Dorothy
Margot writes
I am no academic,
and I have made no study of the Politics of my country. Nevertheless, I have
been a keen observer of the political scene since I first proudly walked into a
polling booth, to vote for the first time, thanks to the Representation of the People Act,
1969, which gave
me the vote at 18 years old.
I voted Liberal. Frankly, it was to hack off my RAF father, and
all he believed in, but I also thought Jeremy Thorpe was more convincing than
the sexually ambiguous, Edward Heath. (Oh the irony). I doubt if I could have
told you a single policy, from any party. I voted for the man who seemed most
sincere.
If you Google Ed Miliband, you will note the second most popular search
is 'Ed Miliband bacon sandwich'; if you Google David Cameron, the next most
popular search is 'David Cameron, Twitter'. People actually want to know what
Cameron is saying, whereas Miliband is good for a laugh.
In the days when the Labour party could field a man of the calibre of
the late Labour Leader, John Smith, they stood a chance of sweeping the Tory
party away. Who, amongst the ranks of the faithful, consider the
unprepossessing and uninspiring Miliband any threat to Cameron? Cameron
acts out the part of the statesman and family man to good effect, irrespective
of what he is actually saying.
Political pundits rather downplay the influence that mere personality
exerts on the voters' minds. That might be a simplistic summation, but Arnold
Schwarzenegger garnered 4,206,384 Republican votes in 2003 on the back of
having a good physique and a few quotable one-liners. It would be wrong to
imagine the British voter has more savvy and is not swayed by celebrity and
charisma, witness the Farage Effect! My father was persuaded by the
personable Blair to vote Labour after a lifetime of Daily Mail-informed
conservatism, but during recent local elections, he voted UKIP, because he
admires Nigel Farage, for 'talking sense'.
To quote Chesterton: ''The first
effect of not believing in God is to believe in anything".
Have you read your papers recently?:
Comedian Al Murray has
announced he plans to stand against Nigel Farage in the seat of South Thanet in May’s general election.
He will stand as his comedy
alter ego “the Pub Landlord” for the Free United Kingdom Party, or FUKP.
In a video
posted to YouTube launching his bid for
parliament, he says: “It seems to me that the UK is ready for a bloke waving a
pint around offering common sense solutions.”
The first of his pledges is to
make pints of beer cost 1p and to brick up the channel tunnel"
Frances Perraudin, The Guardian January 14, 2015
Politics
is dying on its feet, when a stand-up comedian, mocking UKIP, warrants column
inches in all the press. The next election seems set to fragment politics even
further, to devalue it and to fail to offer the country a radical leader/thinker
of the likes of Greece's Alexis Tsipras, who ensured he was always seen,
without a tie! Political stagecraft, and it got International press coverage of
the 'this man means business' variety.
In
June 2013 the Calder Valley, West Yorkshire Labour Party, had the opportunity to
adopt an outstanding female Labour councillor, Jenny Lynn as their next
election candidate. She has worked tirelessly for the party and her community
and much more besides; she was the first woman to represent her ward in over 30
years.
She
is an openly practicing Christian, and I have witnessed the great respect she
gets from the local Muslim community, (no mean feat), by her leadership of the
Halifax Friends of Palestine and her support of asylum seekers. She is
eloquent, her voice is easy on the ear, she has a 'common touch' and a good
sense of humour, and she is passionate about her politics. So whom did her
party choose, when she was proposed as a candidate, and stood against 3 other
hopefuls? A fresh faced, anodyne London-based 'local' lad who has yet to serve
his community, Josh Fenton-Glynn. Yes, let's not select a fiery, single,
middle aged woman, let's have a safe smiley Mili - Bland clone. Well, good luck
with that choice.
Josh twittered on 7 Feb 2015:
"We are
'likes' away from 500 on the 'Josh For Calder Valley' Facebook page, let's see
if we can get there by Monday". Inspiring, isn't it?
So, finally, to answer the question. By choosing,
post-Kinnock, yet another albatross leader to hang around their necks, the
Labour party is indeed already dying, by slow suicide