Since the
year of my birth, 1949, sixteen British general elections have resulted in nine
Conservative governments and seven Labour.
Two or three
took place every ten years throughout the Fifties, Sixties, Seventies, Eighties
and Nineties. Since the Millenium we’ve had four and by June 8 those will be
joined by a fifth: five general elections between 2001 and 2017; three since
2010 when the Conservative-Liberal-Democrat Coalition brought in fixed
five-year parliaments. Didn’t last long, did it?
When you
feel stumped to say anything remotely interesting or amusing about what should
be an important political event in the life of the nation, you can always
resort to nostalgia (fings ain’t what they used to be) and facts (16 elections
since 1949).
Evidently I
would like to say something about the current campaign; but what? Were I a
betting man I’d be inclined to take a punt on Labour coming up on the blind
side of the other parties and winning by a head on June 8. It’s only the polls
that say the Tories can’t lose because they are 16 points ahead and the polls,
as we know from the 2015 General Election, Jeremy Corbyn’s election as Labour’s
Leader, and last June’s EU Referendum, are rarely wrong.
No, no, not
fourth time around, according to media reports. Voters love Labour’s manifesto
proposals to nationalise the railways, put more money into education and the
NHS, scrap university tuition fees, guarantee the triple lock on state pensions
and take more tax from people earning more than £80,000 a year. What voters
don’t like or don’t trust is Jeremy Corbyn, they add.
I’ve heard
stalwart Labour voters in various parts of the country say as much on
television news vox pops. None of them
said Mr Corbyn was unlikable as a human being or untrustworthy as an MP: most
of them just didn’t think the former backbench Left-winger had the right stuff
to be prime minister.
Americans
vote for a president, but we vote for prospective party political candidates.
Only constitutional levellers such as those who adhere to the six
Chartist-style principles of the Harrogate Agenda maintain that a prime
minister should be voted in by the public during a general election, not chosen
by party members afterwards. The British
Constitution does not permit that, but that’s the way we think and feel about
political leaders: they represent more than themselves. Personalities, by a
process of metonymy, come to stand for, or even stand in for, party policies. Therefore, Jeremy Corbyn, whom
people don’t like as a potential leader, represents policies that they do like.
With Theresa
May the other way round appears to apply: the public doesn’t care for Tory
principles of privatisation, public spending austerity, tuition fees, the level
of overseas aid, immigration, and much else; but they feel that Mrs May is
strong and dependable. I have heard female Labour voters in the North East say
so on television.
What grounds
they have for saying that I have no idea, because reporters never ask them to
explain what they mean or give a couple of examples of strength and
independence from a Prime Minister whose actions don’t always live up to her
words.
The nature
of the job inevitably means that is going to happen because politicians, not
even prime ministers and presidents, control events. For example, a few months
ago Mrs May maintained that she had no interest in calling an early general
election; then on April 18 she called one. Surprise, surprise. Oh Laura Kuenssberg.
Oh Robert Peston. Oh Andrew Neil. Did any of these oracles see it coming?
The Prime
Minister does her best to sound decisive and look leader-like in front of
television cameras; but that’s precisely what I think she is: an impression,
style without substance, though I’m not sure about the style either.
Her
preference for appearing in public in those bum-freezer jackets, high-belted
trousers and flat shoes has drawn much comment and amusement already. But when
I bother to think about this, I ask myself if this slightly stooping,
grey-haired vicar’s daughter really does have the political moxie to ensure
that Brexit means Brexit when she comes up against the true enemies of Brexit –
the hard Right of the Tory Party.
She’s better
at giving impressions whereas Jeremy Corbyn struggles with sounding or
appearing like anything other than he is. So the public apparently likes the
manifesto policies he represents but doesn’t like him. With Theresa May the
reverse applies, as though they believe she is able to and capable of adjusting
reality to live up to their hopes and expectations.
Tony Blair
was exceptionally good at that kind of political legerdemain. David Cameron
also but to a lesser degree. Jeremy Corbyn, I would say, does not. He has four
weeks to convince voters, at least the ones he meets at rallies, that far from
being a charlatan or opportunist he really is as good as his word.
As I said,
if I was a betting man I’d be inclined to wager against the polls. Just in case. And in the hope that the outcome of this election isn't as predictable as Masterchef.
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