It’s awards season again.
Obviously, it makes sense for the entertainment industry to hold these ceremonies in the earliest part of the year; that way, the whole of the previous year can be considered. That’s one of the ways in which Britain’s Political Studies Association went wrong. By holding their 2019 awards in November they missed out on the most politically important event of the year — the general election on the 12th December.
The PSA is a ‘learned society’, an academic body from which one might expect a degree of objectivity. This was especially important in 2019 — the year that the battle to save/stop Brexit came to a head. However, there wasn’t much even-handedness in their choice of award winners, which overwhelmingly favoured the Remain establishment.
Exactly one month later, the British electorate delivered a very different verdict — one that the experts of the PSA had signally failed to anticipate. So with the benefit of 2020 hindsight, how might one re-award the PSA awards? Here are five changes that I’d make:
🏆Politician of the Year: Boris Johnson🏆
The PSA gave this to David Gauke and in December the voters of South West Hertfordshire gave him the Order of the Boot.
Gauke did do some funny stuff on social media, but on the other hand Boris Johnson won the Tory leadership race, became Prime Minister, re-negotiated the Withdrawal Agreement, secured the largest Tory majority since the 1980s and broke the Brexit deadlock. So, on balance, I’d give him politician of the year instead.
🏆Parliamentarian of the Year: No one🏆
The PSA gave this to Hilary Benn for predictable Brexit-related reasons. I’d have given the award to… no one. 2019 was the year that Parliament disgraced itself — saying no to everything and yes to nothing. Some MPs were less self-servingly awful than others, but that’s the lowest of bars.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
Subscribe