the brilliantly leaping gazelle

Tag: labour

34:63 presents “Mari Wilson.”

As with all things, the devil is in the detail, and there is a lot of detail for Farrago to dwell on, following the overnight constituency, local council and mayoral elections. It is now Friday afternoon and more grim tidings are expected to be heading Plonkers way. But the results are just as troubling for Farrago, albeit in a different way, one replete with potentially longer term damage. 

First of all, a quick shufti at the actual results. The Reform UK candidate, Sarah Poitin, won the Runcorn and Helsby by-election by six votes, overturning a majority that rights, shouldn’t have been vulnerable. However, as stunning – and widely predicted –  as her victory undoubtedly was, she only got 38.7% of the votes cast and only 42.6% of the voters actually bothered to vote. And even that was lower than the turnout less than a year ago. at the general election.It’s not like there hadn’t been any publicity, media interest and speculation about it or anything.

Which means a few things, none of them good for her glittering parliamentary career, which may or may not happen or for Reform UK’s positioning of itself as a viable electoral proposition. Firstly, with a majority that is the very definition of ‘by the skin of their teeth’, and with such a low turnout to boot,  a better result for her would’ve been to have lost by six instead. Because you can bet that the local Labour Party will scrutinise her parliamentary attendance record, forensically examine her expenses claims, flood her constituency surgery with labyrinthine constituent problems, all designed to portray her as bad MP at the next election. They’ll also be all over her social media content – especially in her youthful postings – for any damaging content, and trying to unearth anything in her past that might be used against her. So basically what every political party handed such opportunity would do.

The situation in Greater Lincolnshire, where Dame Angela Jenkins became Reform UK’s first mayor, is if anything, potentially even worse. Yes, she’s a former Conservative MP so she knows how the game is played and yes, as mayor of newly formed super council, essentially overseeing three smaller councils each represented two senior councillors each, – given as how all of whom are Conservative,- this in theory doesn’t pose as much of a problem as if they were Labour.  I didn’t know this, but prior to last night, over 65% of Reform UK’s local councillors were defectors from the Conservatives. But be that as it may, Ange got her gold chain with a vote share of 42.2% – good -, a majority of nearly 40,000 – double good -, on a voter turnout of, er, 29.9%.  

So her election has succeeded in highlighting the flaws in our voting system and nothing else. As the mayor of a new super council, she needs the support of six others to ratify any policies she wants to introduce. They in turn are at the mercy of local officials, in town halls and council departments to make those policies real. And successful implementation of her policies will, even if they succeed in permeating down through the layers in bureaucracy, rely on council staff and contractors, who might be instinctively opposed to Reform UK. They won’t want her mayoralty to become a shining example of good governance should Farrago enter No.10.

And this is why the greater the electoral success that Reform UK has, the greater the threat to Reform UK has of suffering irreperable reputational damage. It can only present themselves as the change Britain needs for so long. At some point, they’ll have to deliver that change, and whilst bemoaning the structural unfairness of the first-past-the-post voting system chimes with people who care about such things, if potholes are left unrepaired, schools face staff shortages, or social care is pared back even further,  nobody will much care.

They won’t care that central government has cut the councils budget, but they will care the their council tax bill goes up or that they have to buy a residents parking permit. They won’t care that the council is barely meeting its statutory obligations but they will care when those statuary obligations are perceived to be applied discriminatorily. They won’t care when council run things that they never use are closed, but they will care when things that they do use close. Then they’ll care, then they’ll care a lot. 

And it won’t just be Farrago regretting getting the thing he always wanted.

34:63 presents ‘The rules of entitlement according to Eddie Izzard.’

It strikes me that there is a really simple way in which trans – or faux – women might easily regain the rights which they believe that the Supreme Court ruling has taken away from them. All they need do is to get a woman to transfer to them all the rights they have as woman over to them and bingo. Problem solved!

Because according to the twisted logic of trans activists, not only if you were a man but said you were a woman, but also got a piece of paper confirming your delusion – a Gender Recognition Certificate – then you were a woman. It reminds me of that Eddie Izzard sketch, the one in which he suggests that Britain only got her empire because of the cunning use of flags. ‘I claim India on behalf of Queen Victoria.’ ‘ You can’t do that, there are 500 million of us, we live here! ‘But do you have a flag?’ That’s all it took. A delusion, a piece of paper and of course, people validating that delusion. Although seeing as how some of those people would be only validating that delusion because they too share it, it’s not really a valid validation, is it?

But where might one find such staunch supporters of trans rights that they’d be willing to sign over their own rights? Well, a good starting point would’ve been at the demonstration yesterday in Parliament Square by those who think that the best way to get rights is to take them from someone else. Pushing at an open door there with that lot. I mean sure, fine, sign away your own personal rights, rights that are inherently unique to you, that’s your affair, but don’t trade away someone else’s rights in pursuit of some batshit crazy notion of equality. 

And if they still couldn’t find enough women willing to do that – improbable, I know given the amount of supportive press coverage they’ve had over the years – they might ring round those journalists who wrote those pieces to see if the support was still strong. And if there was still more waivers needed, they could try university campuses where ‘no platforming’ gender critical feminists – or rationalists – was a thing for so long. The University of Sussex might be a good place to start. Students there mounted a successful campaign to to to force rationalist Kathleen Stock out her job. It did however cost the University nearly £600,000 but that’s only a detail.

If more supporters were needed I’m sure members of the Labour government would be only too happy to oblige. Take Angela Rayner, for example, who said “Transgender women’s rights are women’s rights.”That was back in 2022, but its not like a politician would ever say something in order to be seen as ‘right thinking’. Rachel Reeves, Yvette Cooper, Anneliese Dodds and Lisa Nandy have also expressed some equally pandering nonsense. The Greens would only be too happy to sign on the dotted line, given how their 2024 election manifesto fully supported trans rights. With 4 MP’s and over 800 local councillors what better time to stand up for what they claim to stand for? And what about the Scottish Greens? They were so in favour of trans rights that they pulled out of a coalition with the SNP in Scotland, bringing down the Scottish government.  

I mean, I haven’t quite worked out all the details of how such a waiver would work in practice, but hey, all humans have rights, only some humans are more deserving of rights than others.