It is
sometimes said that democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have
for lunch.
Maybe there
is some truth in that because there are many people who have been had for lunch
in the 14 years, 2 months and 8 days since the Tories have been in power.
There are now 26 days to the general election. In a recent TV debate, Rishi
Sunak (who, I believe to be a nice man in a nasty party (and also, desperately
out of touch with people’s day-to-day lives)) said: “I would
ask everyone to judge me by my actions.”
I don’t want to go into the specifics of the actions (and
inactions) of the Government these past 14 years, but, safe to say, it has been
the poor and vulnerable who have suffered the most. My brother constantly
talked to me about the trouble he had with the Government in their treatment of
him as a disabled person (he had rheumatoid arthritis from childhood). I cannot
forget him telling me about how he had walked past a Conservative Club and a
group of its members laughed across the street at him because of the way he
walked. Multiply that small scene to many, many applications for help from a
Government which has simply treated those with disabilities as ‘lunch’.
The existing problems have not gone anywhere. We simply have
new ones too. If you struggle with mental health problems, if you are disabled,
or if you need help from the Government in any way, when you apply for it, you
will be treated with little dignity. And there is such a level of suspicion
that even if you manage to jump through their hoops and get any kind of help,
it is a minor miracle. It has been the case, these last 14 years that most of
the genuine help has come through charities – they have been the ones who have kept
the country from disintegrating. Parkinsons UK, The Brain Tumour Charity – you
name your charity – these are the ones who continue to help those in need. Not this
Government.
And in a country where there is so much homelessness and a
change from a few thousand people using foodbanks to a few million now, you
might be excused for thinking that the ‘Big Society’ idea is more up and
running than ever.
‘Judge us by our actions.’
Seems reasonable. I’m old enough to remember the 1997 general election and how
overjoyed I was to see Labour get in back then. I had even joined the party.
But it wasn’t that long before I became disillusioned by Blair and the UK
getting involved in the war in Iraq. I left the party and have never joined
another since. While we wait for the Labour manifesto this time round, it seems
to me, to be a case of voting for the least-worst option.
‘It doesn’t matter who you vote for, the Government
always gets in.’
And maybe that’s why the system needs changing. Maybe even
more radically than having proportional representation (although that would be
a start)?
I know some friendly Conservatives – but the Tory Government
have long abandoned any pretence of conserving anything but their own power.
Now, they're appealing to our basest instincts with promises of tax cuts and
security, all the while blaming minorities like Muslims and immigrants for
their own failures. And I think Reform are also largely appealing to our
prejudices.
My hope is that if and when Labour get in, they don’t behave like wolves again
too.
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