This boy.
Although I generally find political
biographies quite tedious and self-obsessed, occasionally I enjoy reading them.
I recently spoke to a colleague who had just read This Boy by former Home secretary, Alan
Johnson. I have always had a bit of soft spot for Mr Johnson, based almost
entirely on the fact that he was General Secretary of the communication workers
union, of which I used to be a member when I followed my father and grandfather
in to working for the Royal Mail when I left school. The colleague who had read
the book had done so on kindle but recommended it so I thought I might purchase
it for my holiday book (I always take one on holiday each year). Unable to find
it in Asda’s best sellers, I decided to venture online and look on Amazon. I
soon found a used copy priced quite reasonably at £2.50 in good condition, only
read once.
I’m not suggesting the vendor lied, he may
well have only read the book once, but it looked as though it had been well
handled more than once. The dog eared pages looked like they had been used as a
splatter guard and the corners of the cover were torn. In fact were it not for
the British heart foundation 99p
sticker on the spine, I suspect the yellowed pages may have fallen out.
Despite its weathered appearance I decided to
keep it and read the first couple of chapters before my holiday just to whet my
appetite.
Mr Johnson was born in London in 1950. 1950
was just 21 years before I was born in the wintery January of 1971. As I
already said, my Dad worked as a humble postman. We lived in a modest 3 bedroom
council house, which my parents still live in (although they took advantage of
Thatcher’s right to buy in the 80’s). When I was born the house needed lots of
work doing to it. The kitchen still boasted an old fashioned pantry and the
three gardens that living on a corner plot gave us, needed hours and hours of
attention from my Mum to get them to the state of splendor they offer today.
Old steel window frames and single glazing offered little warmth in the days before
central heating but we had an inside toilet.
What struck me immediately about Alan Johnson’s
book was the huge difference between the working class poorness I grew up in
and the absolute horrendous poverty that he described experiencing just 20
years prior. With a father that offered little or nothing in the way of
house-keeping or paternal instinct, Johnson early years in the slums sounded
like they were a hundred years before I was born. I was amazed to think of how
far we had progressed in just two short decades. He talks of having no gas or
electric in the house until they were moved and then the way they had to put
money in the slot to obtain services we all take for granted today, as we did
in 1971. Then there was the emergence of TV, which in 1950 was almost unheard
of in a council house. By ’71 almost everyone had a set, even though we only
had 3 channels to choose from. He talks of playing in the street safely as
there were hardly any cars on the road. Although I owned a car before my father
finally got rid of his Honda 90 motor cycle, cars certainly were not unusual by
the time I was born. Such massive changes are hard to comprehend now days.
20 years ago John Major was prime minister,
Labour leader John Smith died of a heart attack and Fred and Rose West were
charged with murder. The channel tunnel was officially opened in 1994 and Wet
Wet Wet’s Love is all around us was number 1 in the charts for what seemed an
eternity.
A bomb exploded outside the Israeli embassy
injuring 15 people and Harry Styles of One Direction was born, as was my first
son. All of these things feel like they happened quite recently to me and yet
the 20 year gap is the same vast chasm between my birth and that of Alan
Johnson.
Fiercely proud of my working class roots, I
never considered myself to be fortunate or privileged until I read This Boy.
I wonder how far we will all come in the next
20 years by which time my son will be forty (3 years younger than I am now).
Will we still be in austerity enforced upon us by ideological Tory governments
or will there be a new party in power?
It was
announced today that Boris Johnson intends to stand once more in next year’s
general election. The news came as no surprise really, as many believe he will
be the next leader of the conservative party. Whether that will be as Prime
minister or leader of the opposition will depend largely on the popularity in
the next 12 months of Ed Miliband.
Despite the Tories being consistently behind
Labour in the polls for some time, leader Ed is equally as consistent at
polling lower than Cameron. This is often credited to Miliband’s geekiness and
lack of photogenic qualities. The media would have us believe it is because he
is unable to eat bacon sandwich without looking ugly. Others say it due to his
links to the trade unions which elected him while others blame it on his
brother David, who many still believe would have and should have been a better
leader.
Others would say that it is because like the
Tories, Miliband is out of touch with the reality facing ordinary people, being
paid low wages and living in over-priced properties. Consecutive Labour
governments did little to ease the housing crisis, continuing to sell off stock
while failing to address the growing waiting lists for social housing. They did
even less to repeal the ant- trade union laws that the Tories would strengthen
if re-elected in 2015. Prime minister David Cameron insists on referring to
trade union pay masters every week in Prime ministers questions in spite of the
fact that few of the current crop of Labour MPs have had real jobs any more
than the other side of parliament.
Men and women from council estates and trade
unions are almost extinct in parliament these days and reading Alan Johnsons This Boy, makes it crystal clear what
the current batch miss out on. Alan Johnson understands what it is like to have
to have two or three jobs to pay the bills. He understands the needs of council
tenants and he knows the issues they face. He understands the community spirit
and the pride of working class families.
I have written before of the need for more
working class MPs and the need for more trade unionized MPs. Former Labour MP
Denis Macshane called for working class shortlists but the amount of MPs who
didn’t attend Oxbridge Universities continues to recede. The trade union
paymasters of the labour party needs to demand more candidates from a normal
background and the system which prohibits all but the wealthy from becoming a
politician is in need of a major overhaul. Maybe then, possibly in 20 years’
time I might be able to give a voice back to normal people, stand against Boris
and be an MP myself.