By Bernard Thompson
Published on NewsNet“Politicians want to make a difference. They want to put something back. They care about the life of their community and want to help people. They believe the values of the political tribe they belong to will change the country for the better.
“Sure, some are more effective than
others.
“But very, very few go into it
because it looks like an easy life.
“They work long, anti-social hours
under intense scrutiny. They shoulder very great responsibilities,
like passing laws, or deciding whether we go to war. They can be
bombarded with abuse and have to reapply for their jobs every five
years.
“And everybody hates them.
“If one thing comes from Jo Cox's
shocking and tragic death, it should be this. We should abandon our
lazy, unthinking disdain for the people who represent us. “
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| Poacher-turned-gamekeeper: Magnus Gardham |
But his piece was prescient as, a mere
11 days later, it was announced that he was to leave journalism.
It would, of course, be quite wrong to
infer that Gardham's poacher-turned-gamekeeper conversion lent any
weight to those who suspected that he had been a little too cozy with
that gamekeeper all along.
But it's not as if this is the first
time something like this has happened.
Back in the day, Gardham's predecessor
at the Herald, Catherine Mcleod, had to deal with outrageous
accusations in the Herald's comments section that she somehow
favoured the Labour party.
Mcleod never revealed if that was what
drove her to leave her post with a "huge amount of sadness" to take up a position as special adviser to Alistair Darling, whom
she had known for years “partly through his wife Margaret Vaughan,
a former Herald journalist”.
Nor was Gardham the first to link the
murder of an MP to the general lack of respect shown to our political
class.
Polly Toynbee wasted no time in
declaring in The Guardian:
“This attack on a public official
cannot be viewed in isolation. It occurs against a backdrop of an
ugly public mood in which we have been told to despise the political
class, to distrust those who serve, to dehumanise those with whom we
do not readily identify.”
But while it may be quite proper at
such a time of tragedy to hope for something better – a “kinder,
gentler politics” – we should be careful of those on the
political scene who demand an inalienable right to sanctuary, rather
than being answerable to the people they claim to serve.
And never has that political class been
shown up for what it is – an unrepresentative, unprincipled clique
that pays no heed to the interests of the country under its power –
than in the UK today.
In times of uncertainty, nations need
leadership and statesmanship, lest they descend into chaos.
But Britain's two biggest Westminster
parties have effectively absolved themselves of all duties of
governance as they choose instead to play internal power games.
While people are worried about their
jobs, their businesses, the futures of their children, even their
right to live and work in the countries they have called home, the
political class has chosen to indulge in lascivious chatter about
internecine wars.
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| Power players: Theresa May, Boris Johnson and Michael Gove |
Labour, instead of seizing the vacant,
leaderless ground, choose to hold their own leader hostage and
threaten to split their party in two, making risible excuses to
defend what is transparently a pre-planned,
cynical manoeuvre to maintain a style and structure of politics that
British people are rejecting in their millions.
So a nation of 65m will have its next
prime minister chosen by a Tory membership of less than 150,000. Or
two people, if you believe it's really Paul Dacre and Rupert Murdoch,
and possibly only one of them.
Labour's 388,000 members are expected
to accept a leader approved by 172 MPs and 20 MEPs, many of whom are
acting against the explicit wishes of their constituency parties,
without the man elected nine months ago with a massive mandate even
being allowed to stand again.
And why? To keep Tony Blair from having
to be housed in “suitable accommodation”?
Or is it just because they want to
maintain a mechanism through which they can accrue wealth and power
via a party that doesn't want them and an electorate deprived of
representative choice.
And just look at this political class
that we must not disdain for fear of being accused of promoting
abuse.
The UK has a parliament in which 309
Tory MPs voted to cut £30-per-week Employment and Support Allowance
(ESA) to disabled people, at least one of whom was reported to have
voted in a dinner suit.
Last year, Harriet Harman, acting
leader of the Labour party, ordered MPs not to resist her distant
relative, David Cameron's welfare cuts, in just one of many exercises
that have seen money taken from the poor and diverted to bankers.
The UK has a Chancellor who cuts deals
with tax avoiders,
a Justice Minister (and possible PM) who supported the death penalty,
a Health Minister who appears to support the privatisation of the NHS and a Home Secretary (also a potential PM)
who said Britain should leave the European Convention on Human Rights
(until Thursday).
All serving under an outgoing PM who
has been busily trying to stop an investigation into whether or not
his party actually committed fraud to win the election.
As for Labour, their coup was kicked
off by that great hereditary MP, Hilary Benn (a schoolmate of
Toynbee's), who apparently should be accorded the respect that many
had for his late father but never accused of being part of a
political dynasty.
Which is probably why a media that is
exceedingly kind to him on both the “left”, such as it is, and
the right rarely make much of a remarkable story of privilege.
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| Hereditary MP: Hilary Benn |
The current incumbent is Hilary's
brother Stephen, whose daughter was selected as a Labour
parliamentary candidate at 17.
It sounds more like something from
1970s Tories than any party once calling itself socialist and yet
British people are supposed to trust and respect, if not pay fealty
to an ever-tightening group who are not so much a political class as
feudal overlords.
There should be no mistaking the danger
of the mess that Britain is in.
One of the most perilous aspects of the
EU referendum was the way in which the concerns of millions of people
were ignored, voters being caricatured as uneducated, unthinking
bigots, if they said they had voted to Leave.
There were assuredly plenty who were
guided by prejudice but the whole point of a democratic process is to
allow people to participate in shaping their own destinies and to
respect the result, however imperfect their motives or understanding
of the complexities of the debate.
Yet those voters were not even accorded
the courtesy of an honest campaign on the issues – and neither side
emerged with any great credit.
But few are listening to the
increasingly agitated millions, with talk of simply finding a way to
disregard the Brexit vote becoming more common.
Where can that lead to: a huge swathe
of British voters dismissed and two party elites choosing to remain
oblivious to their concerns or even defying majority opinion?
Tories, the great excluders of the
people, against Labour, the great ignorers of their will.
This is not simply a case of failing
democracy. Only a fantasist could believe in that in a country which
still has an unelected head of state, who is also head of the
established church, which is allowed to send its bishops to the upper
house of parliament.
It would be a strange democracy in
which one party could be guaranteed a parliamentary majority for five
years on less than 37% of the vote.
No, what is far more grave is that,
such is the contempt in which this political class holds British
people, it has even given up pretending.
As the country cries out for direction,
those who have climbed their way up the greasy poll, through
patronage, heritage, duplicity or sycophancy seem so sure of the dumb
obeisance of the masses that they can decide amongst themselves who
gets to lead, with only the formality of an electoral sham to ratify
their anointed head of government.
In this they are aided by the media,
many of whom are themselves part of that political class delivering
“news” and “opinion” that should be preceded by three shouts
of “Oh, yea,”
so blindly does it follow the
prescribed narrative of the party plotters and spin doctors.
But at what point does a political
elite's complacency start to be punished? Have they learned no
lessons from Northern Ireland and what happened when people from
disenchanted, disenfranchised communities stopped relying on elected
representatives and instead fell in behind those favouring altogether
more direct, if devastating, means of achieving their ends?
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| Labour's anti-immigration mug |
If all this seems melodramatic, it
appears almost to have been forgotten that, only a few weeks ago,
Nigel Farage said publicly that “violence is the next step” as a
response to immigration.
And it is less than a year since a
serving general was quoted as saying that the military “would not allow a prime
minister to jeopardise the security of this country and I think
people would use whatever means possible, fair or foul to prevent
that”, should Corbyn be elected Prime Minister.
In that, he echoed the response of some
top brass against the Wilson government, 40 years ago.
That's the thing about chaos – it is
impossible to predict where it will all end but it is no exaggeration
to say that the UK stands on the edge of a precipice. And, if its
political class do not soon start to listen and represent, the
consequences may be dire.
Scottish political leaders, too, have
their decisions to make.
Does Ruth Davidson align her
over-inflated Scottish Tories with a new PM without popular mandate
or match her threat to declare political independence in the event of
a Johnson Premiership?
Does Kezia Dugdale choose to continue
to snipe at Corbyn or somehow try to revive Labour in Scotland by
adopting a programme more acceptable to the thousands of voters the
party lost over the last 18 months?
Does the SNP help to prop up Corbyn,
hoping for a future government with which it could co-operate,
knowing that any other option will see the political class close
ranks with the bankers and corporations to lock out democracy for
good?
Or will the events of the next few days
and weeks make issues around Brexit obsolete and the only viable
solution independence through referendum or even a unilateral
declaration.
The combined efforts of Thatcher,
Major, Blair, Brown and Cameron may already have taken Britain too
far down the road to effective dictatorship to reverse within a
lifetime.
If that is the case it makes for a
compelling imperative – that anyone who can get out, should get
out.
That goes for countries that are
members of the UK, just as surely as for individuals who may have the
opportunity to escape a future in which Labour and the Tories
silently collude to ignore possible electoral fraud and an illegal
war for which those “rebel” MPs voted, and maintain a system
allowing them to feather their own nests.
But let's never disrespect our
political class.






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