A blog by Ross of Penge (formerly of Balham)

I blogged pretty extensively during 2014 and early 2015, but got out of the habit. In the time since there has been a huge amount I've sort of wanted to write about (politics, terror etc) but I haven't. I tried several times, but anger and frustration about what was happening prevented me from getting things down in a coherent form. Given I couldn't express what I felt, and it didn't seem like it would make a difference anyway, I let it lie fallow.

It's now early 2017, and I'm back, blogging about my attempt to do the first month of the year without social media. After that, who knows?

And why gateway2thesouth? Named after a famous sketch popularised by Peter Sellers:

"Broad-bosomed, bold, becalmed, benign,
Lies Balham, four-square on the Northern Line."

I lived in Balham for 23 years - longer than I have been anywhere else, and it still feels like one of the places in the world I most belong.

Tuesday, 6 May 2014

They Fade to Grey

I had a comment on yesterday's blog via Facebook as follows:

Farage gets airtime because, however else he is found wanting, he doesn't lack character. He makes good sound bites because he clearly says what he's thinking. Same has gone for paddy pantsdown, Alan Clark, Ann Widdecombe (aka Doris Karloff), Dennis Skinner and many others over the years. At least they don't have to check their pagers and phones and get clearance from ground control to stay on message with HQ.

A perfect excuse to do another political post, so here goes…

It is certainly true that many politicians are bland and safe these days. And it is true that Boris Johnson is popular because he is a "character", and that I struggle to think of too many others right now. So it is probably right that Farage gets airtime for that reason. But airtime doesn't always means popularity.

And I don't know if this is worse than in previous generations. I suspect more convergence - it is much harder to tell Conservative from LibDem from Labour, as they increasingly come from a background of similar degrees, universities and non-jobs. But back in the 1970s there was a Labour type, just as there was a Tory type, and success often meant resembling it. There were non-conformists like Tony Benn, but were they more frequent than the ones we have now, and if so, is that because running a modern organisation allows and requires more control?

I don’t think that is why Farage is a) popular and b) doing well. I think he is gathering support because he is offering easy answers. Implicit for me in the UKIP message is that if we withdraw from Europe, and stop poor foreigners coming over here (and make those here more likely to go back) then everything will be fine. The other parties are promising more of what we have now, or very similar, at least to the untutored eye.

Of course, it cannot be as simple as that. If UKIP were to be in government and to follow through on those policies, we would still be a country with a huge deficit. And we would lack many of the low-paid individuals that the NHS relies on (and that much of London also requires). And we would be a country that had turned its back on some fairly fundamental human rights legislation, but let's gloss over that for the moment*.

But they give us an answer. A simple answer, even if it is the wrong answer to the wrong question. And people want an easy answer.

The real problem is that this country is hugely over-reliant on house prices and low interest rates to keep heads above water and the only way to sort the deep-lying economic woes is to reduce that reliance. Plus we need to educate people in relevant skills and ensure that jobs exist. Ideally higher wage jobs, rather than call centres. A recovery led by employment, not buy-to-let. And before you start calling me a socialist (because I don't see what any of the above  had to do with who controls the means of production) look at the US recovery - which has been built on jobs. Often poorly paid ones, but jobs nonetheless.

UKIP offers none of this. Mind you, neither do the three main parties - because it is not appealing to the core middle England voters to say that this may mean your house price is, at best, not going to go up for the next decade, but your mortgage payments probably are.

And of course, we aren't voting for someone to run the country. Officially we are voting at one end for people to represent us in Europe, and at the other for people to run our local services. And there is no reason why one party should be good at both, or good at that and at running a country. But we are encouraged to view this as a referendum on the government – a big vote for [you decide] will mean changed policies for all three big parties at the next election. And if that means you are left with a bunch of idiots running your local council for the next four years – well, tough.

And that's I think enough about people and personalities, and a trailer for what this should be about, which is policies. So that's where we will be next time.


* Here's a tip. Whenever anyone suggests leaving the Convention on Human Rights, or repealing the Human Rights Act, ask them which of the rights they would like to get rid of. And wait for an answer. You'll have time to make a cup of tea.

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