- Tue May 20, 2025 4:58 pm
#89665
I suppose we knew that the “backlash” from the usual suspects in reaction to the Starmer government’s first significant and pragmatic moves - regulatory alignment, youth exchange, etc - to begin to undo some of the damage wrought by the Brexit project, was always coming. I wasn’t expecting it to be quite as virulent - or quite as frankly risible - as it has been. All this over the top bombastic nonsense about betrayal, surrender, and capitulation is transparently total bollocks, and what’s more, it is likely to be recognised as such by a majority of electors mindful of one of the modern beat combo The Who’s biggest hits.
As James O’Brexit has been pointing out this morning, nothing that the Brexiters promised has come true, a full nine years later. Cheaper food? Bollocks. Extra £350m a week for the NHS? A stinking lie. Lowered immigration? It’s fucking rocketed. Cutting red tape ? There’s more, not less. Everybody can see that the entire case for Brexit was a pack of lies, and that the mooted Brexit benefits never existed.
People aren’t going to buy the same lies again, are they? At any rate, not in anything like the same numbers. As has been mentioned, significant numbers of those who might have been likely to do so are no longer in a position to do so, on account of having stopped breathing.
Littlejohn, Neil, Hannan, etc are shouting into the void.
It also, I think, is another indicator that Starmer’s approach to this first term of government is actually working. Pragmatic, slow and steady, a plan is coming together. In three or four years’ time, it’s not inconceivable that the UK will be cruising to a second Labour term of government.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.