If Law and Policy Blog sounds like a boring read think again. Alan Green, David 
Alan Green is one of the most astute commentators on politics that is UK 
centered but with implications that are important for us all. 
https://davidallengreen.com/2019/12/the-l-word-the-f-word-and-contemporary-uk-politics/

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In a few days there will be a general election in the United Kingdom.

This post is not about the possible election result - that is still uncertain 
and it may even come down to voting intentions which are as yet not settled.

This post is instead about two words that should have had more impact on the 
campaign, and current politics generally, but have not.

One word begins with L, the other with F.

*

The L word

The first word is "lie".

Some commentators in the United Kingdom aver that more should be done to 
confront politicians with their lies.

Peter Oborne, a journalist of immense integrity, has even sought to document 
and expose each lie of the current prime minister (the estimable website is 
here).

This is essential work: nothing in this post should be taken to mean that 
recording each lie is not important.

But it is not enough.

This is because many politicians now do not care about being called a liar, or 
even be shown to be one.

Such a reaction is a cost of political business for them - and some even relish 
that they "trigger" such a response as some perverse form of valediction.

The ultimate problem is not that many politicians lie.

The ultimate problem is far more worrying and far more difficult to resolve.

The ultimate problem is that many voters want to be lied to.

These voters may pretend otherwise, claiming that they want "honest 
politicians".

In reality, such voters just want politicians to say what the voters want to 
hear.

There is therefore an incentive for politicians to lie.

Until and unless many voters can be made to care about being lied to, every 
fine and worthy effort in exposing the lies is (at least in the short-term) 
futile - a public good but not enough to effect immediate change.

There are many political lies: small lies, forgettable lies, lies that take 
longer to expose than any mortal attention span.

But the biggest lie in the current general election - a lie that may determine 
the outcome - is "Get Brexit Done".

Brexit cannot be "done" without years of intense effort and attention.

Entire international relationships have to be rebuilt from scratch; entire 
areas of law and policy have to be reconstructed; entire social and economic 
patterns of behaviour have to be re-worked.

And all this in addition to the making of actual decisions about what we want 
those relationships, laws, policies, and social and economic patterns of 
behaviour to be.

And all that in turn against the intractable problem of fitting in a Brexit 
policy within the framework of the relationship between the United Kingdom and 
Ireland.

Brexit cannot be "got done" by mere exhortation.

It is a lie but a lie many want to believe and cannot be dissuaded from 
believing by mere arguments, logic or evidence.

And by the time many voters will come to care that they were lied to, Brexit 
will be too long gone for any voter choice to make much difference.

*

The F word

The second word - the F word - I will not type.

It is a word which has lost its traction when it needed to to still have 
traction.

The word describes the 1920s and 1930s manifestation of populist nationalist 
authoritarianism, a political phenomenon that despite the heady optimism of 
democratic campaigners has never been too far away.

Complacently, some believed that the thing had gone away with the end of the 
second world war, or with the transitions to democracy of Spain and Portugal.

The thing, however, is always there.

What happened in the 1920s and 1930s in Germany and Italy and elsewhere was 
always just one set of manifestations of the thing.

Populist nationalist authoritarianism has more purchase on voters than many 
conservatives, liberals and socialists realise.

It is the politics of easy answers.

In the United Kingdom there are those in favour of Brexit who routinely trash 
the (independent) courts, the (independent) civil service and diplomatic 
service, the universities, the broadcasters, even the supremacy of parliament.

This populist disdain for independent institutions is unhealthy.

The threat of the "will of the people" is used as intimidation.

Coupled with nationalistic rhetoric (on immigration and Brexit generally) and 
authoritarian hostility to legal checks on government (contempt for human 
rights), you have all the ingredients of the thing described by the F word.

But if you call this thing by its name, it now has little or no effect.

People will yawn and shrug and pay no real attention.

And because what we have before us is not visually the same as the 1920s and 
1930s manifestation of the thing - no uniforms, no goosesteps, and so on - many 
of those hearing the F word will regard what is now happening as not being an 
example of the F word at all.

Of course, using the F word is not as important as stopping the thing it 
describes from taking hold.

 
*Calling politicians - and pundits - liars, and describing the vile populist 
nationalist authoritarianism that they promote as the F word, is not going to 
stop them lying or the thing the F word describes.

The words are not enough, and it may be that new words are needed to make old 
warnings.

And unless voters can be made to care about being lied to by politicians, or 
about the implications of the populist nationalist authoritarianism (again) 
being promoted, then there will be little to stop either the politicians or the 
F word thing.

Making voters care about any of this is the challenge for liberal and 
progressive politicians (and pundits) in the United Kingdom and elsewhere.

And the biggest challenge is to make enough voters care in time.



David Alan Green



#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nett...@kein.org
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to