The Labour Party should be sitting pretty on what would
appear to be a near unassailable chance of winning the next general election.
But never underestimate any political party’s ability to sabotage its own
chances, principally by not understanding what the country actually needs;
ideology only gets you so far, but ultimately you need to have actual policies
which can really work, which can’t immediately be hijacked and subverted.
So, what is Labour doing amid the multiple crises which
assail us? It appears to be morphing into Margaret Thatcher’s Tories. Wes
Streeting has been on the stump saying that Labour is going to get tough with
the health unions and that reform of the NHS is needed, not continued
acquiescence to its demands. Now embarked on this trajectory, will it also have
to come down hard on the very people who have long funded the party?
Postal workers, nurses, rail transport, bus drivers, Border
Farce, university lecturers, barristers, school staff, baggage handlers, firefighters…
all have had or will be having a go at attacking the government through the
medium of creating chaos and bringing about the prospect of real harm to
innocent old you and me. The problem is, of course, that the piggy bank has
been smashed open and raided too many times. It doesn’t matter who did it – it’s
a bit late for that – we are flat broke.
Does anybody think that any rational employer would
squeeze and squeeze every last bit of loyalty from their workforce if there was
an easy way to simply pay them more? Oh, seriously? Come on, the robber barons
are long gone, replaced by administrations so sensitive to the soft needs of
their delicate charges that they employ diversity coordinators and equality managers
and decolonialisation evangelists and pay them handsomely for their odious grift.
But surely it is globalism and its impersonal exploitation
of needs that is at the centre of all this. Inequality is not just a structural
feature of corporate Britain, it is an inevitable outcome of supranational greed
and the unchecked power of giant world-connected behemoths, who dictate to
governments and effectively stifle local attempts to become independent of
their reach.
The internet is – or can be - a force for good, but is
just as effective a force for propaganda. The type of propaganda which tells you
that you can’t walk alone, you can’t buck the zeitgeist, you can’t survive
without Google, or Facebook, or TikTok, or whatever social media is harvesting
your every thought. This is where a political movement founded on the
individual could really be a game-changer. A party going into battle for the
common man. Whoever heard of such a thing?
Coming out with tough talk against the health unions could be a master stroke for Labour, but it could also be a death knell to its campaign if it turns its back on its own red wall. Something has to change, for sure, but as ever it is unlikely to change for the poorly educated, low aspiration masses. For them, the majority of the population, the options to go it alone, to reduce their costs, defend their wages and manage their lives, remains stubbornly out of reach. This winter is set to be one of discontent indeed.
Most core Labour supporters will still vote Labour even if they are targeted by them. They are jut so dumb. Not that the Tories are any different btw. Our species is just too dumb to do its own analysis and the swing voters rely instead on being influenced by social media. We laugh at lemmings yet we are so much like them.
ReplyDeleteThe idiots, indeed, are winning.
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