Numquam Censuit Boris

Cincinnatus holding the fasces at his plough in Cincinnati, Ohio.

You don’t have to be Mary Beard to know this means “I never voted for Boris”. Latin is a neat language – concise.

I voted for Jeremy Hunt in the leadership ballot and Xingang Wang in the General Election. If I may digress he is the candidate that put the ass in assonant but he’s a Tory ass so I gave my X to Xingang (he lost Hammersmith). His name, to digress, is curious. Chinese nomenclature is surname, first name – so Smith, John. My candidate should properly be Wang Xingang and I wonder if he was named for the Chinese film actor of that  name (born 1932); the winner of Golden Rooster and Hundred Flowers awards?

Numquam censuit Liz and it is most unlikely I will ever have the opportunity to do so. That’s how democracy works here; parliamentary not presidential, Party not Prime Minister. Over lunch last week a friend drew a parallel between Prime Ministers a century apart: LLoyd George (PM 1916 – 1922) and Johnson (PM 2019 – 2022). Both elected to solve knotty problems – World War I and Brexit – and dumped when their job was done. The same might be said of Brown (PM 2007 – 2010) and Churchill (PM 1940 – 1945). Churchill and Cincinnatus were come-back kids – Johnson?

Liz Truss looks more like a Brown than a Churchill (or Thatcher). She’s in at the fag end of a twenty-two year Tory innings, a tail-ender not a night watchman – to stretch the analogy. But Gordon Brown had principles and vision that transcended his brief premiership. I have a suspicion Truss will pander to the polls and put the country deeper in the poo. Rescue me …

 

One comment

  1. Latin is indeed concise: the phrase means “He she or it [perhaps not that precise] never voted for Boris, and it should be Borem, accusative.

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