The Mirrors of Downing Street eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about The Mirrors of Downing Street.

The Mirrors of Downing Street eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about The Mirrors of Downing Street.

It is not so in politics.  There a man of power cannot pick and choose his colleagues.  He must work with fools as well as men of ability.  And never can he work as a master.  Always at the Cabinet table he will find a cabal of deadheads opposed to the exercise of his authority, and in the department over which he is set to rule a bunch of traditional Barnacles, without one spark of imagination between them, who will fight his new ideas at every turn.

The essence of politics and government is mediocrity.  The good sense of the House of Commons is a conspiracy to resist genius and to enthrone the average man.  A department of the State is well governed only when its chief Civil Servant, by the grace of God, chances to be a man of statesmanlike capacity.

Like Lord Rhondda, Lord Leverhulme was approached by the Government during the numerous crises of the war to render service to the State.  His experience in this respect confirmed his judgment that our system of government is a chaos which would hardly be tolerated in a business establishment of the second class.  I will give an incident.

It was a matter of grave urgency to the Government that margarine should be manufactured in this country.  A Cabinet Minister begged Lord Leverhulme, on the score of patriotism, to set up such a factory.  Lord Leverhulme expressed his willingness to take up the project, but said that he must go to the public for a certain sum of money to carry it out.  The Cabinet Minister made no demur to this very natural proposal, but suggested that it might be well if Lord Leverhulme would call at the Treasury and inform them of his purpose.

Accordingly the great industrialist, able as was no other man in this particular to serve his country’s need, called humbly at the Treasury for permission to ask the public for capital.  He was received by an official who refused point-blank to listen to such a proposition.  Lord Leverhulme mentioned again the name of the Cabinet Minister who had requested him to embark on this venture.  This was nothing to the official.  He had nothing to do with other departments.  His business was to see that the public’s money came to the Treasury; he was certainly not going to countenance the raising of money for an industrial purpose.

You could no more have got into this gentleman’s head than you could have got into the head of a rabbit the idea that money invested in an essential industrial undertaking pays the State far better than money advanced to it at the cost of five per cent.

Not to weary the reader with an incident, however telling, the end of this affair was that after going backwards and forwards between a Cabinet Minister and a Treasury official, Lord Leverhulme was at last permitted to ask the public for a small sum of money which he himself considered inadequate for the Government’s purpose.

I have never heard him speak bitterly of his political experiences, but I have never heard him express anything but an amused contempt for the antiquated machinery which passes amongst politicians for a system of government.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Mirrors of Downing Street from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.