How do you know you’re in a ghost story? It isn’t always obvious. The ghost, after all, usually doesn’t appear until the very end. But there are signs. Perhaps it’s the time of year, or the Ulster rain pawing at my window, but I think such signs are appearing in the life of the prime minister. I feel duty bound to inform him that he is being haunted.
I observed the first clue in late August, when it emerged that Starmer had removed a portrait of Margaret Thatcher from his study. Accusations of puerile tribalism were denied with a smile. Speaking to Laura Kuenssberg, he said: “This is not actually about Margaret Thatcher at all. I don’t like images and pictures of people staring down at me. I’ve found it all my life; when I was a lawyer I used to have pictures of judges… I don’t like it. I like landscapes.”
Some took this statement as artful evasion. I think it’s worthy of serious thought. Ghost stories tend to begin with similar moments of unease. People staring down at me. How easy it is to imagine. The comfortable sofa, the pool of lamplight, yet another document plumbing the alarming depths of Rachel Reeves’s black hole. But he cannot concentrate. His gaze creeps up to the portrait on the wall. He is disturbed by an uncanny feeling of… what? Invigilation? Judgment?
This will seem fanciful. Keir Starmer is a man who doesn’t dream. He’s a lawyer. An abacus man. Although he loves classical music, particularly Beethoven, his frank indifference to the other arts is well documented. There’s no favourite novel (unless it is expedient for him to have one), no poem that rattles around his skull. He just doesn’t care. And he isn’t going to pretend otherwise. Angela Rayner is equally unconcerned with such fripperies, declaring that “beautiful means nothing really”. This is who these people are, and I admire their honesty — there’s nothing more embarrassing than a barbarian in a toga.
Is this the sort of man who would get the creeps in his own study? Well, yes. In fact, Starmer’s personality is Clue No. 2. Such stolid, clockwork men are exactly the sort of people that end up in good ghost stories. Robert Aickman’s hapless protagonists are earnest blanks clutching Blue Guides, while M. R. James specialised in the tweedier end of donnery. Michelle Paver’s Dark Matter, the best English ghost story written this century, is narrated by a physicist. The truth is that, with the notable exception of Hamlet, hopeless neurotics don’t make for decent haunting. No one is particularly impressed when an out-of-work actor sees Boudicca in the bathtub. The real pleasure is in watching a bluff empiricist having his certainties sanded away, night after misty night.
What are Starmer’s certainties? Who haunts this lawyer? A possible answer to these questions arrived last week. It turns out that Thatcher is not the only notable to have been mothballed. Elizabeth I, William Shakespeare, Sir Walter Raleigh, and William Gladstone have also vanished from Downing Street’s walls. A No. 10 spokesman has stated that “the change of artwork is long planned, since before the election, and is timed to mark 125 years of the government art collection”.
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SubscribePatriotism has always been a dirty word on the Liberal Left. To show pride in this country, and its history, is treated as almost akin to joining the BNP.
That attitude, skewered so well by Orwell, is the default setting for most of the Left, and certainly in Left-Liberal media. How many Guardian articles or BBC programmes, in any given year, denigrate the very concept of patriotism? Associating endlessly negative baggage with the idea of ‘British-ness’.
In their heart of hearts how many Guardian readers were not with Emily Thornberry when she tweeted her sneering white van with cross of St George picture? As though such low-brow, working class patriotism was worthy only of scorn?
It is the idea that any and every culture is to be celebrated – but not British culture or at least not English culture – one can celebrate the Celtic parts of Britishness (separately) but celebrating Englishness, whatever that might be, is seen as proof of latent racism.
The same attitude that would make Starmer’s team remove all “potentially problematic portraits” has infected any debate involving our history with a national self-loathing, the idea that patriotism is xenophobic at heart, the idea that British history is something only to apologise for.
The head-banging nationalist, convinced the British Empire was a force of unalloyed good for the world, sits at one end of the spectrum. Idiotic Labour party activists sit at the other end, convinced it was an endless parade of atrocities and depredation. Both seem as monocular and impervious to nuance as the other. Both seemingly obsessed with Empire.
I’m very proud to be British. As a student of history I am well aware of terrible things that happened (usually hundreds of years before I was born) but I am still unapologetically proud to be British. This country has had an enormous impact on the world – some of it very good, some bad. But it is our history. It for the most part happened in our ancestors’ day. Nothing I can do or say will change that history. My pride has no more bearing on it than my guilt would. Nor, for that matter, Sir Keir Starmer’s disapprobation.
Removing the portraits of historical figures, simply because they don’t align with C21st progressive agenda issues, is moronic. But utterly unsurprising.
Taking all the good and the bad, there is no need to detoxify the idea of Britishness – or Englishness. Indeed if I suggested the need to detoxify any other nation’s history I’d be accused of xenophobia (at best). The Leftish line seems to be that anyone who has pride in being English has somehow admitted to something unhealthy and ‘problematic’. Why?
If a Frenchman is proud of being French, would they immediately mistrust his motives in the same way? I’m willing to bet they wouldn’t.
If a Tongan speaks of his homeland with tears in his eyes, (they are, on the whole, the most deeply patriotic people I’ve ever met) would they be suspected of xenophobia and a misplaced pride. Again – I’m fairly sure they wouldn’t.
So, what is so different about a British person expressing pride in their nationality? Why does the Left automatically suspect anyone who has pride in being English of some sinister subtext?
The prevailing attitude in Guardian-land is that anyone who shows any pride in Britain’s wartime past is jingoistic and somehow laying claim to glories that belonged to another generation. Yet many of the same writers who push such bilge, also pen articles insisting we should all shoulder the guilt for anything bad done by this country in its imperial past.
Admiration for heroes in the very recent past is backwards looking, yet we’re somehow on the hook for reparations to the colonised 200 years later? It doesn’t seem a consistent position.
Why should the statute of limitations for guilt should run so much longer than that of glory?
Maybe we should chip in and buy Starmer a Union Jack waistcoat (like the one worn by Tim Brooke-Taylor).
No need to chip in. Lord Alli will have it covered.
Superb!
To suggest an answer to your question of why left wing intellectuals (mostly pseudo-intellectuals!) disdain British patriotism, it’s a toxic mixture of middle class guilt, and snobbish conceit. The conceit is in thinking they are superior to poor benighted third world people and are therefore obliged to champion them from an imagined position of strength.
Then they’re amazed when the poor benighted’s attitude is, “If that’s the way you think of me, I’d rather you didn’t think of me at all.”
Yes, It betrays a contempt for Jonny foreigner that they would deny. While xenophobia and homophobia are suspected and condemned in the lower orders of the white English the actual manifestation of such traits by immigrant communities is skated over or excused as they can’t be expected to abide by the superior understandings of the “liberal“ leftist.
If you adhere to all you’ve written, then politically it’s important for you to assert your Englishness if that is your citizenship- even with Irish family roots.
You can’t be an “English citizen”, nor in fact a “British citizen” (although I use this shorthand like most people*). You can only be a citizen of the UK which consists of the island of Great Britain (as contrasted with Bretagne in France) and part of the island of Ireland/Eire.
*Because “UK-ish” really doesn’t trip off the tongue.
So being from the channel islands means I’m not a British citizen? You seem to have forgotten the crown dependencies.
As you’ve obviously got plenty of time on your hands to consider the vexing subject of patriotism’s New Normal problematics maybe you could try Leon Uris’ classic (before it goes out of print like ‘Mila 18’ & ‘Exodus’) … “Trinity”. It’s 800 pages worth of post-Famine history so well worth the effort …
I note that UnHerd seems to view my comment as potentially offensive. Just a few minutes after posting a recommendation to read a book about Irish history that post has been deleted. Un-f*****g-believable really … Or, should that be … sur-really ..?
I suspect it’s because you don’t actually address any points in PTs comment, but instead just indulge in a a classic example of “Whataboutery”.
Although…..it hasn’t been deleted!.Conspiracy theories about temporary technical glitches are all the rage on all sides on UnHerd comments pages!
Very perceptive comments Paddy.
I enjoyed your well written piece. My own opinion is that removing the portraits wasn’t just a gesture of anti Britishness, I think it was also, as the article suggested, and as Starmer himself implied, down to a feeling of being haunted. I think he is a man whose dull exterior belies an inner swamp of paranoia and unnamed fears.
Adroitly put.
I am deeply proud to be British, acknowledging our remarkably disproportionate impact on the world, for good. However, I have never been one eyed about our history. I remember being allowed to stay up to watch The British Empire TV series in 1972, which was a mixture of elegaic and deeply critical
And that is about right.
By the way, you cannot watch that remarkable series ANYWHERE. It must have been cancelled.
A very enjoyable article indeed.
The mental image of Starmfuhrer pulling his hair out while Farage puts portraits of famous British politicians, monarchs and heroes up in no 10 is just soooo appealing.
I’m entitled to dream aren’t l?
If Farage becomes PM I’m leaving the country. Except I can’t (at least not so easily) because of Farage.
Could you go anyway? Like tomorrow?
You are a prize twit then. Which enlightened paradise would you move to?
Great article, thank you.
Brilliant. I enjoyed that.
This is fun.
A great essay, thank you.
Hmm, I’ve wondered for some time if Starmer is autistic. This portrait thing is another clue – hating being gazed at.
Socially awkward for sure but more a**l than autistic l think
I’m on the edge of my seat till the end…
It won’t be long….
At 62 Starmer might be having intimations of mortality, and dead historical figures remind him of his own, a here to-day and gone tomorrow politician without a discernible project and a unfilled cultural hinterland.
And a reduction to a “who’s that?” official portrait in a hallway somewhere.
Oh dear. Of course it was about Thatcher. Starmer studied at Oxford during the 1980s FFS! The man epitomises the de haut en bas attitudes of that class in that generation: “for heaven’s sake, the woman’s a grocer’s daughter with ideas above her station, doncha know? How dare she!”
It was only much, much later that he felt the need to become a ‘toolmaker’s son’.
but Starmer was a toolmaker’s son which was not haut in 80s Oxford…
At the time his father was a Surrey landowner and businessman. It was only later that he was transformed into a horny handed oik for the sake of the narrative.
Do you always just invent stuff to score political points?
Toolmaker’s son. Does that make him a tool?
Hardly. Tools are useful.
I’ve no brief whatever for mediocre Starmer, but that comment is just silly, and misses the target by miles. And are some on the Right going to finally their minds up whether they admire or despise the British upper classes?
Yes, for Labour England should ideally disappear in the shadow of multicultural Britain with its devolved Celtic fringes.
And the Tories? Osborne’s obsession with lots of little regional parliaments in England rather than an English parliament without the Celtic fringe?
A gem of an aticle
“a nice portrait of Oliver Cromwell” – surprised that Poots found one, but the linked painting does indeed make the Lord Protector look quite pleasant.
The man himself would have hated it. 17th century air-brushing.
He’s a vulgarian with little or no sense of history.
Can Sir Kier escape being included in the Hogwarts world? The Muggle prime minister is suddenly informed of the arrival of a dark wizard. All those portraits; they might start speaking.
Sir Kier has said that he isn’t a man of faith. Whereas, as the author points out, some of those in the portraits, such as Gladstone, were very much of faith.
Please stop referring to this spavined Marxist by his honorific. He doesn’t deserve it, it should never have been bestowed on him and I look forward to the day that it is stripped from him.
It won’t be, so you will be waiting a long time. Much as I dislike progressive politics, and consider Starmer a mediocrity who is just not up to the job, (we’ve just given away a naval base essential for the West’s geostrategic defence among other things) this ridiculous name calling and rudeness does nothing for the cause of conservatism, western pride or patriotism.
Very good!
Nice piece on haunting in the Halloween season. Let’s not forget a foundational principle of today’s left is to stage the revolution in secret through lies. The past must be destroyed, not just discredited.
Beautiful! Loved this piece. A wonderful premise that the author took & ran with. Fact or fiction? True or false? Doesn’t matter, just a great story – perhaps Mr. Poots could run even further with it …
One of Unherd’s better articles. Thank you, Alexander.