The Reform Party and the UK’s lurch towards fascism

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  • #32683
    David9694

    I posted an earlier version of this a while back – inspired to do update following THAT discussion about all things ULEZ. 

    The “manifesto”, in terms of transport, only mentions stopping HS2, but there’s plenty on the usual right-wing obsessions: Brexit, immigration, veterans and climate change.  I had another look because I worry about the ongoing decline of the two main political parties. 

    If the Cons stay wedded to Brexit, then we will go into the next GE with all the widespread impoverishment Brexit has ushered in – not helped by Covid, Putin, etc. People generally vote according to their pockets.  I don’t get Labour’s current position on Europe either, but let’s see how that evolves, and even the Cons may also evolve, or even pivot, but time is already running out for them.

    Several roads now lead to the horrors of a further lurch to the right in this country.  Let’s hope Labour get the GE landslide the polls are predicting – but we’re still at least a year out from the real campaigning beginning. 

    A cycling angle? With the Reform Party and its ilk, Facebook Steve and Nextdoor Dave attain real political influence. It’s not spelt out in the manifesto, but you can see where this is probably heading and what it is likely to mean for cycling.  You can bet that this lot are very much “on the side of hard working drivers” etc. 

    As you all know, Dave’s going to “sort the traffic” and no doubt show them lazy planners how it’s done: Steve thinks the Council are corrupt, the police blinkered and is, if he can fit it in to his busy schedule he’s going to “teach them Lycra’s a thing or two.” It won’t concern him that his Mondeo is 3 months out of MoT or that Mrs Steve sometimes drives the kids in it uninsured. 

    As vulnerable road users, vulnerable people, we rely a great deal on the rule of law for protection. The rule of law means that we understand what the laws are, they are in general fair, and how they are applied and to whom is even-handed and consistent. 

    The fascist position is broadly the opposite – it’s all off-the-cuff to support today’s particular agenda – that’s why the Iain Duncan-Smith “happy to see ULEZ infra vandalised” comment is, as an example, so very worrying.  In the Conservatives, here is a party happy to send signals to enable the mob to attack RNLI stations, beat up immigrants, shout at teachers, doctors etc. 

    This right-wing stuff works by allowing/enabling significant privileged groups to to think of themselves as the downtrodden underdog and here is a way to fight back.  The pro Brexit campaign played on people’s ignorance, fears and prejudices exactly as this does. 

    It’s all about freedom, innit, less regulation, less tax burden, and damn the climate.  There’s more polar bears now, so it’s fine.  Let’s have open-cast coal mining, lithium mining and fracking. The section on climate change stumbles around like a Friday night drunk, trying to explain he wasn’t being racist to the barman – a denier position emerges, unsurprisingly.

    In places, the mask really slips: “We must keep divisive woke ideologies such as Critical Race Theory (CRT) and gender ideology out of the classroom.” – to be honest, I don’t even know what those two are.

    The standard enemies are put up – the civil service, the BBC.  Amid all the thrust and parry, there’s nothing  about making a better, more inclusive and cohesive world to live in; arts, sports and culture don’t feature in this barstool view of the world: a dullard’s grim vision.

    Don’t be a member of the wrong sort of minority would be my advice, should any of this come to pass. 
     

    https://www.reformparty.uk/reformisessential

Viewing 15 replies - 676 through 690 (of 891 total)
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  • #1016781
    0
    chrisonabike

    [Reform – presumably Farage
    [Reform – presumably Farage will reprise his EU parliament performance, merely showing up to decry the existence of Westminster and alledge that other MPs have never has a real job. Before putting in expenses claims and drawing a pension.

    David9694 wrote:
    Now can we get active travel and Europe back on the agenda please? 


    Well you know the answer to the 2nd is “no”, and currently it looks like even moving to Scotland won’t change that anytime soon.

    I’d love to believe the first would be the case, I hope that the high water mark for another generation wasn’t a couple of years back with Active Travel England being set up (before being defunded, in favour of “supporting drivers”)

    Luckily things can progress locally despite Westminster indifference.

    #1016779
    0
    Hirsute

    No Tory seats in zones 1 to 3
    No Tory seats in zones 1 to 3.
    Watch out for your wallet * and wear a stab vest.

    * wallets may be returned if you dropped them on the seat.

    #1016775
    0
    David9694

    C13 seats for Reform, says

    C13 seats for Reform, says the Exit poll. 

    #1016773
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    hawkinspeter

    Hirsute wrote:

    Hirsute wrote:
    I agree. Not sure who is left wing in the UK.
    I ended up voting labour after checking the tactical vote sites. I do wonder how many voted the Tories out rather than voting labour in.

    The Tories have done more for Labour than Labour has.

    #1016771
    0
    Hirsute

    I agree. Not sure who is left
    I agree. Not sure who is left wing in the UK.
    I ended up voting labour after checking the tactical vote sites. I do wonder how many voted the Tories out rather than voting labour in.

    #1016769
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    Rendel Harris

    I agree and they’re not the

    I agree and they’re not the party I joined as a kid and all the worse for that, but just for tonight I’m going to celebrate the end of a long Tory nightmare.

    #1016767
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    brooksby

    Labour are left of the Tories

    Labour are left of the Tories and Reform, but I don’t think that they are particularly ‘left wing’ any more…

    #1016765
    0
    Rendel Harris

    Well whaddya know, turns out

    Well whaddya know, turns out Left_is_for_winners!laugh

    #1016763
    0
    brooksby

    Is it to go with their black

    Is it to go with their black shirts? 😉

    #1016761
    0
    chrisonabike

    … because they ate all the

    … because they ate all the crayons already?

    #1016759
    0
    Hirsute

    Remember folks
     

    Remember folks

     

    https://cdn.road.cc/wp-content/uploads/roadcc/blackpen.png

    #1016757
    0
    Rich_cb

    Corbyn was not an antisemite
    Corbyn was not an antisemite of course.

    He just happened to do lots of things in exactly the same way an antisemite would have.

    He also, coincidentally I’m sure, oversaw a terrifying increase in antisemitism within the Labour party whilst he was leader.

    Which is also exactly what we would have expected to happen if he was, himself, an antisemite.

    Which he obviously isn’t.

    #1016755
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    chrisonabike

    Having been informed about
    Having been informed about the marketing efforts of some candidates ( by eg. the BBC), I think we have no need of the second hypothesis…

    #1016753
    0
    mdavidford
    brooksby wrote:
    It seems an appropriate place to log this – The Sun has thrown its weight behind Labour  https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/28935096/its-time-for-a-change/

    Clearly Labour really isn’t particularly left wing any more… 

    Not so much thrown their weight behind them as finally conceded that there’s no time left for anything to derail them – they just want to be seen backing the winner. What the poitics are is almost irrelevant.

    #1016751
    0
    Crazyhorse

    Corbyn was never personally

    Corbyn was never personally accused of, or found guilty of, antisemitism. If he had been, he would surely have been expelled from the Labour Party a long time ago. He did not break any party rules which is why it was not possible to expel him from the party until v recently (when he declared he would stand against the Labour candidate for Islington). He did say that the EHRC report overstated the problem of antisemitism in the Labour Party. As the EHRC acknowledged, it is not antisemitic to question the extent of antisemitism in the Labour Party.

    Get your facts right first. 

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