It might be at
least partly down to advancing years.
Policemen are definitely getting younger, and that’s supposed to be one
of the more reliable signs, isn’t it? I
don’t think it’s down to rose-tinted nostalgia, though – I mean, I’ve always
known that politicians will say one thing to get elected and then do the
opposite when they’re in power, even if it took a while to realise that no
party is exempt from that rule. The
first elections in which I took any interest were those of 1964 and 1966. I was too young to vote, but had I been old
enough, I would have voted for Harold Wilson’s Labour Party. They were going to bring about radical
change, to re-forge Britain in the “white
heat of the technological revolution”, and above all, they were going to
scrap Polaris. They didn’t of course,
and (apart from a brief period of hope under Michael Foot) I’ve never trusted anything
the Labour Party has said since.
But if I can’t
explain it in those terms, then perhaps it really is true – there has never
been a time when politicians told such outright and easily demonstrable lies on
the scale which we are witnessing today.
The Prime Minister lies on an industrial scale, even if MPs are told
off for pointing it out. But the
fact that it is contrary to parliamentary rules to call the PM a liar doesn’t
mean that she isn’t. Day after day she
opens her mouth and what comes spilling out is in complete contradiction to
objective, provable truth. It isn’t just
her, of course; but we’ve reached a stage where mere ‘facts’ are no longer
relevant; her nearest thing to a saving grace is that she hasn’t yet reached
the level of Trump, who seems to feel himself bound to utter six demonstrable
untruths before breakfast.
She told the
House of Commons this week that she’s spent two weeks ‘negotiating hard’ with
the EU when, in reality, they are still waiting for her to define what she
actually wants. There are no
negotiations – as some EU officials put it this week, the UK is only “pretending
to negotiate”. What she asked
parliament to agree to yesterday was to give its approval to continuing the
pretence for another two weeks; she still hasn’t a clue what it is that she’s
trying to achieve or how it is in any way different from that which she herself
solemnly declared to be impossible just a few short weeks ago. It would be a foolish person who was prepared
to wager that she won’t go back to parliament in a fortnight, declare that she’s
still ‘negotiating hard’ but needs yet more time to define what it is that she
wants.
In the worst days
of the old Soviet Union, when the economy increasingly resembled a basket case,
one factory manager was reported as saying of the workers “they pretend to work and we pretend to pay them”. The UK seems to have reached a point where
the government pretends to govern, the opposition pretends to oppose, and parliament
pretends to have some influence. Where’s
Toto when he’s
needed?
2 comments:
Hey, never fear, these are largely well educated Scottish and English men and women running the country. Have a little faith that they know what they are doing.
We here in Wales would be well advised to sit back, watch and learn.
If ever we go for independence we really will need to draw upon individuals of a similar calibre. Regrettably we are very short in such home grown talent!
"these are largely well educated Scottish and English men and women running the country {...] they know what they are doing [...] If ever we go for independence we really will need to draw upon individuals of a similar calibre"
Brilliant, thank you. Best laugh of the day. It was parody, wasn't it?
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