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Chief Mouser Larry and the surprising power of political pets







Party affiliation is sometimes apparent in the form of colours and rosettes and viewers can imagine that the appearance of a pack of foxhounds outside a polling station in rural Hampshire signifies the countryside Conservative vote. But these political animals largely provide light relief in times of political and social strife. There is a reassuring sense of political continuity, of business as usual, as well as a pleasingly British eccentricity. It’s hard not to smile.
The same can be said of the political icon that is Larry the Cat, the rescued moggy that has been a resident at No 10 Downing Street for just over a decade. Larry was adopted in 2011 as a pet for then prime minister David Cameron’s children. But he has become something much more than that. Not just because he has official duties and the title of “chief mouser to the cabinet office”, but also because he stays at No 10 while prime ministers come and go.
Cameron left office in 2016 after the Brexit debacle, but Larry voted to remain. No longer personal property but a civil servant, Larry resumed his responsibilities under the premiership of Theresa May – even if she was more of a dog person.
In 2016, the Guardian imagined that Larry’s anxieties were about the possibility of Jeremy Corbyn becoming top dog:

“My real worry is what happens if May calls an early election and Jezza wins. I hear he has a feline called El Gato and I really don’t fancy sharing this gaff. I didn’t vote to leave the EU only to end up with a Spanish housemate.”

But, of course, the firebrand lefty lost out to Boris de Pfeffel Johnson.
Other countries have more overtly partisan pets. US president Warren Harding’s airedale terrier Laddie Boy (1919-29) was described by historian Helen Pycior as the first of the “First Dogs of the land”.
Laddie Boy was an icon of loyalty and family even – or especially – for the Hardings, who didn’t have children. And the tradition of the “first dog” has survived. It was interrupted only by the dog-averse Donald Trump, but resumed with Joe Biden’s German shepherds – first Major and then the replacement puppy Commander, admittedly not without problems as both have proved to be serial biters.
Despite such incidents, and they have a long history, White House dogs are handy public relations assets. Sometimes, as with Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Fala or Richard Nixon’s Checkers, they may even have rescued political careers. Disliking dogs is demonstrably survivable, for sure, but mistreatment of dogs will probably stymie a political career, as potential Trump running mate Kristi Noem has recently discovered.
For the most part, Larry the chief mouser seems to rise above this kind of political exploitation. Tracing the history of what we might call the first cat in the land is fraught with difficulty and the lists of cats in the corridors of power tend to run together with the various offices of state. But Larry’s chief mouser predecessors go back at least to 1924 with a cat called Rufus of England – also known as Treasury Bill.
Chris Day of the British National Archives notes the promotion of celebrity government cats and the idea that as feline government employees they deserved to be officially recognised and rewarded. More recent chief mousers include the No 10 residents Wilberforce, who takes us from the premiership of Edward Heath to that of Margaret Thatcher, and his successor Humphrey, from Thatcher to the Tony Blair years. These cats were already part of a political culture that promoted celebrity cats at the heart of British politics.
Astonishingly, Larry has now seen in his sixth prime minister, and compared to the 50 days of Liz Truss, he feels like a genuine political heavyweight. Indeed, The Standard called him the “one figure of stability in the last 14 years of political turmoil”.
It’s clear that he isn’t just a civil servant: there is something distinctly presidential about Larry. For all the Guardian’s snark, Larry is seemingly above politics, flying the flag and cosying up to foreign dignitaries when required, but mostly staying above the fray.
The street-fighting former stray occasionally scraps with rivals like Palmerston of the foreign office, or on one famous occasion seeing off a trespassing fox. But – like the royal family – Larry mainly provides the pliant media with the more heartwarming kinds of digital content.
Partisanship is not wholly absent: the sociologist Robert Ford published a study that demonstrated that Conservative voters liked former chief mousers more if they were told that they belonged to Thatcher, while Labour voters preferred cats assigned to Blair. So even celebrity cats are not immune to the halo and horn effects.
But the current incarnation of the chief mouser surely signifies stability in an age of political upheaval. Larry’s unofficial social media feed once reminded the world that he had been in office longer than any of the political party leaders. It seems his run as the political world’s favourite feline won’t be ending any time soon.

(To read the Chinese version of this article, please click: 〈首席捕鼠大臣賴瑞與政治寵物的魔力〉)
*This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

About The Conversation

The Conversation was founded in Melbourne, Australia in 2011. It is a unique collaboration between academics and journalists that in a decade has become the world’s leading publisher of research-based news and analysis.
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菲利普.郝威爾(Philip Howell)
菲利普.郝威爾(Philip Howell)
作者
郝威爾教授的研究興趣主要在於歷史地理學和文化地理學,他多年來一直從事19世紀社會的研究與寫作,尤其側重英國與大英帝國。他的主要研究領域之一是性地理學,並且曾發表過關於英國及英國殖民地的性交易產業與性工作的地理學研究,以及維多利亞時期城市男性氣質建構的研究。他的專著《規範地理學:19世紀英國與大英帝國的性交易產業管理》(Geographies of Regulation: Policing Prostitution in Nineteenth-Century Britain and the Empire)2009年由劍橋大學出版社出版。郝威爾博士也對「動物地理學」這個新興的研究領域有所貢獻,該領域探討了人類與非人類動物之間的關係如何在地點與空間中展現。他的另一本著作《在家與在外流浪:維多利亞時期英國的家犬》(At Home and Astray: The Domestic Dog in Victorian Britain)於2015年出版。此外,他還參與了3本論文選集的編輯工作。Professor Howell’s research interests are chiefly in the field of historical and cultural geography, and he has been researching and writing on nineteenth-century society for a number of years, particularly on Britain and the British Empire. One of his main areas of interest has been with geographies of sexuality, and he has published on geographies of prostitution and sex work in Britain and in the British colonies, as well as on the construction of urban masculinity in the Victorian period. A monograph, Geographies of Regulation: Policing Prostitution in Nineteenth-Century Britain and the Empire was published by Cambridge University Press in 2009. Dr Howell has also contributed to the developing field of 'animal geographies', which looks at how relations between human and nonhuman animals are played out in place and space; his book At Home and Astray: The Domestic Dog in Victorian Britain was published in 2015. He has also published three edited collections.
王家琛
王家琛
設計
設計系畢業的插畫及手刺繡工作者,喜歡將生活中的見聞以不同媒材記錄。理性設計;感性創作。透過雙手把模糊的感知化作具體圖像進行溝通,引導觀者走進故事。
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吳冠伶
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