Even Donald Trump once told a good joke. It’s worth repeating. At a fundraising dinner eight years ago he referenced a speech his wife Melania had made. Melania had been accused of plagiarising a speech, or large parts of one, delivered a little time before by Michelle Obama.
Trump said that when Michelle Obama stands up and makes a speech, everybody loves it. My wife gives the same speech, everybody gets on her case.
See – it’s smart, acknowledges a reality, rather than bombastically slamming it, and makes it look like he has something about him. Quite what happened in the intervening years is for the memoirs when his cowed acolytes finally come clean. But while Donald Trump can find moments – the tonal shift coming around that Gary O’Donoghue interview was from way out yonder – chancellor Rachel Reeves can’t catch a break.
Her Mansion House speech, when chancellors annually address the gilded brass of the financial services sector presenting their thinking for the period ahead, is a key moment in the financial calendar. It was the chance for her to show more after recent tribulations. She tried a joke. I think it was a joke, or at least a light-hearted moment. It went like this. She mentioned speaking to a young schoolgirl who asked her about her dream job. “Given the events of recent weeks you can understand why I might say any job but this one… but I am very proud to stand here as chancellor.”
It’s the way she tells them!
That’s not the key takeaway we, the people, are supposed to take from that speech. I felt sorry for her. She couldn’t find the means to navigate around something simple to allow a memorable moment to lift people. The symbolism is hardly subtle.