
No Way to Run a Country
An Outsider's Journey into the Heart of Our Broken Politics
Johnny Mercer(Author)
Macmillan (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 24. September 2026
Book
Hardback
352 pages
978-1-0374-0746-8 (ISBN)
Description
Brutally honest, insightful and darkly funny, No Way To Run A Country is former Cabinet minister Johnny Mercer's account of a tumultuous nine years in Parliament, under five prime ministers, including Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.
In this deeply personal memoir he reveals what Westminster and government is really like . . . and why, for all our sakes, we need to see change.
Johnny, who fought in Afghanistan in 29 Commando Regiment, was fired up with anger at the poor treatment of veterans by successive governments. Determined to do something about it, in 2015 he stood for election in his beloved city of Plymouth. This political outsider was on a mission to change the country.
Johnny's experiences in Westminster veer from hilarious to infuriating as he refuses to accept the gap between what governments say and what they do. As a result he is threatened, briefed against and sacked as a minister - twice! Politics is a blood sport, whatever your party.
He sees a system riven with infighting, incompetence and inertia, struggling through Brexit, the fall of Afghanistan and numerous self-inflicted crises. There are many good MPs who deserve better. The public certainly does.
As the outsider becomes the insider, he succeeds in creating the UK's first Office of Veterans' Affairs and introduces legislation to protect their rights and service. But for Johnny, who has his own daily battle with crippling OCD, the long fight comes at a cost.
Perfect for readers of Politics on the Edge and Ungovernable.
In this deeply personal memoir he reveals what Westminster and government is really like . . . and why, for all our sakes, we need to see change.
Johnny, who fought in Afghanistan in 29 Commando Regiment, was fired up with anger at the poor treatment of veterans by successive governments. Determined to do something about it, in 2015 he stood for election in his beloved city of Plymouth. This political outsider was on a mission to change the country.
Johnny's experiences in Westminster veer from hilarious to infuriating as he refuses to accept the gap between what governments say and what they do. As a result he is threatened, briefed against and sacked as a minister - twice! Politics is a blood sport, whatever your party.
He sees a system riven with infighting, incompetence and inertia, struggling through Brexit, the fall of Afghanistan and numerous self-inflicted crises. There are many good MPs who deserve better. The public certainly does.
As the outsider becomes the insider, he succeeds in creating the UK's first Office of Veterans' Affairs and introduces legislation to protect their rights and service. But for Johnny, who has his own daily battle with crippling OCD, the long fight comes at a cost.
Perfect for readers of Politics on the Edge and Ungovernable.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Pan Macmillan
Target group
Interest Age: From 18 years
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 153 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-0374-0746-8 (9781037407468)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

E-Book
approx. 09/2026
Macmillan
€27.99
Not yet available
Person
Johnny Mercer was elected in May 2015 as the Conservative MP for Plymouth Moor View and served as a junior minister in the MoD before becoming a Cabinet minister. He created the UK Government's Office for Veterans Affairs, oversaw record spending on veterans and introduced legislation in Parliament that would become law to protect their rights and services. Since losing his seat in 2024 he has worked extensively in Ukraine with their government, to help establish the Ukrainian Veterans Corps to strengthen their veterans' care pathways. His acclaimed first book, We Were Warriors, detailed his military career and was a Sunday Times bestseller. No Way to Run a Country is a memoir of his time in office.