Thursday, 26 September 2019

Battling Blustering Boris

Well, he's done it again. Boris has diverted us from the true issues of the Brexit debate, and he's got us all talking about the bearpit antics in the House of Commons yesterday. The news broadcasts, the talk shows this morning were absolutely buzzing with angry pundits and phone-in callers. Boris, seen above in one more of his humorous escapades, has been lambasted for accusing Paula Sheriff MP and others of "humbug". Jeremy Corbyn has described Boris's conduct "disgraceful" (which it was - but...) and he faces censure from many MPs, including some Conservatives, over his claim that the best way to honour the memory of Jo Cox, MP, is by facilitating Brexit. As has been pointed out, the late Jo Cox was a passionate Remainer, but Johnson must have been aware of that.
I admit that what we saw yesterday was less than edifying. Quite what commentators from abroad made of it is not something I care to think about. Unfortunately, these events merely reflect what is happening in society as a whole. The fact is that UK society is polarised over the Brexit issue  with both sides giving way to irrationality. Instead of discussing, we shout. Instead of seeking resolution or compromise, we resort to abuse.
As we know, cooler heads from all sides are calling for restrained behaviour and the moderation of political language in the House of Commons in order to avoid what we saw yesterday. In the case of MPs, they should behave in a calmer fashion for the benefit of their own health. Barry Sheerman MP is a case in point. During his (albeit justified) outburst against the Attorney General,he seemed to be on the verge of having a heart attack.
Having said that, I understand why Mr Sheerman lost his temper; the accusations of Geoffrey Cox, that the whole of the opposition was steeped in immorality, were simply outrageous. He said, according to The Independent:
"Mr Cox warned MPs they have "no moral right" to sit on the green benches of the House of Commons".
When it comes to immoral behaviour, Cox must know that his party leader is hardly a paragon of virtue, either. Labour MPs reacted with fury to this statement of Mr Cox, which I suspect is exactly what he wanted. Perhaps that's why he is smiling in the photo below?

One very serious matter that was highlighted yesterday was the threats of violence made on a regular basis to MPs of all parties. Paula Sheriff, MP, spoke emotionally about this issue, as did Jess Phillips, MP. Ms Phillips' office has since been attacked and she has received death threats. Boris has refused to attend parliament today in order to apologise for his comment about the late Jo Cox. Jeremy Corbyn has correctly said, according to the Daily Mirror:
"It is extremely disappointing that the Prime Minister has not respected this House by attending today. The Prime Minister’s language and demeanour yesterday was frankly nothing short of disgraceful...To dismiss concerns from MPs about the death threats they receive, and to dismiss concerns that the language used by the PM is being repeated in those death threats is reprehensible".
I have no quarrel with this, but I think we should examine Boris' words yesterday as part of a strategy. Significantly, the extreme right in Britain have applauded Johnson's words of yesterday. Is he trying to outdo the likes of Britain First and the Brexit Party by his use of terms such as humbug, treachery, etc? I think we should ponder this coldly and analytically.


However emotional we may feel about Boris and his statements, I think we should look back to the parliamentary performance of another Tory prime minister: Margaret Thatcher. The leader of the opposition Labour Party in Parliament at that time was Neil Kinnock. He was regularly worsted in debate by Mrs T. because she found it easy to get him to become irate and lose his self-control. The TV programme, "Weekend World", sent Stephen Fry, a then up-and-coming comedian, to analyse Kinnock's performance. Fry identified Kinnock's mistake as losing his temper and reacting over-emotionally to Mrs T's pronouncements. Instead, Fry advocated that Kinnock stay calm and ridicule Thatcher's statements and speeches - to become proactive, rather than reactive. Both Fry and Kinnock denied any collusion, but Kinnock's debating style in the House changed in just such a way almost immediately. Not that it won Kinnock a general election.
Perhaps all opposition parties in Parliament could learn from this. Instead of getting worked up at Johnson's (probably deliberate) provocative language, they could try satire and wit. After all, there is plenty to ridicule Boris about. And it would be better for the health of MPs of all parties to stay cool, calm and collected in debate. 


Sunday, 22 September 2019

The Brexit Party, Iran and The Kremlin

Last week, the European Parliament passed a resolution calling on Iran to release all EU/Iranian dual nationals being held in Iran on a variety of trumped-up charges. One of these unjustly imprisoned detainees is Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, about whom I have written several times. There are many others from a number of different nations, all of whom have families back in their countries of residence, wondering if they will ever see their falsely accused loved ones again.
Now, 608 MEPs voted for the resolution, 7 voted against and 46 abstained. Of the abstentions, 29 were MEPs from our very own Brexit Party here in the UK. The party spokesman, Gawain Towler, seen above, was quoted in The Independent:
"It would be incompatible with what we believe, to assume that the EU is the right place or the most effective tool to put pressure on the Iranian government...we could not say...the EU is the right forum for that, so we abstained".
No Brexit MEP offered any better suggestions as to what might be done to help the detainees, nor did they offer any sympathy to them and their families. Understandably, they drew angry criticism from a number of people in the UK. Shappi Khorsandi, the Anglo-Iranian comedian and writer said, again in The Independent:
"It’s a state of mind my instincts usually lead me to but it has been challenged somewhat today by the Brexit Party, who are almost admirable in their steadfast refusal to behave in any way which might display the British sense of decency and fair play we are famous for."
No surprise there for me and many others, but we'll come to that. Of dual nationality herself, she goes on to say:
"It’s chilling, frankly, to know for sure that if I went snowboarding in Iran (as many of my British friends do, there’s good snow in Iran) and was arrested and thrown into prison without committing a crime, the Brexit Party, who claim to stand for “British People” would not consider me British enough to fight for."
No surprise there, either, but others joined in the condemnation of the Brexit menagerie, saying more or less the same thing. David Lammy, MP, said:
 “You (Brexit MEPs) call yourself patriots but you will not stand up for Brits imprisoned abroad. Shame on you."
I fully endorse these criticisms, but I think there is something that is being missed. In my view, the Brexit MEPs were only doing what they have done all along. They are pandering to the section of the electorate that they depend upon most heavily: racists. We like to pretend these people don't exist, but the rise in hate crime since the EU referendum proves that they certainly do. As "good" populists, the Brexit MEPs must be seen as catering for this element in the electorate, and their squalid, weaselling excuse for abstaining, while it may disgust most of us, will certainly have pleased those who think that British people should come first before immigrants who have funny names, have different coloured skins and can speak other languages.
That, actually, doesn't take much working out. Any of us who are unfortunate enough to encounter such people will know what their "views" are.
However, I think that there might be another, hidden, underlying reason for the abstention of the Brexit Little Englanders, and that is financial. The ex-prime minister, Gordon Brown, back in May of this year, raised the question of the source of funds for the Brexit Party. Quoted in the Guardian, Brown stated:
“Arron Banks, the lead funder of Leave.EU and a friend of Nigel Farage, has been under investigation. He has big contacts with Russia,” Brown said. “We don’t know where his money comes from and yet we found out last week he has given £450,000 in payments to support Nigel Farage while Nigel Farage was in a public office in the European parliament who should have been declaring the payments to avoid any conflict of interest.”
If Brown is correct, then it is fair to say that the Brexit MEPs would not want to upset their alleged Russian paymasters. It has been pointed out by a number of commentators that Russia has a keen interest in supporting Brexit. As Nick Cohen says:
"We know that Russia has interfered in elections in North America and Europe. Russia had a direct interest in promoting Brexit because it would destabilise a strategic rival. (Anyone who doubts me need only look at how Brexit has brought Whitehall close to collapse.)"
But it doesn't stop there. As we know, Russia has been very active militarily in support of the Assad regime in Syria. And who has been fighting alongside them?...Iran. Would President Putin be happy if the Brexit Party were criticising his foremost Middle Eastern ally?
Perhaps, then, we can discern another, very different reason for the Brexit Party abstention. Rather than being the British patriots they claim to be, they could well be nothing more than a shower of useful idiots for the Kremlin. 

Monday, 9 September 2019

Conspiracy, Elvis and George Soros


Kirsty MacColl was wrong - Elvis is working in a chip shop, and the photo above proves it. He owns and works in the pictured chippy which is located on Brighton seafront. He is in very good health, and stays looking young by taking long, bracing walks along the seafront and bathing his face in calves' milk. His only worry is that he might be discovered and have to pay back taxes to the US government. His anonymity is guarded by a sinister alliance of the Freemasons, the Women's Institute and George Soros, the multi-billionaire.
Nonsense? Of course it is - but no more ludicrous than the conspiracy theories that have made George Soros a hate figure for the far right in the USA, Turkey, Italy, Hungary and, in nascent form, here in the UK. A BBC TV documentary last night highlighted the horrifying international hate campaign against him by a menagerie of conspiracy nuts, right-wing Republicans, Donald Trump, Nigel Farage and a bunch of fascists. The documentary, "Conspiracy Files: the Billionaire Global Mastermind", highlighted the conspiracy theories that the menagerie have cooked up against Soros.
The hate campaign against him in the US began in 2003 because of his opposition to the Iraq war. It rose to the present crescendo when Donald Trump became president. Trump himself has referred disparagingly about Soros. Soros has been blamed for the violence in Charlotteville, Virginia in 2017. The Fash claim that Soros financed the whole thing to discredit Trump. He is also accused of financing the Honduras "caravan" of would-be migrants to the US, and, as the BBC programme says, he is blamed for having been a Nazi collaborator in Hungary during WW2, when Hungary's Jews were being rounded up for dispatch to Auschwitz. As Soros is himself Jewish and was 14 at the time, that is somewhat hard to believe. Worst of all was the attack on a synagogue in Pittsburgh, 27 October, 2018, when 11 Jewish people were killed. The killer, Robert Bowers, accused Soros of heading a conspiracy to eliminate the white race in order to achieve Jewish domination of a "mongrelised" (multi-cultural) United States. Soros himself, along with some liberal US politicians, has received a (fortunately dud) bomb in the post. Until the bomber, a white supremacist and Trump supporter, was caught, the anti-Soros coalition accused Soros of orchestrating a fake bomb campaign, in order to win public sympathy. The evidence for this claim, predictably, was shown to be either fake or non-existent.

The hate campaign has spread abroad. In Turkey, President Erdogan has accused Soros of seeking to "shatter" Turkey; the Italian politician, Matteo Salvini, has accused Soros of seeking to flood Italy with illegal migrants. Soros is a philanthropist and has spent millions on welfare and educational projects in his home country of Hungary. but that has not stopped the Hungarian prime minister, Viktor Oban, from introducing "Anti-Soros" laws.

Now, the lies about George Soros are absurd and easily refuted. Channel Four, Snopes and Fact Check, as well as last night's BBC documentary and all responsible journalists, repeatedly expose the anti-Soros conspiracy accusations as outrageous and blatantly untrue. The problem, however, is that the people who believe in these conspiracy theories are not rational people. Racists and fascists start with their racism and then look for reasons to justify it. Even when one of their beliefs is proven to be wrong, they carry on believing it anyway. Having said this, we cannot, however much we debunk them, dismiss these people as harmless nutcases. As Time Magazine says:

" In recent years, fringe ideas prompted a gunman to storm a Washington, D.C. pizzeria and may have motivated another to fatally shoot 11 worshippers inside a Pittsburgh synagogue. They are also largely to blame for a worldwide surge in measles cases that has sickened more people in the U.S. in the first half of 2019 than in any full year since 1994."

We must continue to combat these people and their bizarre beliefs.
 The accusation of conspiracy against George Soros and, by implication, against all Jews, is nothing new. The myth of an international Jewish conspiracy has a long and murderous history. At the turn of the 20th century, 1903 to be exact, a truly evil anti-Semitic book was published in Russia. It is thought to have helped inspire a wave of pogroms against Russia's Jews and is beloved of fascists and other Jew-haters even  today: "The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion". The book was a forgery, concocted by the Tsarist secret police in Russia for use against Jews and all Russian revolutionaries. Foreshadowing George Soros's vilification, the book claimed to be proof of a Jewish conspiracy to take over the world. Although it was exposed numerous times as fraudulent, the Nazis made extensive use of it in their campaign against Europe's Jews. Some of the charges made today against George Soros might almost have been lifted from the pages of "The Protocols". To my disgust, I have learned that this hate-filled tome is for sale on Amazon.
The mention of disgust leads me to the British dimension to the Anti-Soros hate campaign: the statements of our old friend, Nigel Farage. Nigel has dismissed accusations of anti-Semitism, but what are we to make of statements like these? As The Guardian says, Farage:

"Said Soros "wants to break down the fundamental values of our society, and, in the case of Europe, he doesn't want Europe to be based on Christianity".

Claimed the EU was financed and influenced "by the Goldman Sachs and a particular Hungarian called Mr Soros".


Alleged the work of Soros's foundation could amount to "the biggest level of political collusion in history"



These statements of Nigel Farage closely resemble all the other allegations made by the extreme Right. Anyone thinking of voting for the Brexit Party should bear this in mind.


As the politics of the Brexit Party grow uglier, so does Nigel Farage.

Tuesday, 3 September 2019

Boris de Pfeffel Johnson – master of misdirection

The democracy demo in Liverpool on 2 September 2019
The Trump effect has finally poisoned British politics. We too now have a leader who:
  • Has no real convictions and changes his mind to suit what is to his advantage at any given moment.
  • Has a record of incompetence, such as when as Foreign Secretary his words ensured Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe's prison sentence in Iran was increased.
  • Squanders public money on pet schemes that get nowhere.
  • Is openly jingoistic, misogynistic and racist.
  • Is a womaniser. Womanisers claim to love women, but womanising is exploitation, i.e. abuse.
Johnson beat Hunt by 92,153 votes to 46,656. As the total number of registered UK voters in December 2018 was 45,775,800 (source: ONS), this means Johnson will become PM with the support of 0.2% of the electorate. To put it another way, 99.8% of the electorate did not vote for him, and 99.65% had no vote at all.

Here is a telling comparison:

When I was a union rep in the civil service, I represented a member who was facing dismissal having been accused of deliberately misspending public money; the amount involved was a couple of hundred pounds. I managed to save his job only at the final level of appeal when it was eventually accepted that it was a genuine error. The first two decision makers had rejected that argument and had recommended dismissal.

Johnson, on the other hand, squandered £53 million of public money for a bridge that was never even begun. He also misspent more than £300,000 on illegal water cannons which were never used and were eventually scrapped at a huge loss. Despite all of that, he was rewarded with the keys to Number 10. I cannot understand why he has not faced prosecution for massive misuse of public funds. If not prosecuted, then at least barred from holding public office. My member would have lost his job for misspending a tiny percentage of the fortune that Johnson “spaffed against a wall”, to use his own unsavoury phrase.

As prime minister, he is misusing the power to prorogue Parliament, normally just a suspension during which the government prepares its programme for the next Parliamentary session, to prevent MPs holding him to account for his actions over leaving the EU. This is contrary to the Bill of Rights 1689, the foundation stone of our modern constitutional system, which clearly asserts the sovereignty of Parliament over monarch and government. However you voted on leaving the EU, you should be worried by this cavalier approach to our constitution. Furthermore, he has threatened any Tory MPs who vote to block a no-deal exit from the EU with, in effect, the sack.

These two actions demonstrate Johnson's despotic tendencies. He is not a natural democrat, and is prepared to resort to extreme measures to achieve his own aims. Those who voted Leave so that we can “take back control” could not have foreseen that the control would be handed, not to our elected Parliament as we were told, but to just one man, unelected and extremely unscupulous. Proof of the latter is his dismissal of genuine concerns in Ireland that a no-deal exit from the EU could jeopardise the peace process there.

His 'election' was little more than a coup d'état and his reckless misspending of public money has been shrugged off. He has a privileged immunity that ensures his incompetence and arrogant profligacy avoids any kind of scrutiny or investigation. His succession has denied the people any say in who leads the country, which is especially galling because he denounced Brown for succeeding Blair as PM without calling an election.

Stage magicians use a technique called misdirection in which the performers draw the attention of the audience to one thing to distract it from another. Johnson's buffoonery has amused and even endeared him to many people who have failed to see that behind the hesitant waffle, outrageous statements and clownish antics there is a thoroughly cold-hearted, egotistical and unprincipled right-winger who stands only for his own and his cronies' advancement in terms of both status and wealth. Many of us thought we had reached a political nadir with Theresa May, but in a reverse of the New Labour anthem, things can only get worse.

This article follows on from the post immediately before it by Geoff Parry, who kindly asked me to post this on his blog.

Sunday, 1 September 2019

Resisting the Coup: Besieging Boris the Bonapartist

I don't attend many demonstrations nowadays, but I felt compelled to attend the London protest yesterday against the proroguing of Parliament. There were rallies all over Britain which, as far as I can tell, were very well attended, attracting both Leave and Remain voters and people such as Bridie Watson of Exeter, about whom the BBC says:
 "NHS pharmacist Bridie Walton, 55, said she had never been to a demonstration before, but joined the protest in Exeter to oppose Mr Johnson's plan".
Boris probably wasn't in 10 Downing Street, but it was exhilarating to join the crowds that peacefully besieged the entrance to his new street of residence. 
Mark Easton of the BBC commented, somewhat disparagingly:
 "It's a far cry from the numbers that we saw marching through Westminster earlier this year. I think we'd probably measure this one in the thousands [in central London]".
Mr Easton should have borne in mind, firstly, that previous rallies have been national mobilisations for a march in one spot: London. The regional rallies drew in the numbers that would otherwise have gathered in Whitehall. Secondly, the rallies were called at short notice, and made full mobilisation in all regions difficult.
I have to admit that the organisation of the event was the best that could be done at short notice, but there were inevitable difficulties. I was in the crowd for well over an hour, but I could not hear (or even see) any of the reported speakers. Nor did I see any of the counter-demonstrators who reportedly turned up, although I did see a minor spat between two men near Westminster Tube Station. Democracy in action...
Among my fellow demonstrators were some genuine DEMONstrators: a group of Satanists in black cloaks. They were displaying a sign which said: "Satan hates dictators", which comes as a surprise. If that's true, Boris had better beware strange sounds in the night - unless it's his girl friend leaving.
One thing that disturbed me a little was the presence of families with small children in buggies among the crowd. I fully support the right of families to take their offspring on marches or orderly pickets, but the crowd was thickening as the afternoon wore on and any violence at the front, or pushing from the back, could have led to the children being placed at risk.
In the provinces, one of the best-attended rallies was held in Liverpool. Like Bridie Walton (a good Liverpool name!) in Exeter, it attracted people who have rarely, or perhaps never, attended a political demonstration. One such is my friend, Phil Scott, who took the above photograph. Phil, who holds no partisan pollical views, speaks, I am sure, for many "non-aligned" people who showed up yesterday when he says: 
"I think the Labour party hi-jacked the meeting too much for their own ends, rather than focusing on uniting the anti-Brexit broader church."
To me, and others with political experience, that's no surprise. Realistically speaking,the Labour Party is the largest opposition party, and took the lead in organising yesterday's protests. My best advice to Phil and others who feel like he does is to write to the Labour leadership at local and national level, pointing out the need for a united front against Brexit and/or no deal. To be fair, Jeremy Corbyn has attempted unity on the "no deal" issue.
But what of the great bugbear himself? Well, Boris did not appear yesterday, unsurprisingly. In fact he has become uncharacteristically shy of late. How a man with so much past dishonourable conduct ever became our prime minister is mind boggling, Anyone who wishes to go over his past misdeeds and indiscretions can click on this link and this one.
Instead, I'd like to examine the charge against Boris that was made so vociferously yesterday: that he is a dictator. Well, he has prorogued Parliament, but we should be careful about characterising him as a 21st century version of Hitler, Stalin or Mussolini. He hasn't - so far - made any moves towards eliminating political opponents. 
I can, though, see some vague resemblance to the great dictator of the early 19th century, Napoleon Bonaparte. Simple-minded souls will point out the obvious differences, but there are similarities. Both exhibit the Nietzschean "will to power"; they both have overweening egos; they both circumvent established practice when it suits them. Napoleon crowned himself Emperor of France, while Johnson has flouted so many laws that do not suit him (including moral laws) that Napoleon might almost have regarded him as an acolyte. Perhaps, instead of dignifying Johnson with the title of dictator, we should simply dismiss him as a would-be Bonapartist.
The major difference, of course, is that Napoleon's career ended at Waterloo, 1815. Johnson, when he comes unstuck, will simply leave 10 Downing Street and catch the 18.15 train from Waterloo Station. And I doubt that Abba will write a song about his demise...