"Strong and stable" or "strong and stable leadership" was a phrase often used by the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Theresa May in the run up to the 2017 general election. [1] [2]
The slogan was criticised often by opponents of May, for its perceived robotic delivery and contradictory nature, also becoming an Internet meme.
According to the Financial Times , the phrase may have originated from former Prime Minister David Cameron's resignation speech after the UK voted to leave the European Union: "stability ... strong, determined and committed leadership". [3] David Cutts, professor of political science at the University of Birmingham, has described the phrase as an example of compressing information to provide helpful cues to voters and reduce the time needed to acquire information. [4]
"Strong and stable" was described as a cliché and led to criticism that May was an ineffective political campaigner who could only talk in slogans. [5] [6] In an interview with the BBC's Andrew Marr, May was stopped after saying "strong and stable" in the first 30 seconds, and was asked to not use sound bites. [7] During a Commons debate, Labour MP Paul Flynn sarcastically asked the chamber, through Speaker John Bercow, if a microchip had been planted in Conservative MPs' heads to repeat "strong and stable" every 18 seconds. [8]
Artist Jeremy Deller designed a poster parodying the phrase and mocking the government's Brexit process. [9] At a press conference during the election campaign, a reporter suggested that May was "weak and wobbly" rather than "strong and stable". [10] This was repeated by other news outlets. [11] At another point in the election campaign, a man presented opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn with two bananas, one bearing the word "strong" and the other with the word "stable." Corbyn found the incident amusing even though the man had intended to suggest that his politics were bananas. [12]
After the election, May reportedly wanted to drop her "strong and stable" slogan because she felt it was making her look "stupid", and it was widely considered that the phrase had been overused and was becoming ever less effective. [13]
Guy Verhofstadt, the European Parliament's coordinator for Brexit-related affairs, parodied the phrase by saying "Any Brexit deal requires a strong and stable understanding of the complex issues involved". [14]
The phrase was still being associated with May in 2019, the year of her resignation as prime minister. [15] [16]
The Guardian quipped, on a book collecting a few years of John Crace's politics sketches: [17]
"Brexit means Brexit." "Strong and stable." "I don't think I'm in the least robotic." Ever since Theresa May first whirred into inaction as prime minister, there has only been one reliable source of strength and stability: John Crace's political sketches for the Guardian.
— John Crace (3 May 2018). I, Maybot: the rise and fall. London. ISBN 978-1-78335-159-6.{{cite book}}
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Theresa Mary, Lady May is a British politician who served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Conservative Party from 2016 to 2019. She previously served as Home Secretary from 2010 to 2016. She was Member of Parliament (MP) for Maidenhead from 1997 to 2024. May is the second female UK prime minister, after Margaret Thatcher, and the first woman to hold two of the Great Offices of State. Ideologically, May is a one-nation conservative.
John Crace is a British journalist and critic. He attended Exeter University. Crace is the parliamentary sketch writer for The Guardian, having replaced the late Simon Hoggart in 2014, and previously also wrote the paper's "Digested Read" column. He is a supporter of Tottenham Hotspur F.C. and has written several books on the club. He blogs for ESPN FC on Tottenham. According to his columns, he is an enthusiastic collector of ceramic pots.
The Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 (FTPA) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which, for the first time, set in legislation a default fixed election date for general elections in the United Kingdom. It remained in force until 2022, when it was repealed. Since then, as before its passage, elections are required by law to be held at least once every five years, but can be called earlier if the prime minister advises the monarch to exercise the royal prerogative to do so. Prime ministers have often employed this mechanism to call an election before the end of their five-year term, sometimes fairly early in it. Critics have said this gives an unfair advantage to the incumbent prime minister, allowing them to call a general election at a time that suits them electorally. While it was in force, the FTPA removed this longstanding power of the prime minister.
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