what is it about Tory political players writing scandalous books?
- Written by Jodi McAlister, Senior Lecturer in Writing, Literature and Culture, Deakin University
Cleo Watson, former co-deputy chief of staff to Boris Johnson, was fined[1] in the infamous “PartyGate” scandal involving gatherings held at government buildings while the United Kingdom was under a pandemic lockdown. The scandal ultimately saw Johnson step down as prime minister.
She’s the author of Cleavage[2], a saucy new novel set against the backdrop of contemporary Conservative British politics. Cleavage depicts an embattled Tory party limping towards a seemingly inevitable election loss. It is an interestingly timed release for those hoping current UK prime minister Rishi Sunak will win the upcoming July 4 election.
At a time when the Conservatives are desperately trying to distance themselves[3] from their party’s reputation for scandal and sleaze, Watson’s novel lifts the curtain on it. She is the latest in a long line of Conservative figures writing popular fiction, often set against an explicitly political backdrop.
Near the beginning of her book, fictional ex-prime minister Lord Percy Cross gives a reading from his own salacious new historical novel, entitled The Loin King.
It begins with a Tudor king kicking himself free “from the tangled limbs of big-bushed stable girls” to discuss political business: the war with Spain, the imminent beheading of his ex-mistress, a plague that has broken out in parliament. When his Lord Chamberlain remarks the plague has been caused by vermin, the king quips, “the rats or the members?”
Percy tells an interviewer The Loin King is based on his time as prime minister: “I found being in Downing Street very much like a Tudor Court in atmosphere.” Then he adds, “By shoving everyone into corsets and ruffs, I’ve distorted the characters of anyone who might sue me for libel.”