Why on earth do you want The Mogg in power? Organising your dream team government based on how much of their multimillion dollar fortune they’ve donated to anti-eu causes seems short sighted seeing as he’s anti-gay, anti-feminism, associated with far right groups, and a member of Cornerstone who switched to the catholics because the Church of England was beginning to smell too liberal for His Toffness
Well Rowanas was pretty much on the ball that I was just answering your question, there are no other viable candidates for PM who aren't Remainers or of dubious affiliations like Bojo.
Start of a dream team would look something like that, I might finish one later. The only restrictions I put in place were that I could pick anyone for cabinet as long as they weren't fictional and they were from a British or Commonwealth nation, so no Secretary for Work & Pensions Joseph Stalin, Prime Minister Genghis Khan or Chancellor of the Exchequer Mansa Musa of Mali.
Regarding Jacob Rees-Mogg, he's not the first politician to be accused of being anti-this or that, once you observe firsthand the selective application of such labels you lose attachment to their power pretty quickly. Ditto for association with far-right groups, since it's too vague a reason, voting Leave for example was one such issue to fair with the far-right label despite it being supported by half the country. What happens is that as time goes on, if you continually abandon your principles in order to shift leftwards, what was once a central pillar of right-winginess becomes far-right and warrants further leftwards shift, with the end result being you are simply choosing between far-leftism now or tomorrow. Thus when discussing ideas and belief, to only express your notions in the language set by your opposition, they need only define the limits of your language in order to rob you of your ability to meaningfully disagree :
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Hence why I find it's important to be utterly indifferent to the taboo of controversial leaders like Farage, Corbyn or Mogg, since the world without them is just Camerons and Cleggs.
Regarding religion, I dare not presume to wield a man's faith against him. As a matter of fact, he was born & raised Catholic, the notion that he switched denomination for political affinity is a narrative concocted by the same atheists saying Mogg ought to be excommunicated for entirely political purposes. It reeks of "I don't believe in this but maybe if I use this against you I can get you to do what I want." At any rate I am considerably supportive of having our first Catholic Prime Minister since the Reformation, and all I'd expect of him is to separate his belief in Papal infallibility from his duties as one of Caesar's lot. Diversify yo cabinet yo
Regarding Cornerstone, I had never heard of them before until now. Looking them up, while I have my disagreements with their economic policy, wikipedia says their philosophical, cultural and aesthetic views are headed by Roger Scruton, who is a familiar face in the UK I already agree with in large.
Here's a BBC documentary by Roger Scruton on aesthetics, on why beauty matters. It is useful too in illustrating how Cornerstone went from being received by leftist journalists as maintsream into far-right the moment the Conservative Conservative backbenchers started gaining real influence in the Conservative party. In short, the moment they become an actual political rival, is the moment they begin attracting all the labels which mark them for destruction with the full force of all the anti-groups, when just moments prior they were on daytime television with no protest.
But those are all double-negative reasons for why I'm not not supporting JRM, and not reasons why I'd support JRM for PM. My reservations are simple, he is a former Rothschild banker with economically libertarian tendencies which do alarm me. It is a fairly irreconcilable belief too. Such things as reducing the proportion of consumer income spent on necessities through free trade will increase the disposal income of the middle classes, but what would come of the English countryside? Would those farmers be able to compete with international imports from agricultural giants? Possibly, but there is a considerable likelihood of many of those farmers being put out of business. Presuming such unemployed farmers could be directed to other pursuits I believe this could be a success for the English ecosystem, especially given the dreadful destruction of our wildflower meadows - I find it regrettable that no politician in the UK is conscious of the plight of our bees. Yet I believe also, if we were to force so many of our farmers into unemployment, would we not be forcing the UK into a greater threat of future food insecurity? If so, it would warrant subsidies to keep these non-competitive farms afloat, and I haven't the slightest clue how much that would cost.
On the fundamental level, JRM's proposals to raise tax revenue with which to fund social welfare programs through economic growth delivered via a lowing of income and corporate taxes certainly sounds plausible, yet I fear it doesn't adequately address the issue of trying to operate a democracy under a system of extreme wealth inequality. It could theoretically deliver all the funding needed to operate expensive welfare and healthcare systems, yet I would be conflicted: For what good is it to pursue higher standards of living without addressing the growing power disparity between the immensely wealthy and the rest, that the former can dictate to the latter, provide what is illegal and retract what is legal at a whim? In short, do we strive for a society of citizenry where everyone is poorer but equal & meritocratic, or a society of citizenry where everyone is wealthier but there is a clear discrepancy in power between the new aristocracy, the officer class & and innumerable servant class? It seems all of our leaders are content to sleepwalk into an assured hierarchy, not based off of morality, strength, talent or industriousness, but simply of aggregations of imaginary capital.
There's also something to be said in the naivety of Jacob Rees-Mogg. He is entirely too trusting in the goodness and civility of all of his critics & opponents, and subsequently I wish he would look after his own personal safety considerably more.
Still, I don't intend to wait for King Arthur before I support any politician, or else there'd be no point in observing politics at all. Perfect candidates are once in a millennia types. The qualities which offset my reservations regarding Mogg are:
- Humility
- Patience
- Erudition
-Humility. There is something amusing in how the British people as a whole are immensely humble, to the extent that they sabotage their own prospects of advancing in life. In short, if you asked any Briton throughout the country if they were talented enough to be the Prime Minister, I would bet my money they would tell you no. This does not seem to apply particularly well to our leaders in media, politics, finance & administration, who believe immensely in their own superiority, often in spite of their own glaring limitations. Consequently you end up having British leaders losing situations which they should never have had a chance of losing - consider a recent example, Theresa May blowing a 20 point lead down the well by calling and fighting a political campaign with technical analysis instead of common sense. Jacob Rees-Mogg always self-depreciates, keeping him from this common pitfall of British leadership. There is nothing more to say about this simple quality, as it's the absence of it which is most glaring, while the presence of it is fairly inoffensive. Without humility, there is no way in hell this backbencher would ever have gotten so relevant - the notion that grassroots party polling favour a man who holds no cabinet post as a PM candidate is exceedingly rare in British politics.
-Patience. Jacob Rees-Mogg does not play the game of Milibands, Camerons or Bo Johnsons. He is the only Tory politician in the running for leadership I know of that finds bidding for leadership to be secondary to enacting fundamental change to the Tory party itself, finds rank entirely secondary to power. So for example, instead of seeking to become Prime Minister now with the same eagerness Bojo did from 2015-18, JRM would be entirely content if Theresa May remained in power and simply changed her policy. Rather than merely changing around the cabinet for a few years, JRM encouraged Conservatives to join the Conservative party and seek selection for MP contests. Bojo seems to desire Prime Ministerialship for its own sake, men like JRM seem to understand Prime Ministerialship as just another tool for affecting the world, with the effecting of the world being the fundamental purpose of political action. Put more generously, Bojo wishes to become PM to enact his agenda, JRM will enact his agenda to become PM.
-Erudition. JRM understands fully well how our government and society functions, and has a vision for how it ought to function based off of principles he actually believes in. I greatly desire more politicians who actually believe in things, and aren't just the hollow vessels of think tanks and lobbyists, while his knowledge of the British constitution makes me confident in his ability to actually get things done were he to hold institutional power. He further understands how to raise havoc in government, quell havoc, and understands that to seek Prime Ministerialship now would result in failure and break parliamentary convention.
On the entirely pragmatic level too, Jacob Rees-Mogg is the only confirmed sincere Leave supporter with significant backing within the Conservative party who is interested in becoming Prime Minister at some point in the future. Boris Johnson seems to be a calculative Leave supporter, but he is the only Leave-supporting cabinet minister left who could command any support within the Conservative party, so on that front there is also no other choice in whom to support. If Boris and Mogg do not take up power within the Conservative party, the reigns will fall to the likes of Hammond, and we will still be tangled in the EU one way or another come 2050.