Tuesday, 29 September 2009

Something To Be Really Worried About.


I listened to Radio 4 this morning, to Austin Mitchell after his fringe meeting at the Labour Party Conference yesterday. Eight people turned up at his meeting, and one of those was his wife.

I saw the empty seats, the closed off areas at Brighton

I saw the photographs of half dead, half asleep Lib Dem supporters whilst Cleggy gave his all at the Lib Dem Conference.

UKIP and BNP are in dire straits financially; the LPUK is examining the pointlessness of contesting seats at Westminster in favour of building a grass roots local authority base.

Next week I am going to be watching the glassy eyed adoration of no policies Cameron and the Conservatives.

Basically Party Politics has collapsed in this Country, dwindling party memberships, over centralisation into Westminster, the recession, the expenses scandal etc has traduced democratic politics that has taken four hundred years to build up in less than twenty years.

The Public know it’s a fix, the Public want Radical Change and a New settlement, that was evident at the Forum on Modern Liberty, but that clamour for real progress has been stymied by the big three parties, and the growth of smaller Parties and pressure groups will never have a voice under this Electoral system. The British just don't do the 'Summer of Rage'

The Public has withdrawn from even voting, because ‘the Government’ always gets in. This has produced the bizarre situation where corrupt faux aristocrats lead the Labour Party. Has it really got to the point where Mandelson is the saviour of the Socialist Left? Is there nobody left in the Labour Party that can see what a travesty this is. We have now got a situation were Esther Ranzten and a baggage handler from Glasgow, are now seen as the authentic voice of politics. Don’t get me wrong anybody who takes on somebody who is trying to explode a car bomb has physical courage, but I am not sure that I want my politics to be along the lines of ‘fisticuff’ Prescott. A man who can barely string a coherent sentence together.

Politics is dead, the only option on offer is Mandelson’s ‘post democratic’ age. This is just an Oligarchy by another name with the rest of us condemned to the role of exploited serfs.

Unless the Radical smaller Parties start to coalesce around the concept of a new constitution, a new settlement and a new voting system, we are going to see the gradual sapping of the life blood in our democratic institutions, with the Police and the EU taking up the slack and running the country by default. The Army is now a degraded institution, loved and respected by the people. Hated and kept short of funds by the political classes and sent to fight illegal wars and to occupy foreign countries, the police on the other hand seem to have no shortage of equipment and helicopters, because the political classes see them as the only thing between us and them.

I spent the weekend as a Libertarian, with a Socialist, a near BNP supporter two Tories and a Liberal Democrat. We discussed politics we all had strong points of view that we could never agree on, but we had a forum to discuss politics because we had respect for each other and ‘ground rules’ that everybody was entitled to their say. What we did agree on that this was not replicated at either National or Local level. There is no forum. If nobody is prepared to listen to my point of view, why the hell should I listen or engage to somebody who wants to talk ‘at’ me about their politics.

That is the position that the Public now have with the current political structure.
There may be only 646 of them and sixty million of us, but nobody is listening to the sixty million, only to the 646, and pretending that this the body politic.

Personally the prospect of a Cameron Government fills me with dread, as it will not be any different to Blair/Brown.

Irrespective of each of our political standpoint, we have to fight for a New Constitution, one that comes from below not imposed from above.

Our Politics are Moribund, and worse still has absolutely no mandate from the people of this Country.

10 comments:

Jean-Baptiste220 said...

Rather chaotic, with poor punctuation.

Gandhi said...

One good thing may come out of this: the Labour Party may actually drop dead, it certainly looks that way in Brighton where the Greens are in the ascendency; they're losing out to the BNP in the north and the SNP in Scotland...

I'm bricking it about voting reform, PR might actually be worse than what we have now: if they break the constituency link it will make it impossible for small parties/independent candidates. Worse possible scenario they will end up replicating the way the Euro's work, giving the big parties even more control and no choice of specific candidates either!!!

Neues Arbeit have bent over and let the finance industry do them up the wrong-un, but the Tories ARE the finance industry! Tories + Obama (finance-backed) is likely to add up to a massive trans-atlantic banking gang-bang. HELP!

Andrew said...

NeuE Arbeit, actually. Feminine, you see.

But your reasoning's faultless.

Gandhi said...

Depends if you are translating:
"New labour" = Neue arbeit, or
"New Labour" = Neues Arbeit

Don't mess with Gandhi ;-)

Andrew said...

No. It would still be feminine even if you wrote "New Labour Party" (= Neue Arbeiterpartei) as Partei is feminine too.

Don't mess with a translator.

Gandhi said...

New Labour Party? Methinks you is pullin' a fast one, if you lose the word party then Labour is a NAME, so neuter noun, richtig?

We've translated "Labour", perhaps that's the mistake, but if they registered "Arbeit" as a party name in glorious Deutschland then surely we are in neuter noun territory?

Roger Thornhill said...

Sod that, don't mess with my blog name!;-)

Gandhi said...

More bad news: I'm afraid they are soon to be Historische[s] Arbeit*, you'll need a new name anyway!

*This is seriously starting to push the limits of my "C" in German

Gandhi said...

Suggestion: Blaue[s] Arbeit

The Great Simpleton said...

My squaddie bar German of 25 years ago doesn't go deep enough to know who is correct on the translation of New Labour.

It does go far enough to know that I want New Labour, and Old Labour, tote at the next election.