Wednesday 5 June 2024

Nigel Farage's Big Adventure

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"The argument that Nigel Farage is a political dud because he has lost seven parliamentary contests is wrong. He is the most consummate politician since Tony Blair. He commands politics. He taps into what a significant minority of voters think. He predicts, and then moulds, the debate. He was the first to raise the migrant crossings in the Channel. He anticipated the West’s move against China. He campaigned for Brexit for two decades before it happened." 

Freddy Hayward, in The New Statesman this week

"...in the new media and internet age, power stems not from politics or the law. It comes from fame and the ability to draw an audience." Freddy Gray, in The Spectator this week

"They [Ukip, Nigel Farage's former party] make a good fit for Clacton. Somebody has to represent the static caravans and holiday villages, and the people and places that for no fault of their own are not getting where a 21st-century Britain needs to be going.

"...Clacton-on-Sea is a friendly resort trying not to die, inhabited by friendly people trying not to die…
 

"I am not arguing that we should be careless of the needs of struggling people and places such as Clacton. But I am arguing — if I am honest — that we should be careless of their opinions."
Matthew Parris, in The Times, September 6 2014



Nigel Farage on, naturally, GB News, announced that he is now Leader of the Reform Party and standing for the ideal seat (I know it well and have a vote there) Clacton-on-Sea.
He said:

"There is a buzz out there, there is something happening, particularly among young people, that’s very interesting.
"But the thing that really got me were the number of people saying ‘but why are you not standing?’ And they look at you and you give a response and they look at you as if to say ‘you’ve let me down’. And I began to feel guilty about it.”

Suddenly, the British election becomes interesting.
He is right. He had let his public and even his country down. And this is his moment. The Conservative Party was about to be annihilated and where was Farage?

Sunak would have had a chance had he withdrawn from the European Convention on Human Rights and the Geneva Convention on Refugees and started removing refugees to Africa before calling the election. But at least two cabinet members would have resigned over ECHR.

Lord Cameron, always a globalist, said it would look bad abroad.

Anti immigration politics (not anti immigrant politics which is very distasteful) will win throughout Europe, but not quickly enough.

I doubt the populists will succeed in stopping the onrush.

They haven’t in Finland or Italy.

Reform should not stand candidates against Tory MPs who share their views.

The Tory Party should encourage local pacts as the Liberal Party backed Labour candidates in 1906 and 1910.

Think what that led to.

13 comments:

  1. Not convinced by your last point! There were other reasons for the downfall of the Liberal Party — one was that Lloyd George split it down the middle in 1918. Another was that all men got the vote at the same time.

    A bit hard to follow who has written what on this page. You have a vote in Clacton?

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    1. The split between Lloyd George and Squiffy was the main reason for the near death of the Liberal Party, yes. I think I have been given back a vote in Clacton, curiously enough.

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  2. Clacton and Farage deserve each other.

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    Replies
    1. Mr. Gladstone said, 'All the world over I back the masses against the classes' (proving incidentally that he pronounced classes with a Lancashire short 'a') but they are not to your taste, anonymous, or those of many liberals and leftists.

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  3. Mr. Gladstone was a conservative liberal.

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    1. He began as 'the rising hope of the stern, unbending Tories' (Macaulay) and made his maiden speech in defence of his father's treatment of slaves, but he became a Liberal and not a conservative one - the conservative Liberals were the Whigs who left the party when he decided that Ireland deserved Home Rule. He backed the Confederates in the US Civil War (a nation rightly struggling to be free') and was right to do so. The Guardian did too but not the Spectator or the Lancashire mill girls whose livelihood the Northern blockade of the South destroyed.

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  4. We're only making plans for Nigel
    We only want what's best for him
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel just needs that helping hand
    And if young Nigel says he's happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy in his world
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    He has his future in British steel
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel's whole future is as good as sealed, yeah
    And if young Nigel says he's happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy in his world
    Nigel is not outspoken but he likes to speak
    And loves to be spoken to (in his world)
    Nigel is happy in his world (in his world)
    Nigel is happy in his world (in his world)
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    We only want what's best for him
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel just needs this helping hand
    And if young Nigel says he's happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy
    He must be happy in his world
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    We only want what's best for him
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel just needs this helping hand
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    He has his future in a British steel
    Steel, steel, steel, steel, steel, yeah
    We're only making plans for Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel
    Nigel, Nigel, Nigel, Nigel

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  5. No matter whether you have the Romanian citizenship or not, as a long time resident in Romania you have the right to vote in the European elections today, unfortunately for Romanian candidates. Would you give your thoughts on the various parties and your voting intentions? Will you vote?
    As a long time resident in France I have the right to vote here, but for French parties. While not ideal (I would have preferred Europe-wide parties), I think it is still way better than in Romania, choice-wise. What is there to choose from in Romania? PSD, PNL, USR, and AUR, I would say. PSD and PNL have no personality, in my opinion. Just stay in power and share the benefits, that could be their programme. There's no classical liberal euroskeptic party, in the sense of more deregulation, less government, smaller state sector, and tough on law and order. AUR looks ok on paper (on its website) and is a fecal sludge in reality. USR might be attractive in Romania for its anti-corruption stance, but it has a eurofederalist voting pattern in the EU Parliament and belong to the same group as Macron's party and this says it all I think.

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  6. He once said he wouldn't want a Romanian family as his neighbours and I rather feel the same about him!

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  7. I think it was a putative houseful of Romanian male migrant workers, not a family, if I remember correctly.

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  8. In an interview for LBC Radio on Friday, Mr Farage was asked what the difference was between having a group of Romanian men and German children as neighbours.

    "You know what the difference is," Mr Farage replied.

    He added: "I was asked if a group of Romanian men moved in next to you, would you be concerned? And if you lived in London, I think you would be."

    He also said many migrants coming to the UK had been "forced into a life of crime" by "real poverty" in their country.

    In a statement following the interview, external he said: "Any normal and fair-minded person would have a perfect right to be concerned if a group of Romanian people suddenly moved in next door." https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-27459923

    ReplyDelete