In a Faraway Pond 
David Runciman
On 24 July, in a speech to the Rwandan parliament, David Cameron said that the old ideological divisions concerning aid and trade – aid is ‘wasteful’, trade is ‘unfair’ – needed to be abandoned in favour of a commitment to what works. He talked about the importance of transparency and accountability at both governmental and non-governmental levels to ensure that resources were used efficiently and money reached its targets. He committed a future Conservative government to spending $1 billion a year to fight malaria and insisted that rich countries should stop luring the brightest and best medical staff from poor countries to work in their hospitals. All in all, it was a sensible speech, but almost nothing Cameron said was reported in the British media or anywhere else. What received all the coverage was the fact that he was in Rwanda, talking about the problems of Africa, when his own parliamentary constituency was under three feet of water.
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David Runciman’s new book is Political Hypocrisy: The Mask of Power from Hobbes to Orwell and Beyond.
Other articles by this contributor:
Liars, Hypocrites and Crybabies · Blair v. Brown
Tax Breaks for Rich Murderers · Bush and the ‘Death Tax’
Cricket’s Superpowers · Beyond the Ashes
The Precautionary Principle · Taking a Chance on War
The Garden, the Park and the Meadow · After the Nation State
The Cattle-Prod Election · The Point of the Polls
He shoots! He scores! · José Mourinho
Invented Communities · post-nationalism