Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW
He also offers his thoughtful perspective of Stephen Harper’s last 10 years in his recent eBook, The Harper Decade.

Not with a bang, but with (an opponent's) whimper

by Paul Wells on Sunday, September 12, 2010 1:13am - 0 Comments

This excerpt from Tony Blair’s memoirs, quoted in the New Yorker review of that book, stood out for obvious reasons:

So I defined Major as weak; Hague as better at jokes than judgment; Howard as an opportunist; Cameron as a flip-flop, not knowing where he wanted to go. . . . Expressed like that, these attacks seem flat, rather mundane almost, and not exactly inspiring—but that’s their appeal. Any one of those charges, if it comes to be believed, is actually fatal. Yes, it’s not like calling your opponent a liar, or a fraud, or a villain or a hypocrite, but the middle-ground floating voter kind of shrugs their shoulders at those claims. They don’t chime. They’re too over the top, too heavy, and they represent an insult, not an argument. Whereas the lesser charge, because it’s more accurate and precisely because it’s more low-key, can stick. And if it does, that’s that. Because in each case, it means they’re not a good leader. So game over.

Sound familiar? Open discussion in the comments.

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  • Holly Stick

    Don't borget that Harper is a wannabe Bush, using Bush administration tactics to muzzle scientists. More than a grain of truth in that one:
    http://www.canada.com/Media+rules+muzzling+federa…
    http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/29/science/earth/2…
    http://www.ucsusa.org/scientific_integrity/abuses…

    • Orson Bean

      Way to stay on topic.

  • Kenneth

    Tony Bliar? You're hilarious.

  • Peter Jay

    Good insight from Blair and his main point is true. Still, it's a bit like reading a memoir from Chretien saying how he was a political genius for winning those majorities. Blair benefited from disorganized opposition (Tory infighting, etc) but his writing will emphasize his own strategies as key to victory.

    Not saying the man wasn't a brilliant politician, and a great talent in the HoC. Don't mean to insult him by a comparison to Chretien.

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