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Published 14:48 16 Feb 2018 GMT
Updated 14:49 16 Feb 2018 GMT
The speech contained nothing new. On the contrary, this was classic Johnson, ploughing the same furrow he has for the best part of thirty years. The only difference now is that everyone else in the room has moved on. The act has become stale, and for all his usual bluster, he has nothing else up his sleeve.
An intelligent man, for so long now has he played the lovable buffoon that he seems to have forgotten how to be anything else. At a time when the country is crying out for politicians with gravitas, someone level-headed to steer the ship through choppy Brexit waters, in Johnson we find ourselves stuck with David Brent butchering a Two Ronnies gag.
If the pretext of the Valentine’s Day speech was about making a positive case for Brexit, then the subtext was once again all about Boris Johnson. It was his vision for Brexit. A time to unite around a common cause – the best Brexit for all of us, regardless of whether we want it or not.
For all his talk of unity, the headlines afterwards inevitably focused on his refusal to say that he wouldn’t resign from the cabinet and launch his own leadership bid if Theresa May didn’t deliver his own vision of Brexit.
Some would suggest that even the timing of the speech was an attempt to undermine May’s authority, coming as it did just days after she announced her own ‘road to Brexit’ speeches.
There are positives to take, of course. Now that the cabinet are finally setting out their Brexit visions, we can finally trigger Article 50.
Giving his reasons for being against a 'soft Brexit' or 'EU-lite', Lord Jones explained that the British people voted to get back control from those he described as 'unelected and unaccountable'. Hear, hear.
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https://twitter.com/Digbylj/status/963056816858062849
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