Image: flood warnings across southern Britain
David Cameron is a modern British leader - in his own words the "Heir to Blair" - who likes big ideas and dislikes bad news. Like Blair, his government is filled with a monstrous regiment of yes-people, who eshew common sense policies in favour of those which appear to proffer personal advancement. It is no surprise, therefore, that Britain is currently beset by what "One Nation" - now the brand of Ed Miliband's Labour Party - Conservative Harold Macmillan called "little local difficulties."
Foremost of these is "Floodgate". Climate change is not official Conservative Party policy, and, alas, Mr Cameron, along with many others, now finds himself in the position of early medieval English (and Scandinavian) King Canute who famously "set his throne by the sea
shore and commanded the tide to halt and not wet his feet and robes. Yet
"continuing to rise as usual [the tide] dashed over his feet and legs
without respect to his royal person. Then the king leapt backwards,
saying: 'Let all men know how empty and worthless is the power of kings (and ill-founded government policies),
for there is none worthy of the name, but He whom heaven, earth, and
sea obey by eternal laws" according to chronicler Henry of Huntington http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cnut_the_Great#Ruler_of_the_waves
Then there is the prospect of a Disunited Kingdom, and according to the Guardian newspaper today our Olympian "Prime Minister David Cameron will use the scene of Team GB’s success at
London 2012 as the backdrop for his warning against Scottish
independence."All this, as Russian President Vladimir Putin opens the 2014 Winter Olympic Games in Sochi: an event which Mr Cameron will be not be attending. Nor will he attend to calls from Scottish leader Alex Salmond and his colleagues to engage in a debate north of the border. For in the great modern line of political actor-managers, namely Blair and Heir, Mr Cameron will never place himself in a position where he is likely to be upstaged. For whom "The Scottish Play" will prove unlucky is, of course, another little local difficulty.
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