Guardian Weekly

THE CHILDHOOD OF A LEADER

I HAD A FEELING I COULDN’T IMMEDIATELY PLACE. I WANTED TO GO OUT BUT WASN’T ALLOWED. Shelves were emptying at the nearest supermarket and, instead of fresh fruit and vegetables, I was eating British comfort food – sausages and mash, pie and beans. My freedom to make decisions like an adult was limited. I wondered when I’d see my mum again.

March 2020, first week of the first lockdown: I was 53 years old and felt like I was back at boarding school. Which wouldn’t have mattered but for the fact that, at a time of national crisis, my generation of boarding-school boys found themselves in charge.

My first night at Pinewood school was two days after my eighth birthday in January 1975. A term earlier David Cameron had left his family home for Heatherdown preparatory school in Berkshire, while also in 1975, at the age of 11, Alexander Johnson was sent to board at Ashdown House in East Sussex. This means I know how two of the past three British prime ministers were treated as children and the kind of men their schools wanted to make of them. I know neither of these men personally but I do know that they spent the formative years of their childhood in boarding schools being looked after by adults who didn’t love them, because I did too. And if the character of our leaders matters then I’m in possession of important information.

At the age of 13, after prep school, Cameron and Johnson progressed to Eton. I went on to Radley College near Oxford. The exact school picked out by the parents didn’t really matter, because the experience was designed to produce a shared mindset. They were paying for a similar upbringing with a similar intended result: to establish our credentials for the top jobs in the country. We were being trained

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Guardian Weekly

Guardian Weekly1 min read
Cinema Connect
Name the films and the musician-composer who connects them. Cinema Connect Bones and All, Natural Born Killers and The Killer were all scored (or co-scored with Atticus Ross) by Trent Reznor. ■
Guardian Weekly3 min read
From A Small Step For Man To A Giant Gold Rush For Mankind
If the 20th-century space race was about political power, this century’s will be about money. But for those who dream of sending humans back to the moon and possibly Mars, it’s an exciting time to be alive whether it’s presidents or billionaires payi
Guardian Weekly1 min read
Chess
Magnus Carlsen fears that Ding Liren may have been “permanently broken” following the world champion’s poor performances at Wijk aan Zee in January and in the Freestyle event in Germany in March. Carlsen made his comments on a podcast. Ding won the c

Related Books & Audiobooks