Courtesey of 'Sheffield for Europe';
We have promised to run a series of posts analysing what is going on, and why the far right are making such gains.
There has never been such disillusionment with politics in the UK especially in England, and it is not hard to see why. The trend started in the 2010s in a big way and the hugely divisive referendum in 2016 on EU membership accelerated the process.
We had years of chaos, ever more unsatisfactory political leaders in the shape especially of Boris Johnson, possibly the most dishonest politician to ever to become British Prime Minister, and Liz Truss who crashed the economy in days. People thought they voted for change last year, but of that there is as yet precious little.
We have the highest levels of tax in 70 years, yet public services are falling apart, NHS waiting lists at record levels, record levels of sewage in our rivers, and roads unfixed.
Those of us who voted to remain in the EU in 2016 are disillusioned and justifiably angry at the appalling betrayal we suffered following that vote, with the hardest of Brexits forced on us despite only the narrowest of victories for leave.
Those who voted leave the EU thought jobs would be secured and industry would move back. Yet this week the Grangemouth oil refinery closed, Port Talbot steel works has closed too, and Scunthorpe hangs in by the skin of its teeth. Farmers have been betrayed, subsidies cut and markets lost. Honda has gone and Vauxhall closed their Luton factory Many leave voters were let to believe that immigration levels would fall. Instead they increased massively. There were reasons, but those reasons have never been explained. So the 'winners' who voted to leave are for the most part angry too, and feel betrayed.
The result, at the moment, is growing apathy which will turn to anger eventually. Apathy that meant that while Andrea Jenkyns enjoyed a comfortable victory in the brand new mayoral position in Greater Lincolnshire, winning 42% of the vote, she did so on a voter turn out of just 29.9 percent.
So Andrea Jenkyns won her position with 12.18 percent of the actual vote - showing that most have so little faith in the entire system that they did not even bother to go to the polls at all. That is the mark of a broken political system, and unless action is taken to arrest the decline, Brexit will merely be the first step on the road that could lead to the end of democracy itself, such is the level of disillusionment, the lack of faith in politicians and the believe that they are not interested in serving the electorate at all, but only themselves. The general feeling is that the country is failing (which outside of the EU is pretty much what we expected to happen).
Here, from Josh Halliday and Ben Quinn writing in the Guardian, and a key takeaway from a voter who summed up the feelings of many:
"Underlying Reform UK’s dismantling of the historic two-party system in Westminster is a much more troubling trend: the growing numbers of voters detaching completely from politics. “I don’t see any point in any of them. They really are all horrible. Once they’ve been voted in, they forget about us,” said Tommy Young, 59, outside Murdishaw’s Co-op."
#brexitdamage #democracy