 years. It is that he is a buffoon. He isn’t. The act is calculated and it has required serious application and timing of the sort of which only a clever man is capable.

Whether or not the ambitious Mr Johnson actually makes a good go of being Mayor is something else entirely – but for the moment it doesn’t really matter. He won and that’s all that counts – that, and rather pleasingly Ken Livingstone has finally been ditched.

Elsewhere around the country the Conservatives have made substantial gains in local elections and the Labour party equally substantial loses. Whether these results show an increase in support for the Conservatives or people simply not turning out to vote Labour will be both interesting and important.

In comparison and of very little importance, the chattering metropolitan classes in the media have already begun their usual pointless speculation on whether these results, if reflected at a general election, would give the Conservatives power and a working majority. The point is of course that these results would not be reflected at a general election (though they may show general trends) as they were undertaken in completely different circumstances. However, oblivious as ever in their small bubble, the media still insist on filling column inches with such drivel because they can find nothing else meaningful to write about.

The bottom line is that despite seemingly good recent election results our man Dave still has a long way to go before he can even hope of being Prime Minister.

Your Comments:

  1. It is fantastic news that Boris has won the election. He has some fantastic policies lined up, and I really do feel confident that he will do a good job in running London. So much so, that I wouldn’t bet against him featuring highly in David Cameron’s Front Bench once his tenure is up. I am going to play my cards now - and go as far as to say I reckon he will have a choice as whether to stand for the leadership of the party in a decade or so.

  2. Well, time will tell on whether Boris Johnson will be a good Mayor of London or not. However, I cannot see him ever leading the Conservative party - though I suppose stranger things have happened.

Post Comment:

Name (required)
Email address (will not be published)
Website

Comment moderation is activated. I maintain the right to delete any comment I feel may be libellous in nature or unnecessarily rude.