Until this past month, I’d have said that political diaries and memoirs were low on my list of must-reads. Then the diplo-mate picked up at Heathrow the first (albeit most recently published) in a trilogy of diaries by Chris Mullin, and once he’d finished A Walk-On Part, I was hooked, following close on his tail to devour the other two volumes, A View from the Foothills and Decline and Fall.
Who’s Mullin, you might ask? He has at various times been a real Mensch (not Louise, please) of a Labour back-bencher under charismatic Blair – ‘The Man’ as he calls him - and troubled Brown, a dedicated chairman of the Home Affairs Select Committee, a reluctant junior minister to John Prescott and Clare Short. In posterity’s eyes he’ll no doubt best be remembered as the writer first of a well received novel subsequently turned into a film and play, A Very British Coup, and now these diaries. Reflections on his family life up in his constituency of Sunderland with wife Ngoc and daughters Sarah and Emma, the qualification he would probably value highest, have surely been much pruned in the editing, but the traces have plenty of pith.
In spite of review trumpetings about ‘wicked indiscretions’, Mullin takes a fair and balanced view of most of his more illustrious political colleagues. Though the author is far from starry-eyed about The Man, Blair comes across as a spellbinding speaker on most occasions, and never a deceiver, Mullin believes and so do I (though there’s one disconcerting moment when he half-jokingly advises a colleague to lie). The dash of superhuman stamina Mullin detects in The Man renders him an almost heroic figure with one tragic flaw or major hubris, Iraq, an issue which Mullin alone among the Labour politicians voted against. He is rightly dismayed, too, about a far more black-and-white blot on Blair’s copybook, the lack of a stronger stand on Guantanamo.
Brown emerges – no surprise here - as difficult, a neurotic
obsessive with little hinterland, perhaps a little softened by marriage and
fatherhood; even Mandelson, ruthlessly dispatched in a number of vignettes,
gets some respect for what he was good at. Cherie sounds fun – I’ve always
liked her when I’ve seen her in action – but it’s hard to forgive the thousands
of pounds claimed for her ‘hair stylist’ on accompanying visits. New Labour
spin and the foolish decisions like the risible 75p rise in pensions are viewed
more in sorrow than in anger, for the way they undermined all the genuinely
good things achieved, especially in the early years of government; Mullin
constantly laments how, despite the money poured into health and education,
doctors and teachers hate the politicians responsible. The public is constantly
caught saying ‘all politicians are the same’. Mullin is transparent proof that
they’re not.
The real spinning villains of the piece are Murdoch and the
gutter press, the Mail especially. Telly tyrant Paxman and radio hound Humphrys
deserve a passing swipe or two. Mullin is, on the other hand, pally with
members of the opposition when there’s overlap, as there clearly is in the
rather charming tete-a-tetes with John Major – and he admits that ‘half my
trouble’, at least in terms of advancement, is that ‘I can usually see the
other side’s point’. Some figures have his unreserved contempt – smirking
George Osborne, ghastly Teresa May, opportunist Clegg – and sometimes a
devastating adjective is enough (not quite sure what he’s got against Joanna
Lumley, though). He is astonishingly prescient, too: unless diaries are
tampered with – and I’m sure these were not – there’s no question of golden
hindsight.
One little dialogue led me across from diaries to biography.
This is 22 September 2002, after The Man’s big speech on ‘why we need a war
with Iraq’.
Immediately after the statement, we trooped into his room
for a meeting of the parliamentary committee. ‘One of your biggest problems,’ I
said, ‘is that, outside of Texas,
no one has the slightest confidence in George W Bush or in those who surround
him.’ I added, ‘No doubt, we shall have to wait for your memoirs to find out
what you really think of him.’
‘No need to wait,’ he replied cheerfully. ‘I’ll tell you
now, George Bush is intelligent, open and easy to deal with’.
‘You must see a different George Bush to us,’ interjected
Doug Hoyle.
So it was time to see what The Man had to say; and on Dubya
he remains – maddeningly – as good as his word. Though he’s less of a
pleasure to read than Mullin, with lots of colloquial speech-devices like
‘here’s the thing’ or ‘you know what?’ as well as a surprising amount of sober
exposition, A Journey – which tellingly began messianic life as The Journey
- is at least presented as the long-pondered reflections of a statesman, not a
cosying-up celebrity. Most of it is plausible and seems truthful (sucker, I
hear the many ‘Bliar’-cryers retort). No-one could have put more time and
effort into retrospectively reasoning out the pros and cons, the weighing of an
uneasy conscience, of the drive towards war with Iraq. He does seem almost too
willing to see more of the good than the bad in his improbable international
allies; but the coming-clean about the terrible kerfuffles with unreasonable Gordon
surely pulls no punches.
Those are the elements I can remember most clearly about A
Journey at several weeks' distance – not much, I know. Now I’m skimming the later
stages of Denis Healey’s The Time of My Life, a substantial chunk of which
paints a lucid and complex picture of the world post-1945 and sheds light on the author's unusually
broad and deep cultural perspectives. It's when Healey details his years as Defence Secretary – a post for which, having seen a great deal of action in the
Second World War, he was better qualified than many politicians – and
subsequently as Chancellor of the Exchequer that I find the minutiae of military
hardware and fiscal policy beyond me. One passage did leap out,
written about the mid 1970s from the perspective of 1989:
Meanwhile the private banks were licking their lips at the
thought of the money they would make out of lending to the developing countries.
They thought that loans to governments carried no risk. Walter Wriston, the
head of Citibank, the most aggressive of all the New York lenders, proclaimed ‘Governments
can’t go bust’. On their side, most of the developing countries were happy to
borrow from private banks rather than from the IMF, because they could do so
without limit and without conditions. It was the beginning of a series of
miscalculations as disastrous as those which produced the Great Slump of the
thirties; it could still end in a similar catastrophe.
Which leads me back to another prophetic utterance, this
time from Mullin writing with painful clarity on 1 January 2000. Having noted
that ‘beyond fortress Europe and North America much of the world is in
meltdown’ – the fortress, alas, is crumbling in 2012 - what he writes about the
environment is even more pressing now that the Arctic has seen a record summer
ice melt and Tory factions are clamouring for the third Heathrow runway their
party had promised not to build. Thus Mullin at the beginning of the new
millennium:
Our main problem is, of course, not other people’s wars. It
is that we have invented an economic system which is consuming the resources of
the planet as if there were no tomorrow – and there well might not be unless we
change our ways. In the United States, the home of the world’s most voracious
consumers, there is no sign at all that the political process is capable of
persuading – or indeed has any desire to persuade – citizens to adopt a
sustainable lifestyle. All over the democratic world, politicians increasingly
follow rather than lead. And even were an ecological disaster to occur (perhaps
it has already begun), the price will be paid by those least responsible and
least capable of protecting themselves. Indeed the consumers of the developed
world may not even notice. To crown all, the emerging economies of Asia are falling over themselves to emulate the mistakes
that we have made. Indeed they insist that it is their right to do so.
Maybe, just maybe, this will be the century in which we
learn to reduce, reuse and recycle our waste, develop benign sources of food
and energy and stop burning up the ozone layer. Maybe Europe
will lead the way and others will follow. Who knows, there ought to be money to
be made out of going green, in which case capitalism will enjoy a new lease of
life.
Or maybe it is too late. Maybe we have failed to heed the
warning signs and a long, slow slide towards ruin beckons. By the end of my
life the signals should be clearer.
Too late? Now that the imperatives of economic unravelling
and frightening population growth push environmental issues way down the agenda,
I fear it is. Only a few years ago I imagined resourceful mankind would find a
way to adapt. Now I wonder. Well, as Aeschylus put it, Ailinon
ailinon eipe, to
d'eu nikato: let us cry sorrow, sorrow, but let the good prevail.