Fierce and noble warrior queen Theresa May has called a snap election to heal a kingdom hurt by a crisis of identity. Bollocks. No, she didn’t. The politician, long more inclined to exploit national divisions than to soothe them, has done the thing that she said she never would in order to throw Tory blue bunting over two Tory screw-ups.
Not even free-market advocates had much that was nice to say about her tax proposals for the growing number of self-employed Britons — exasperating changes that would force Uber drivers to fill out forms at the traffic lights. There can be no positive spin on investigation for alleged electoral spending breaches by a reported two dozen Conservative MPs — a number that exceeds the party’s parliamentary majority.
Still. This false Boadicea has a great chance of victory. For this, we will have naked, unreasoned establishment hatred of Jeremy Corbyn to thank. This destructive work need no longer be done by May’s powerful allies. Both the Parliamentary Labour Party and the press of a purported “left” will do it for them.
It wasn’t surprising to hear David Cameron charge the Labour leader with looking scruffy. It was surprising to find that The Guardian had done it first. Assistant editor Michael White developed keen interest in Corbyn’s sandals long ago — actually, at about the same time the guy stopped being a lovable left-wing loser and started to build what has become the youngest and the largest political party in Europe. It’s odd that the paper that positions itself as a model of tolerance and the voice of the marginalised rebel found so little to like about “the MP on the demo with the beard and sandals”.
Even Owen Jones, for a time the paper’s single reliable Corbynite, has done his recent bit to diminish the leader. Actually, this disavowal seems to have done wonders for this unremarkable thinker’s career. In February, Jones was interviewed by another major British newspaper, happy to report that in the person of Corbyn, the left had “failed”.
It remains unclear to me how Corbyn, a politician consistent in his vindicated criticism of austerity and a socialist flexible enough to adopt one of Milton Friedman’s prescriptions, has “failed” the “left”. Or, at least, it is unclear until I consider the possibility that the “left” considers its failure to meaningfully influence policy for the past 40 years a success.
Through Jones, we can see the vision that an establishment left has developed for itself. Like so many progressive establishment pundits, he has built his brand through the public appearance of being personally marginalised. Jones is often offended by the cultural intolerance of others and keen to link his own experience of debate on major television shows to the struggle of real people — cf. Tara Moss and her campaign against the everyday problem of online abuse explored entirely through interview with celebrities. This is the prominent face of the “left” now: a group of modestly known people far more comfortable describing the hard time they had on Twitter than examining the possibilities for actually socialist policy.
At the passing of the execrable Margaret Thatcher, then-UK prime minister David Cameron declared “We are all Thatcherites now”. He’s right. Owen Jones and so many critics of Corbyn implicitly believe that “there is no alternative” to the market friendly regime they quit criticising so long ago. The “left” is very happy to go on talking about how the right is mean to its stars. They are content to leave economic policy, the core business of government, to Thatcher. They are profoundly annoyed that Corbyn talks about the dirty matters of money and of life.
Corbyn has not proposed anything outrageous. His program is one of finance sector regulation, reliable provision of social services and progressive tax. The guy may have Marxist inclinations, but these are not of the uncompromised orthodox sort. Commentators may call him Trotskyist and malign the hundreds of thousands of young people who have joined his party as “entryist” — Lenin forbid we praise Millennials for their political engagement. But upon examination, the Corbyn suite of policies is very modest. Corbyn advances a program of greater wealth equality that is indistinguishable from what those arseholes at the IMF say that they want for the world, but will never deliver.
This is how the “left” criticism goes: the man is poorly dressed; he doesn’t look or sound like an establishment politician; he just can’t get his message across and is therefore unelectable. And because he’s unelectable, we’re just going to keep saying that he’s unelectable to ensure that this message can never get across.
Such hand-wringing about modest and popular proposals for reform! Proposals so modest, even Piers Morgan says that he agrees with them. An interview this week captures the conflict of progressives who publicly endorse the implementation of such proposals but say that they despise Corbyn’s inability to communicate them. You just can’t get your policies across, says Morgan. Let’s talk about them then, says Corbyn. No, says Morgan. Because you just can’t get your policies across.
Jeremy Corbyn has not failed the “left”. He hasn’t even failed the hopes of moderates who would prefer that angry hordes of the impoverished do not run from their shuttered towns to destroy the grand homes of Knightsbridge. The only people he has failed are lazy establishment “leftists” who have built nice careers from the fiction that they are the forgotten people. By the time they recognise that “there is no alternative” to the centrist proposals of this man, the capitalism that currently rewards their piffling efforts will be in ruins.
The content of this piece is serious which makes the headline even more cringeworthy.
Sally Sure
Absolutely agree Zut. Do we have to have that sort of imagery in our political news?
Well it got my attention. And a very worthy read it turned out to be. Thank you Helen Razer
And yet my comment saying the same thing has been disappeared – wonde why that should be?
Yes. and if you listen to UK Labour past two days, they have already lost. Such defeatism before a shot is fired…
“…Therese May have misled them,
Too clever by half,
“No early election!”
She was havin’ a laugh.
Her knickers were crossed
And Theresa, she lied.
So the Tories now too
Have M’doch on their side.”
Curious! No mention of Brexit here?
Perhaps, because, confronted with a Brexit referendum designed to push Britain to the right, Corbyn failed to make Labour an effective champion of Remain, and so Leave won and Britain shifted to the right.
Then, confronted with May’s demand that Labour agree to a snap election on June 8 designed to push Britain further to the right, Corbyn failed to defy her, and now the Tories will soon triumph and Britain will shift further to the right.
In that process, the UK Labour Party will be electorally decimated to the point where it may never again be a viable party of government, with the reign of the ‘nasty party’ guaranteed for who knows how many more years in Britain.
Yep, Corbyn sure is a one heck of a leftist. It’s just a pity he’s also a Conservative’s greatest ever wet dream.
Well, it’s not a long election campaign, and I do find myself wondering if any of the paid wordsmiths out there can come up with anything more descriptive and less cliched than a ‘snap election’ (seriously journos, do you ever read anything other than your own blatherings and those of like small minds?)
But wouldn’t it be wonderful if Corbyn actually started to generate some real energy about him and pull in large swathes of voters. God knows, the Tories are offering nothing, nothing at all. Surely there are some people in the UK willing to risk their vote for the sake of change. America went to a loony, France could fall to a right wing nationalist, Corbyn is the very model of an establishment gentleman in comparison.
Only their blighted ignorance and the incessant Murdoch media cacophany is preventing them from doing something relatively benign, and possibly very fruitful.
Not expecting it, but in terms of weird political events it wouldn’t even rate in the last 18 months.
They too need a Bernie Sanders, don’t we all.