Those who care for the political health of Britain should be praying for the return of a strong Conservative party and a strong Labour party – and, indeed, of two-party politics – and for the rabble-rousers Farage and Polanski to disappear back into the undergrowth whence they came.
Am I confident in the two main parties do a great job on this, of course not. Do I think the people running Reform or Greens have any chance of doing better? Not a chance.
Were we always as irrational about politics as we have become? In my view, the answer is no.
If you chose to vote for Wilson over Heath, or Thatcher over Kinnock, you generally had some pretty sound reasons for doing so. OK, part of it was class-based tribalism, but not all of it, or Harold Macmillan wouldn’t have won the 1959 General Election with a huge majority and then Harold Wilson ditto in 1966. Similarly Thatcher and later Blair.
Now British politics has become like the Eurovision Song Contest or the X Factor. No serious person thinks that a Reform UK government (possible) or a Green government (thankfully, inconceivable) would be anything but a disaster. Yet the latest Ipsos poll has these two parties on 41% combined:
External Link/Members OnlyWho are these people?
Well, one of them is my conspiracy theory friend who believes that the moon landings were faked and that Covid was a hoax. But who are the other 22,631,999?
Finally, I would recast Red Kettle’s question to another subject. Q: “Do I think Andy Burnham has any chance of doing better than Burnham?” A: “Not a chance."
The Labour MPs who in effect got rid of Starmer – or at least those of them with an IQ over 80 – almost certainly know that’s the case. But their focus is on trying to keep their seats in the 2029 General Election, and they think that the usurper Burnham is an X Factor winner.