David Cameron

For the Record


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(Jeremy Selwyn/WPA Pool/Getty Images)

      The Olympic torch arrives in Downing Street (Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)

      Florence at the Alternative Vote referendum campaign (Andrew Parsons)

      Barack Obama meeting Larry the cat (White House/Alamy)

      Meeting with Barack Obama at the Camp David G8 (Obama White House)

      G8 and EU leaders at the Britain G8 Summit (Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images)

      With Vladimir Putin at the Olympics (Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)

      With Angela Merkel at Chequers (Justin Tallis/Pool/Getty Images)

      The G7 participants in Bavaria (A.v.Stocki/ullstein bild/Getty Images)

      Working on the contents of the red box (Tom Stoddart/Getty Images)

      Holding the letter left by Liam Byrne reading ‘I’m afraid there is no money’ (Andrew Parsons)

      Campaigning for the 2015 election (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

      Writing the losing speech ahead of the 2015 general election (Andrew Parsons)

      Visiting the Sikh festival of Vaisakhi in Gravesend (WENN Rights Ltd/Alamy)

      Celebrating the winning count during the 2015 general election (Andrew Parsons)

      Returning to Downing Street (Arron Hoare/MOD, Crown Copyright © 2015)

      With Angela Merkel, Fredrik Reinfeldt and Mark Rutte in a boat in Harpsund (Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images)

      With Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov at the border iron fence (NurPhoto/Getty Images)

      At Wembley Stadium with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi (Justin Tallis/WPA Pool/Getty Images)

      Meeting Donald Tusk and Jean-Claude Juncker (Yves Herman/AFP/Getty Images)

      Inspecting the renegotiation documents with Tom Scholar and Ivan Rogers (Liz Sugg)

      Addressing students and pro-EU ‘Vote Remain’ supporters (Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

      Watching the EU referendum results come in (Ramsay Jones)

      Nancy, Elwen and Florence Cameron writing a letter for the incoming prime minister (Andrew Parsons)

      Preparation for the final appearance at Prime Minister’s Questions (Andrew Parsons)

      The last official visit as prime minister (Chris J Ratcliffe/WPA Pool/Getty Images)

      With family before leaving Downing Street (Andrew Parsons)

      Visit to Alzheimer’s UK (Edward Starr)

      Every effort has been made to trace copyright holders and to obtain their permission for the use of copyright material. Where not explicitly referenced, the pictures are sourced from the author’s personal archive. The publisher apologises for any errors or omissions in the above list and would be grateful if notified of any corrections that should be incorporated in future editions of this book.

      When the hardback edition of this book was published, there was only one issue at the top of the news agenda: Brexit. Britain’s still-unfulfilled decision to leave the European Union dominated conversations. It divided colleagues, friends, even families. It had already demanded the resignation of two successive prime ministers – me, and Theresa May – and it was, though we didn’t yet know it, about to lead to the landslide election of the next, Boris Johnson.

      A year on, much has changed. Britain has left the EU, although an agreement on our future relationship with Europe has still not been reached. But that issue, like so many others, has largely been eclipsed by the deadly coronavirus that, tragically, has caused the deaths of thousands and changed everyday life for almost every person on earth.

      One country’s withdrawal from a continental bloc and a pandemic engulfing every nation on the planet – the two issues might seem totally unconnected. Yet they do have something in common. They both involve the deep, tangled interdependence and interconnectedness of the modern world; one in which we trade and travel, communicate and collaborate, sharing not just the languages we speak but many of the laws we live by and the institutions that assist our cooperation. Politicians call this ‘globalisation’. And the challenges the phenomenon poses are shared by every politician in every country. That is the true common agenda.

      The other issues on my desk in Downing Street were global too. They ranged from the Ebola epidemic in Africa and the Arab Spring in the Middle East to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The consequences of the global scourges of the early twenty-first century – terrorism, dictatorship, poverty, corruption – were then visited upon Europe, including Britain, in the form of the biggest migration crisis since the Second World War. Indeed, I established the cross-departmental National Security Council (NSC) for this very reason: foreign policy is domestic policy. You can’t disentangle the two. As I observe on page 533, what happens on the streets of Islamabad plays out on the streets of Bradford. Or, to bring that sentiment up to date, what’s sold in a Chinese animal market can bring the world to a standstill.

      I remain a passionate globalist. The process of globalisation has helped to drive extraordinary progress for humankind, including lifting billions of people out of poverty. To be sure, a big, open, engaged world brings problems. But a big-world approach is the only way we can resolve them and continue to deliver prosperity and security for all in this still-young century.

      Some might misinterpret this stance as a devotion to some warm notion of a global good over the cold, hard realities of our national interest. So it is important to clarify that one of the biggest reasons I believe in working with other nations is because it is right for our nation. I care about our relationship with other countries precisely because I care above all about our country.

      I would take the argument further. As a Conservative, I believe in the nation state. In most cases, nations reflect a sense of identity, born out of a shared history. And because we feel we belong, we find it easier to share, to cooperate, to accept short-term sacrifices for long-term benefits. The nation state works. Global institutions should serve these states, not the other way round.

      Of course, the arrival of the pandemic has thrown that outward, pro-globalist outlook into question. Is it still the right approach?

      First, finance. A big theme of this book is the fiscal retrenchment known as austerity that was undertaken by the coalition government. Some have alleged that in the way we dealt with a crisis that pre-dated us we were storing