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The Abuse of Power

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Abuse of Power
AuthorTheresa May
PublisherHeadline
Publication date
14 September 2023
Pages352
ISBN978-1035409884

The Abuse of Power: Confronting Injustice in Public Life is a book by former British Prime minister, Theresa May published in 2023. The book explores how power is abused by public institutions and those who run them.[1] It explores the police response to the Hillsborough disaster, Windrush scandal, the Grenfell Tower fire, the Rotherham child sexual exploitation scandal, the British Post Office scandal, [1] and the use of stop and search powers by the police.[2]

Critical reception

Andrew Rawnsley reviewing in The Guardian commented that the prose was plain but punchy.[1] Róisín Lanigan writing in the Irish Independent criticizes May's writing and says that May has a lack of self-awareness.[3]

Rawnsley comments that May's description of the Windrush scandal deflects from her responsibility as a Home Secretary.[1]

Rawnsley says that the inclusion of a chapter on Brexit and the assertion that her opponents were abusing power was bizarre and "repulsive" given the other examples included in the book.[1] Tom Peck, writing in The Independent, comments that many of the claimed abuses of power related to Brexit would be viewed as entirely legitimate tactics by others.[4]

Writing for Literary Review, Tim Bale said: "According to the veteran political journalist Andrew Marr, political memoirs serve three purposes: 'to settle scores, to nudge the dial of the historical verdict, and above all to win a publisher’s advance that is unlikely to be earned out'. May, whatever she might claim, is clearly attempting to do the first and the second of these – in neither case very successfully".[5]

References

This page was last edited on 30 May 2024, at 14:03
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