Vince Cable scores with his lugubrious humour, but then he is not treated with the same lack of respect.
All that said, I wonder whether Nick Clegg's weekly display of synthetic anger has not reached its sell-by date. You may say that there is a lot to be angry about, but I am not sure that this approach is showing Nick to his best advantage - too often he threatens to topple over into petulance.
Nor does this punctual anger chime with the sober approach and limited ambitions of A Fresh Start for Britain.
The Economist article I quoted from earlier this evening begins by making a similar point:
Iconoclasm does not come easily to nice and privileged men: this seemed to be a lesson of Nick Clegg’s early efforts as leader of the Liberal Democrats. Staged parliamentary walkouts and other attempts to distinguish himself from the Conservatives’ David Cameron, the other well-scrubbed young leader on the opposition benches, were mocked as the work of a rookie trying too hard.But it goes on to suggest that "Mr Clegg’s righteous ire should now be an asset".
I wonder. More light and shade, and a little humour, might show Nick to better effect. Perhaps he should try a new approach when the next parliamentary season opens?
1 comment:
I agree.
A "more in sorrow than in anger" tone would shine beside GB's "tractor production recitation" and DC's rather ineffectual "Mr Angry" Act.
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