Friday, 5 July 2024

Now give him a proper chance

Another sabbatical-busting post, to mark the monumental election result from last night. There's only one thing to do at a moment like this...

Of course we should be under no illusion about the size of the task facing Starmer et al. Sure, a colossal majority will help them get their agenda through untrammelled, but they are inheriting a country not just in decline but in a state of collapse. And a country with very little cash to splash on solutions. How long, I wonder, before those that have been clamouring for change turn on those they have chosen to make it happen?

And for all the joyous Portillo moments (goodbye Rees-Mogg, so long Truss, farewell Mordaunt, adios Keegan, sayonara Shapps), plenty of others survived (Sunak, Hunt, Cleverly, Dowden, Badenoch and, worst of all, Braverman). Not only that but the country has had a mirror held up to it, and the reflection shows a massive level of support, in vote-share terms if not elected MPs, for Reform. The batrochoidal pub-bore took his dog-whistle to Clacton and won. Other coastal towns on the east followed suit, with Skegness and Yarmouth letting themselves down. It should be a source of national shame that Reform has four MPs now ... although I take comfort in the fact that is significantly less than the thirteen initially predicted by the exit poll.

On the other hand, we should take pride, and maybe a little hope, in the fact that the Green Party also now have four MPs, with a record share of the vote too. It's tempting to say the electorate are waking up, but of course they're not, just old voters are dying off and new ones are coming of age.

I'm also pleased to see the resurrection of the Liberal Democrats. Whatever you think of them, and their leader, three-party politics is better (and more interesting) than two.

Whatever, On another day, and in a colder light, people will point to how Labour's vote share showed only a very modest increase and that, in reality, the cause of the monumental swing is primarily blue defection to Reform and LibDem. But it seems churlish to point that out, right now. Because right now is a time for celebration. Farewell Tories, you total feckless shower, you heartless, inept, morality-vacuum, you corrupt puddle of cronyism, sleeze and entitlement ... farewell. Don't rush back.

And remember, kids - things can change...

15 comments:

  1. Great post, Martin. And yes, I had a spring in my step this morning, more so when I read about Rees-Mogg, Truss et al.

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    1. Indeed. As I said in the comments over at CC's blog, I usually feel slightly guilty for Schadenfreude ... but not today!

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    2. I didn't have a spring in my step this morning but only because I didn't get to bed until nearly 8am. It was worth it though.

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    3. Yes, some things are worth staying up for.

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  2. I'm still decompressing.

    JM

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  3. Great post and such a relief that you can be writing what you have. it's going to be tough for them I know but it feels as if we have some sanity at last.

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    1. So refreshing to hear KS majoring on "public service" - how novel!

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  4. I've just heard Reform won a late-declaring fifth seat. Damn.

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  5. Great stuff. Relief, they've gone, tiredness from lack of sleep, and sense of schadenfreude that is quite warming.... a giddiness at some points today. A range of emotions. But mainly, thank fuck that's over.

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  6. Ditto what everyone else has said and thanks for introducing me to a new word - batrochoidal. Very apt indeed.

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  7. So correct me if I've got the wrong end of the stick here, but now that the Lib Dems are the 3rd largest party in the house of fun we have a 3 party system? Surely in the previous Parliament when the SNP were the 3rd largest ( and considerably moreso than the Lib Dems) we had a 2 party system? Explain please.

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    1. I can't, of course you're entirely right. The difference is that LDs hold seats from Cornwall to Shetland, something the SNP doesn't, and that feels like a big difference for a 3rd party. To me, at least.

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