[Prime Minister Francis Urquhart has just asked pollster Sarah Harding to become his “slave”—i.e., a political adviser whose brain he can “plunder” when needed, at his constant beck and call.]
Sarah [played by
Kitty Aldridge]: “I’m interested in looking at power close-up. I want to
understand the way it works.”
Francis [played by Ian
Richardson]: “You know how it works, Sarah. It tends to corrupt, and
absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
Sarah [disturbed
by what she’s just heard, but trying to shake it off]:
“There’s
no such thing as absolute power.”
Francis [slowly,
with emphasis]: “If you work for me,
you’ll give me your absolute allegiance.”— To Play the King
(Part 2 of the BBC House of Cards trilogy), Episode 1, original
air date Nov. 21, 1993, teleplay by Andrew Davies, based on the novel by Michael
Dobbs, directed by Paul Seed
While going back to the original British House of
Cards from the 1990s, I have been struck by similarities with events on
this side of the Atlantic in the last several years: notably, the divisions
between rich and poor, the creation of scapegoats for unrest, and the lengths
to which leaders will go to secure the highest office in the land.
But, given the repeated news reports during this time
of a leader who demands loyalty to him personally rather than to country, this
particular exchange brought me up short.
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