WITH REFORM MAKING BIG GAINS IN THE FACE OF LABOUR’S SHARP RIGHTWARDS TURN AND
ONGOING TORY INCOMPETENCE, IS CONTROL OF WALES THE NEXT STOP?
Meanwhile the Mayday rallies worldwide are as always a rare bright spot in the
general thrust of bad news, and Barclays comes under pressure with spray, wire
cutting and general disruption taking place against its support of fossil fuels
and the Gaza massacres.
The post Anarchist News Review: Local elections, Mayday rallies and direct
action at Barclays appeared first on Freedom News.
Tag - Local elections
“OH GARÇON? I’D LIKE ENOCH-WAS-RIGHT TORYISM WITH EVEN MORE GRIFTING, PLEASE.
YES OF COURSE I’LL HAVE THE SIDE OF SELF-SABOTAGING INCOMPETENCE AND UNHINGED
SHOUTING AT CLOUDS, THAT’S THE FLAVOUR RIGHT THERE.”
~ Rob Ray~
Jordan Tarrant-Short, a man in his 30s who has somehow never quite managed to
throw off that Young Tory look, won an unremarkable by-election on May 2nd in a
quite striking way.
For the last five years Tarrant-Short has been standing in Rochdale by-elections
as a Tory and losing, handily, to Labour candidates. Despite a couple of second
places, it’s never been close. Something about his self-satisfied, smirking,
oleaginous Conservative chops just couldn’t cut through in a red seat.
Yesterday however he won in the Balderstone & Kirkholt ward by-election, tearing
down a 31-point gap established in 2021. All he had done was switch parties to
Reform.
As with most council by-elections, we’re talking small numbers of voters – 2,362
people turned out. But the way they split is notable:
Reform UKJordan Tarrant-Short (Elected)76632.55%LabourLeanne
Greenwood62426.51%Workers Party of BritainLaura
Pugh39816.91%ConservativeMudassar Razzaq2129.01%IndependentBilly
Howarth1807.65%Liberal DemocratsChariss Laura Peacock1094.63%GreenMartyn David
Savin652.76%
Compare this to the 2021/2024 elections:
Labour 1473/108660%/53%Conservative and
Unionist710/29829%/7%Greens186/1508%/7%Freedom Alliance. No lockdowns. No
curfews88/–4%/–Workers Party of Britain–/395–/19%Liberal Democrats–/122–/6%
As I say, striking. While a large chunk of the people who still care to vote –
barely 28% of the electorate – moved over to Reform, they did so to back a
longtime Tory candidate who had repeatedly failed, and badly, in previous
outings. But the stolen votes from Labour, and nearly as much so from the
Tories, aren’t just going there. The Workers Party picked up nearly 400, while
their former candidate, the far-right activist (and Reform sympathiser) Billy
Howarth picked up 180, and the Lib Dems grabbed 109.
Why am I talking about this somewhat obscure bit of voting drama in the wake of
Reform’s general surge? Because I think this microcosm speaks a great deal about
the abject state of electoral politics, at the tail end of decades of centrist
neoliberalism telling us There Is No Alternative if you don’t want worse to get
in. This turn away from the status quo is not a sudden collapse, but a natural
conclusion of a spiral decades in the making.
In this thumping embarrassment for centrism – and even of classic hard-right
politics as Labour increasingly hangs out in spaces previously reserved for the
likes of the BNP – we have the public’s ultimate reply. There’s no credible left
grouping, and the status quo is an ongoing slide into impoverishment. So for the
loyal election-goer, what remains is varying formats of nationalist who promise
they care about you even if they don’t care about the lives of refugees, and who
haven’t had a chance to screw things up yet..
Much is being made of these gains essentially being a protest vote, along the
lines of Nigel Farage’s most successful-ever political vehicle, Brexit.
But there’s a fair bit overlooked in that sentiment, depending on who you talk
to. For some, this party led by a multi-millionaire, public funds-robbing,
tweed-toting chinless stockbroker’s son, a multi-millionaire property baron and
a millionaire Goldman Sachs alumni is genuinely seen as the honest voice of the
common man. For others it’s a means to an end on immigration (even though the
party offers very little that Labour isn’t already doing ). And for some, it’s a
simple fuck you to the status quo, even though this is a party led by the rich
with policies like “cut waste” and “fill potholes” – truly revolutionary.
A significant difficulty for the status quo parties is that (entirely warranted)
criticisms of Reform as bought and paid for by the offshore rich, infested with
corruption and fascists, led by a proven liar, is in large part simple
hypocrisy. With the exception of that last (clearly not the dealbreaker at local
level that you’d hope) they can all be Spiderman memed. Especially, in Starmer’s
case, the constant, bald-faced lying and breaking of pledges alongside a
rapidity of decline into anti-working class barbarism that has shocked even
those of us who knew from the start where it was headed. As the Novara Media
crew noted in their coverage, the consensus of opinion when you talk to people
is “they’re all as bad as each other” and when you mix that with the sense that
Reform are at least getting up the right noses, it’s (clearly) a potent mix. One
which exposes the complete stupidity of Labour’s strategies in all kinds of
areas, most particularly migration – it doesn’t matter how nasty government
policy is, it can never “address concerns” that aren’t based in policy but in
feelings and habit.
The left, specifically the Greens, meanwhile have made modest gains but nothing
like the breakthrough needed in an era so open to shift that both the major
parties lost two thirds of their seats. Some of this is beyond their control:
Worthies are less inclined to sink money into opening a fully-funded propaganda
network (like GB News) to pump out Green talking points than far-right
billionaires who see direct value in shifting culture rightwards. And The likes
of the Mail, Sun, Times etc are less likely to give them a break if they get
mentioned at all. Other elements are more the Greens’ own fault – lackluster
leaderships who haven’t the media chops of a Farage, difficulties in the
coalition of left and right, and a failure to cut through with head-turning
policies or a sense of, for want of a better word, prickishness against the
powers that be. They’re nice, well-meaning. And in the world of politics that
translates as useless.
So in this sense it’s not always a protest vote, as such. It’s a “what else am I
going to do” vote. Reform’s approach is tailored for a particular strain of
“everything’s shit especially London” British miserablism, but other than a
particularly indulgent line on barely-concealed racism it’s really quite
remarkable how unremarkable this London SW1-based party is. What it has is the
same lack of tarnish from time and power that Corbynism had, in its early days.
For non-politicos it’s a brand, for the most part they didn’t know or care who
Darren Grimes was beyond some faff or other on GB News – though they will now
he’s head of Durham Council.
The jabber about a Tory-Reform pact being pretty laughable, the next couple of
years are about Reform trying to manage the places it now controls, expand its
voter base beyond an enthusiastic core and come up with some policies which
sound good enough for government (as opposed to nonsensical stuff about taxing
solar panels or swapping income taxes for sales taxes). That will be much
harder, and there will be lots of opportunity for them to stuff it up.
But in that vein, should anarchists care? We aren’t part of the vaunted (and
largely obsolete) “ground game”, many of us don’t even vote. Well yes, of
course. Mainly because where Reform leads, news agendas follow. Social culture
follows in large part from the debates those news agendas produce. And social
culture is where the battle lies for helping working class people of every
stripe, under any party. We don’t need to be Labour supporters to go after
Farage’s merry band of posh far-right grifters – they already stink up our
communities with their mean-spirited whining. The Tarrant-Shorts of this world,
before they were Reform, were knocking about in blue rosettes saying the same
crap.
It’s on us to make clear that when politics is a pile of bullshit the solution
is not to find another cowpat and call it caviar. The vaccuum in party poltics
is filled by Reform mostly because “who else” – and our anser to that is simple.
There’s no-one else, especially not Reform. It’s just us, all of us, versus
them. Voting has never been more useless, government never so unhelpful,
capitalism never so greedy. It’s time for working people to take matters – the
future – into our own hands.
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Pic: Nigel Farage, from Wikipedia
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