There was a time when the
annual conference of a major political party was an event where parties with
millions of signed up members would at least attempt to mingle with their
followers. Even lesser parties might
have a membership of hundreds of thousands.
Now even the major parties
cannot summon up enough members to rival the followers of a famous cyclist on
his social media link. Once it was a
privilege and honour to be deputised to attend by your local party . Now it is
either a tiresome intrusion into a busy life or perhaps the chance for a binge
and bonk weekend.
Radio listeners or TV viewers
might have been interested but now as soon as the news screen shifts onto a
conference in between a fashion show or gruesome murder or natural disaster the
populace hits the remote control to go to a sports or other channel.
The media does the
coverage out of duty and to keep the politicians happy and maybe because it is
for them the village gossip. For most of
us it is now a strange and other world where people we largely dislike and distrust
caper for our attention.
Apart from being seen with
or among the great and the good, or rather too often the greedy and the gross
and theoretically conferring and consulting these events were usually something
of a fiction. But over time they moved
on from being an internal exercise to one that became much more of an external
media show, a palace of political varieties.
With it arrived all the
agenda and content management, the spin, the stunts and the urgent need to try
to command the lead stories in the press and on the TV news, For a short period it had some sort of
sentient life but this is now long past.
The arrival of 24/7 news
coverage, the availability of other sources and ready international news all
began to impact. Now the web and the net
are assuming greater importance. The
time of the party conference accordingly is over, it is now almost a political
heritage item.
So it has now almost retreated
into being largely an internal event where the leading elements struggle for
coverage and power among a declining, ageing group of followers who in effect
are the local government and agency end of the business.
There has always been an
element of exclusiveness and air of superiority in the UK political class. Often this barely covered their contempt for
the ordinary voter.
Now it is becoming all too
obvious and the party conference is a time to tell people what their governors
want, not for the people to have some sort of minimal influence.
We call ourselves a
democracy and are prepared to use this as an excuse for bombing and blasting
other states. Yet the UK is now falling
far short of being a democracy and holding party conferences in the way they
are run is an all too obvious sign of this.
Just how many people now
outside the Westminster Village take this kind of variety show seriously? The disaster is that the politicians see this
capering as real politics.
Most of us see it as low
farce.
"Just how many people now outside the Westminster Village take this kind of variety show seriously?"
ReplyDeleteProbably very few. I wonder if not many insiders take it seriously. People can be very cynical in going through the motions merely because it's the done thing and putting your head over the parapet is a gift to the snipers.