Theresa May won’t get a landslide, Beyond that, the British election hard to predict

By Anne Applebaum, in the Washington Pose, June 2 , 2017

In the pic: Supporters hold posters depicting British Prime Minister Theresa May near the BBC Broadcasting House in London as the band Captain SKA performs the song 'Liar, Liar' during a protest to complain about BBC Radio 1's refusal to play it. (Daniel Leal-Olivas/Agence France-Presse via Getty Images).

James kottoor(Note: We speak of ‘weather cock’ – one who changes direction and position according to the flow or blow of the wind. That is how Theresa May has appeared to us from the very start, that is, from the time of exit  from EU debate appeared on the horizon. May was then at the forefront for staying put in EU.  So the caption: ‘Liar, liar, you can’t trust her’ simply struck a chord, although we won’t paste that label on her face, for the sheer respect we have for the office of a PM.

But some one has to call a spade a spade, we thought. Cheers to the writer: Anne. Now the question before most minds is: Labour victory or hung parliament? Some wish the first choice come true, like the victory of a Marcon to give a crushing blow to the ‘populist far right tsunami’ blowing across the globe. The last was May’s refusal to appear on ‘Brexit election’ TV debate, which tarnished her image.

A ‘coalition of chaos’ was first launched by President Trump. Its speeding march  was arrested by a sudden break by Macron victory in France. Frantic efforts are now launched by a perplexed May, to keep her credibility which is  fast slipping out of her hands. The unruly winds and waves buffeting the ship of a near ‘globalized’ world must stop. Let sanity in thinking and vision come back to humanity, even if it is going to take time! james kottoor, editor)

LONDON: We are days away from the British parliamentary elections on Thursday. I’m not going to predict the result, but it’s already clear that the British prime minister will not get the landslide she wanted. The same polls that showed a huge majority for Theresa May two months ago have narrowed. Some foresee, if not an outright Labor victory, then at least a hung Parliament. Even if she wins, her position is tarnished. Support that seemed solid has vanished. Why?

For one, it looks like her watered-down English national populism doesn’t work — or at least can’t compete with the tougher, nastier, harder-core version of populism on the British left. As I wrote when it started, this election has been a contest between parties that are offering extremist versions of what they used to be. May has run a campaign that has sought to put some distance between herself and her “elite” party. “Mayism” was launched with posters calling on voters to support “May’s Team” instead of the Conservative Party; other tactics included frequent repetition of the phrases “strong and stable,” “ordinary people” and — to describe her opponents — “coalition of chaos.”

But she also announced policies and then retreated from them, refused to appear at televised debates, declared this a “Brexit election” and then refused to talk about Brexit. Her cabinet includes several people who played major roles in the Brexit campaign and famously promised gains from leaving the European Union that they knew would never be achieved. “Strong and stable”? The No. 2 pop song in the country, with 1.7 million YouTube views as of Friday, is “Liar Liar,” an anti-May tune that has caught on precisely because her attempt to make the Conservative Party seem less conservative doesn’t convince everyone. The lyrics are extremely blunt (“she’s a liar, liar”) and they echo the language of the Labour Party, whose quasi-Marxist rhetoric describes a wrecked country in need of revolutionary change: “Nurses going hungry, schools in decline. I don’t recognize this broken country of mine.”

Instead of helping May, the nihilistic “we don’t believe in anything, we don’t trust anybody” mood that helped the “leave” campaign win the Brexit vote is now working in the Labour Party’s favor. The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, is an old-fashioned leftist who doesn’t do slick campaigning — and that seems to appeal to people right now. He hasn’t changed his views about anything since the 1970s — he would nationalize industry if he could, he has never been too keen on NATO, nuclear defense or the British army — and somehow that makes him seem sincere. Labour’s slogan, “For the many, not the few,” sounds like a Labour Party slogan, not something chosen by a public relations team.

In the end, it may also be that the European referendum last June destabilized the British political scene even more than we thought possible. Suddenly a huge host of questions has been opened up, from the future of Northern Ireland to the future of London’s financial services industry. For nearly a year, nobody in public life has really attempted to answer any of them. May campaigned to stay in Europe, then announced a tough-sounding plan to leave Europe; at no time has she offered any details, or even a sense of what the choices might be. The economic impact of Brexit hasn’t yet registered — Britain hasn’t left the E.U. and won’t do so for nearly two years — but there is plenty of nervous activity, as companies and people argue about whether to stay or leave.

 Sooner or later the British were bound to ask who created all of this uncertainty, and sooner or later the blame was bound to fall on the Conservative Party, whose leaders launched the referendum and who have run the country since it happened. Perhaps that moment has simply arrived earlier than anticipated.

applebaumletters@washpost.com

You may also like...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.