A Moderate Voice on Northern Ireland
This weekend I greatly enjoyed listening to Jonathan Powell on this New Statesman Vodcast.
It is easy to assume that measured, moderate voices are inevitably boring. And with our Media Coach lens we would particularly expect ‘boring’ in the use of language. Clients constantly reach for bland almost meaningless phrases because they want to avoid controversy and sound considered. But actually, technical language, boring phrasing and bland generalities are not essential parts of an intelligent analysis.
This interview by the New Statesman’s Rachel Wearmouth and Tony Blair’s Chief of Staff, who was one of the main negotiators of the Good Friday Agreement 25 years ago, shows how it is possible to be a voice of calm reason but still be very interesting.
But look at his colloquial (and quotable) use of language:
- He asserts the Good Friday agreement has ‘stood the test of time’.
- He claims it ‘ended the war” and allowed more normal politics to become established.
- He believes the agreement ended a period in which he suggested Northern Ireland had been ‘imprisoned by history’.
- He says that Brexit created weakness in the Good Friday Agreement, in particular it put ‘the poison of identity politics’ back into the debate.
- Later he speaks about Boris Johnson’s ‘deliberate vandalism of the peace process in Northern Ireland’.
Ok, so perhaps he is not measured or respectful about Boris Johnson (or actually Boris Johnson’s government) but overall this interview feels like a statesman speaking, but in a way that ordinary people can relate to.
That is the trick. Wisdom with a common touch. No jargon. Clarity of argument. And for my taste less shrill than so much of the political debate.
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