My Resignation, BBC Four | reviews, news & interviews
My Resignation, BBC Four
My Resignation, BBC Four
From sex to morality, a too brief history of the fine art of handing in one's notice
I Resign. It’s not a phrase you hear that often these days. Unlike, obviously, You’re Fired. There was a time, largely synonymous with the era when Tory toffs and grandees had sufficient private income to walk away from employment, that a chap could afford to resign, as the phrase has it, with honour.
My Resignation was a brief history of the rarefied art of leaving office with head held high. At times it was all too brief. Of all the living politicians who had volunteered to walk the plank, few seemed to have received the programme-makers’ invitation in the post. Lord Mandelson was silent on his various trips through the door marked Exit. David Mellor and Tim Yeo and various other Tory saucepots were for some mysterious reason not available to talk about the moment they were caught with their trousers down (or, in the case of Edwina Currie, egg on their face). Cecil Parkinson spoke for them all. “I have no further comment,” he told reporters in a clip from nearly 30 years ago, and he still doesn’t. And nor do any of them.
The only politician who actually stepped forward to speak about sexual scandal was Jacqui Smith, who seems to be trapped in a permanent cycle of apology and atonement after accidentally asking the state to pay for her husband’s home entertainment. Richard Luce, meanwhile, has recovered from the indignity of cocking up negotiations with Argentina in 1982 and was all too happy to relive, when all’s said and done, the only moment in his political career that anyone can actually remember. Alastair Campbell popped up, but then when doesn’t he? And it wasn’t quite clear why. Unless one missed something in his modestly proportioned 9000-page tome about being in charge of Tony Blair, he’s somewhat more resigned against than resigning. A rueful Greg Dyke still brandishes the scars of the dodgy dossier saga, and to this day wishes he hadn’t walked as DG of the Beeb. “I should have said no," he said. "‘You want me to go, fire me.’”
So no, the most interesting cases involved non-politicians, who resigned not behind some shady moral fig leaf but on a matter of actual conscience. For them, unlike for politicians and public figures like Dyke and Max Mosley (wielding the sword of honour as per), the decision to resign has had lasting consequences, not all of them positive. Katharine Gun (pictured above), a translator at GCHQ, hasn’t had a full-time job since she went public on a US government email encouraging staff to bug UN council delegates in order to then “persuade” them to support the invasion of Iraq. Caroline Meagher still looks haunted by her attempt to resign rather than, as a military policewoman, investigate soldiers who, like her, were secretly gay. Instead of being allowed to walk out of the army with a pension, she was discharged for unnatural conduct contrary to military discipline and convicted of fraud for claiming travel expenses.
Others have suffered less. Stephen Bolsin seems more than happy to look himself in the mirror. He had the adamantine moral certainty to resign, move to a new continent and then blow the whistle on the Bristol heart surgeons who persisted in operating on babies despite a shocking rate of failure. “I suspect my resignation has saved thousands of lives,” he concluded, “if not tens of thousands.”
Not everyone throws in the towel quite so successfully. Richard Peppiatt (pictured left) was a tabloid hound who grew tired of making up stories for Richard Desmond’s arsewipe rags and finally decided to walk out in a huff when the paper started, in his words, talking about the EDL “as if they were the SDP”. His letter to Desmond was all set to run in The Guardian when the MPs’ expenses scandal blew. A Bristol surgeon got struck off by Bolsin. Despite Peppiatt’s dignified walkout, the Daily Star continues to subsist on inflatable stories with no factual toehold.
Inside this grab-bag of lurid tales there was an intriguing and important documentary struggling to find a voice. But it was all slightly blighted by the current assumption that viewers will start fixing themselves cups of tea if the camera stays on a single shot for longer than seven seconds. They don’t do that on Radio 4. They won’t on BBC Four either. This could and should have been a series, with one episode on the changing mores of the sexual scandal, another on the Falklands and Iraq, and a third would have given proper space to examine the lonely courage of the whistleblower and the psychological cost of a conscience. Perhaps the head of BBC documentaries should consider his (or her) position.
- Watch My Resignation on BBC iPlayer
Add comment
The future of Arts Journalism
You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!
We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d
And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.
Subscribe to theartsdesk.com
Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.
To take a subscription now simply click here.
And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?
Comments
...