Tuesday 2 June 2015

Remembering Charles Kennedy

Turning on BBC News this morning, I was thrown by the sad passing of Charles Kennedy.

Not being a LibDem and living hundreds of miles from his constituency (as was), I never had occasion to bump into him in real life. Like most other political people the Charlie Kennedy I knew was the kindly presence on Have I Got News For You, Question Time, and (whisper it) This Week.

Perhaps by virtue of the media work, he could lay claim to one of those rarest of commodities. In an age where politicians and politics are almost universally spurned, among those who paid attention he was almost unanimously liked. Can you remember a scurrilous press attack on him? As the LibDems trouped through the government lobbies to vote for some of the most regressive legislation this country has seen in modern times, the opprobrium that attached itself to the LibDems left him untouched. That, however, was not enough to secure him against the SNP blitzkrieg that drove all before it.

It was not hard to see why he was liked either. He took over the LibDems during the period of high Blairism, where New Labour was virtually untouchable and not even an unpopular war could dislodge it from office. Nevertheless, it was Kennedy's opposition to the Iraq War that gave millions their first glimpse at his party and, during his leadership, saw it put on members, influence, and MPs. His stance against the majority of Labour and Tory MPs combining to support the invasion of Iraq granted him a principled reputation, of someone who would say what he thinks but without polarising opinion in the manner of a George Galloway or Nigel Farage.

It must have been painful to see his political legacy fed into the mincing machine by his successor, yet he never really came out publicly against the LibDems' turn to the right. It might not have been his style, as Alastair Campbell suggests, but ultimately his reticence cut short his 30 year career in Parliament.

Charles Kennedy was an opponent and episodic friend to the labour movement and our politics. But regardless of that and despite the distance between that and his liberalism, he showed that you can have a principled career in mainstream politics and avoid getting tarred with the self-serving brush. It's a shame he went too early, and his family and friends have my sympathies.

1 comment:

asquith said...

With rue my heart is laden
For golden friends I had,
For many a rose-lipt maiden
And many a lightfoot lad.

By brooks too broad for leaping
The lightfoot boys are laid;
The rose-lipt girls are sleeping
In fields where roses fade.