I watched Cameron and Osborne at the Covid inquest. They are still in denial about the damage they inflicted on Britain | Andy Beckett
No matter how much they may squirm, the link between austerity and Britain's pandemic outcomes is undeniable
David Cameron's government feels so long ago. Seven years of almost constant Tory turmoil, upheaval in all the other parties, huge strikes and economic crises, the war in Ukraine and the pandemic catastrophe: together, they make Cameron's calm resignation statement outside 10 Downing Street in 2016, and his jaunty humming afterwards, seem like something from another, less frightening era.
In some ways, the worse things get in this country, the better it is for Cameron's reputation. Even the most damaging acts of his six-year tenure - from calling the Brexit referendum to imposing austerity to the military intervention in Libya - are steadily disappearing behind the subsequent disasters under Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak. The social liberalism of Cameron's premiership can be overstated: he only overcame Tory opposition to same-sex marriage with Labour support. But his liberalism seems more of an achievement now that his party has reverted to being reactionary.
Andy Beckett is a Guardian columnist
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