Dropping the Pilot facts for kids
Dropping the Pilot is a political cartoon by Sir John Tenniel, first published in the British magazine Punch on 29 March 1890. It depicts Chancellor Otto von Bismarck as a maritime pilot who is stepping off a ship, perhaps a reference to Plato's ship of state, idly and unconcernedly watched by a young Wilhelm II, German Emperor. Bismarck had resigned as Chancellor at Wilhelm's demand just ten days earlier on 19 March because of political differences.
After the cartoon's publication, Tenniel received a commission from the 5th Earl of Rosebery to create a copy to be sent to Bismarck himself. The former chancellor reportedly replied, "It is indeed a fine one".
The cartoon is well known in Germany and often used in history textbooks and school books, under the title The Pilot Leaves the Ship (German: Der Lotse geht von Bord).
Adaptations
- Dropping the pilot, referring to Kaiser Wilhelm's removal from the list of Royal Navy admirals in 1914, by David Low
- Dropping the pilot, referring to Winston Churchill, by Daniel Bishop
- Cartoon Dropping the Pilots showing Khrushchev looking down as the four "Pilots" leave the ship of state.
- Cartoon showing the pilot Abraham Lincoln being "Dropped" from the "Grand Old Party" By Captain Barry Goldwater
- Cartoon showing Margaret Thatcher being "Dropped as the Pilot"
- Steve Bell of The Guardian has adapted the cartoon:
- Vice-president faces isolation after key ally leaves Pentagon
- Iraqis celebrate the withdrawal of American combat troops
- David Cameron's response to Coulson's guilt
- Dropping the pornbot (Resignation of Damian Green)
- Martin Rowson of The Guardian has also adapted the cartoon repeatedly:
- Steve Hilton's Exit
- Undropping the Pilot
- The resignation of Michael Flynn
- Dropping The Pilate on the resignation of Liz Truss after only 45 days in office