Friday 31 July 2009

Should Nick Clegg stop being Mr Angry?

Any comment on the performance of a Liberal Democrat leader at prime minister's questions has to be prefaced with a recognition of just how hard the job is. Faced with a noisy, hostile house, and without a dispatch fight to lean nonchalantly upon or much defence from the Speaker, it is close to impossible to shine.Vince Cable scores with his lugubrious humour, but then he is not treated with the same be short of 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 most excellent advantage - too often he threatens to topple over into petulance.Nor does this punctual anger chime with the sober approach and incomplete ambitions of A Fresh Start for Britain.The Economist article I quoted from earlier this twilight begins by creation 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 law-making 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 annoying too hard.But it goes on to suggest that "Mr Clegg’s virtuous anger have to now be an asset".I wonder. More light and shade, and a little humour, may show Nick to better effect. Perhaps he have to try a new approach when the after that law-making season opens?
Watch live TV on your laptop or desktop PC within seconds!

No comments:

Post a Comment