Peter Mckay

Peter McKay’s diary: The Old Etonian David Cameron should have been

Plus: Learning to fly, and rejecting the devil

Rory Stewart: a fine example of an Old Etonian (Photo: David Levenson/Getty) 
issue 11 January 2014

David Cameron gives Old Etonians a bad name. Critics deplore his Old Etonian-ness,  his Lord Snooty Factor.  Childish, but it’s an uncomplicated prejudice which can be freely expressed in our otherwise rigidly policed public discourse.  Is there an OE who might rescue the school’s reputation? There is:  Rory Stewart, 40, Tory MP for Penrith.  Known in some quarters as ‘Florence of Belgravia’ because of his expertise in Arabic affairs, he is famous for walking 6,000 miles through Afghanistan in two years and for writing two bestselling books about working there and Iraq. And, says the Guardian – of all papers – he is ‘hugely appealing: self-deprecating, funny, open, curious and kind’. Stewart talks in perfect sentences, never relies on clichés and tells Decca Aitkenhead we should create, in Britain, ‘1,000 little city states, and give power right down to all the bright, energetic people everywhere who just feel superfluous.’ Being able to talk persuasively, without cant, about political solutions must be half the battle.

Steve McQueen’s new film, 12 Years a Slave, is described as one of the greatest movies of all time and has been nominated for seven Golden Globes.

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