COMMENT:
Landslides in politics are not exactly rare in modern Anglo-American politics: Lyndon Johnson had one in 1964, Richard Nixon had his in 1972, and Ronald Reagan had two of them, in 1980 and 1984. They are less frequent in Britain's parliamentary system, with two standing out: Margaret Thatcher's stunning 1983 victory giving the Conservatives a majority of 144 and Tony Blair's "New Labour" earthquake of 1997 resulting in his party having 179 more seats than the Conservatives.
A second category of notable democratic events are "shockers." We are well acquainted with Donald Trump's 2016 stunner. Indeed, if journalism had a concussion protocol like the National Football League, most media pundits and certainly all of the #NeverTrump Republicans would still be in the blue tents, muttering vaguely about not having seen it coming.
Which leaves us wondering how to classify Prime Minister Boris Johnson's stunning triumph on Thursday. His new 80-seat majority in the House of Commons, while not quite as large as Thatcher's or Blair's zeniths, is nevertheless enormous when measured against the narrow margins of a country whose politics have been deadlocked for a decade. And for a variety of reasons, almost no one saw it coming, despite some polling that suggested a Tory majority of more than 20. In the United States, only Andrew Sullivan of New York magazine alerted his readers to the talents of Johnson on the stump. Somehow the toxic brew of Twitter, elite British media, and the eye-catching antics of large crowds and extravagant gestures combined into the British version of the Manhattan-Beltway bubble of 2016 to leave so many professional pundits agape.
"Energy in the Executive" was prized by Alexander Hamilton in Federalist 70 as the necessary ingredient in successful government, but it is absolutely indispensable to modern campaigns, and Johnson had it in spades. His many and vocal enemies hurled disparagement down on him, but he thundered along and charmed a massive majority out of his deeply divided country. I had hoped for a Johnson win in these pages last week but didn't think this scale of victory was possible. Johnson's Tories can, as Sullivan noted Friday in a postmortem, fashion themselves along Benjamin Disraeli's Tories of 150 years ago, seeking growth and opportunity for the common citizen but embracing brilliance and excellence in any sort of achievement.