When I became eligible to
vote in the days before saturation modern media politics was the press and any
voluntary action of interest. The BBC
did not do much beyond basic reporting and there was no local radio and
advertising was basic and skimpy.
But there was wide
interest. Political parties locally and
nationally had much larger memberships and I recall an Attlee election meeting
which drew several thousand in the audience who listened. It was a very different world and a people
with different basic attitudes.
For my part and most
others what had happened two decades or more before and who was involved was
history. We were interested in the now
and the future. Could the Socialists
deliver their promised land? Could the
Tories manage greater freedoms and allow decent social security and housing? Could either of them reclaim the UK as a
great trading power with a real world presence?
Arguing the whys and
wherefores of the gold standard, The General Strike of 1926 and the wisdom or
not and attitudes of Ramsay Macdonald, Lloyd George or Stanley Baldwin was both
pointless and stupid. Times had changed,
the economy had changed radically and the future was going to be very different
with all the technological and scientific advances.
By 2015 it will have been
25 years since Mrs. Thatcher left power, a full generation ago. You need to be over 40 to have any actual
memory and over 50 to have an effective political memory of her time in
office. The recent releases of 1983 documents
look almost antique and the language is of a different order.
The internet had not yet
been created and the Cold War had ended only months before. Yet we have people going on about Thatcherism
and the events of her time. Whether or
not she got some things right or some things wrong is about as relevant to the
present as old copies of the "Punch" magazine, in which a couple of
times I had items.
Mrs. Thatcher was keen on
the concept of "British Identity".
One reason may have been that she was aware that this was then and
before something of an elusive concept.
Certainly when she first began in politics the main London media at the
time did have a lot to say about Britishness.
My memory of that period is that the idea was vague, too much to do with
Empire and world power and if anything our most immediate concerns were local.
You were British because
you were British and might wave the flag and hope for Olympic medals etc. and
were supposed to be proud of great projects, many of which never really worked
or got off the ground. It was the increasing gap between media message and
local realities that led to the growing detachment of the 1960's and cynicism
of the 1970's. I stopped buying British
cars they were badly made, unreliable and expensive to run.
Quite what British
"identity" we are supposed to have now is a real question. The train on Saturday into London had about
400 people on board. Excluding children
around half are not eligible to vote and of the other half there were few over
40. Quite what "identities"
they might have is a question. Very few,
I think, would say "British" despite some being of that
classification in the Census.
As a statistical sample
this was not a good one. But the more
you look around the more you have an older element in the electorate who will
either vote as they have always done or not at all. Some of them might say they
have a "British" identity but this might be the default option. As for the younger elements among the voters
it is likely to be down to narrow personal financial interest. What "identity" they might have is
likely to be one created for them as a marketing defined segment.
Among many of the
electorate it is likely that the General Election will be the equivalent of one
of many Awards ceremonies, but this one is for which of the unattractive,
unreliable collection of second raters and has been's is worth bothering to vote
for.
The signs are that for
many, especially the younger voters, it will not be worth bothering at all to
vote for thickies who do nothing else but argue about ancient history and
things that no longer exist.
We are in the picture
above.
No comments:
Post a Comment