Friday, 18 August 2017

Week in Review: May's offer of a state visit to a Nazi sympathiser  

"Clearly President Trump is condemning the real haters: the SJW/Marxists who've attacked our guys" Commentator on far-right subreddit r/The_Donald
View this email in your browser

Arguably the most surprising thing about the Trump presidency is its capacity to still cause outrage. You would have thought that we'd be immune to this now, that the latest horror story wouldn't even touch the sides. But in fact it's still striking, even now, to see the moral depths this man is prepared to go. He's like a Russian doll. No matter how many you prise apart, there still some extra level of venal, grotesque ignorance he is capable to encapsulating.

This week it felt like we must surely be at the bottom. He was defending attendees of a Nazi march as "very fine people". There really wasn't any other interpretation you could put on it. All the old attempts to somehow exonerate him - from respectable columnists stroking their beards, business leaders eager for tax cuts, and fellow Republicans prepared to countenance anything to force through the rest of their agenda - had finally become impossible. He was stating, as clearly as possible, that he was a Nazi sympathiser.

It was so bad that even Theresa May made something which approximated a pointed criticism. "I see no equivalence between those who propound fascist views and those who oppose them," she said. "I think it is important for all those in positions of responsibility to condemn far-right views wherever we hear them."

She didn't name him, of course, but it was a start. And yet that bad smell still hangs around her. The offer of a state visit still stands. This trip, made incautiously at the start of her premiership, still connects the prime minister to every decision the American president takes. It creates a moral throughline from him to her, so that every story about Trump, every utterance he makes, reflects on her judgement.

Back when she was the all-conquering Iron Lady Mark II, critics of Brexit would use this decision to highlight the flaws in May's judgement. She had made herself a hostage to fortune with no gain to show for it in return. Trump hadn't promised to start trade talks. And indeed any trade talks which took place while Britain was still negotiating with the EU would have been either superficial or damaging.

There's no need to make these points anymore, of course. May's judgement is now universally considered to be abysmal. But the offer still stands. For Trump to be offered the honour of a full state visit, with all its pomp and ceremony, and the attendance of the Queen, would do extraordinary harm to this country's reputation. If it was up to May, it would have happened already. The only thing that has stopped it are demonstrators.

It is fear of them which has prevented Trump from coming until now and fear of them which prevents him coming in future. They are the firewall which protects the UK from Trump's visit and our reputation from the damage it would have inflicted.  

Political journalism in this country has never been very generous to protestors, even though there is an honourable tradition of meaningful demonstrations, from the Chartists through to Iraq, in British history. Protest is treated as faintly un-British, a populist blot in a representative democracy. At best it is meaningless, at worst a bubbling threat of anarchy.

But on this matter, as on many others, it was the protestors - organising on Facebook, preparing to go out marching on the streets - who have been proved right and the respectable prime minister who has been proved wrong. They protected Britain's global reputation from the humiliation of a state visit for a Nazi sympathiser.

Not only does protest work, it often contains far more sensible political judgement than that found in Downing Street.

Latest Articles

 
 

Has anyone bothered to ask what the EU gets out of all this?


 

On Aug 17, 2017 11:41 am
The longer we insist on thinking only about ourselves, the less able we are to get what we want
Read more... »
 

Irish border paper: Britain is hostage to its own delusions


 

On Aug 16, 2017 01:22 pm
Project Fear is now Project Reality
Read more... »
 

The government's customs union plan is an absolute dog's breakfast


 

On Aug 15, 2017 12:43 pm
After a year of preparation, the Brexit department's offering on the customs union is a mess of unrealistic expectations and untested IT solutions.
Read more... »
 

Hammond gets into bed with the Brexit headbangers


 

On Aug 14, 2017 09:20 am
The chancellor is now signed up to Year Zero Brexit
Read more... »
 

 
 

Sex worker robbed at knifepoint faces deportation after contacting police  


 

On Aug 11, 2017 01:23 pm
Sex workers warn that the threat of prosecution and deportation is preventing them from reporting crime
Read more... »
 


 
 

Caste discrimination: Why won't the government legislate?


 

On Aug 18, 2017 08:54 am
Years after the Equalities Act, government indecision has left one last form of discrimination off the statute book.
Read more... »
 

No, Sarah Champion hasn't been hounded out of her job for speaking the truth


 

On Aug 17, 2017 10:16 am
Champion's comments were racist, of course she had to go
Read more... »
 

Housing inequality returns to Northern Ireland as the DUP chases votes in Protestant areas


 

On Aug 16, 2017 10:31 am
Stormont has lost £1m of public money buying social housing land in parts of Belfast where little demand exists
Read more... »
 

Corbyn's immigration tightrope


 

On Aug 15, 2017 08:56 am
The Labour leader must find a position on free movement that unifies the party
Read more... »
 

Opinion Former videos


 

Prison overcrowding

 

On Jul 20, 2017 10:19 am
There are too many people in prison and many are left without support. Levels of suicides, self-injury and violence are at an all-time high.
Read more... »

Delivering diversity

 

On Jul 19, 2017 11:11 am
CMI's latest report shows how businesses can increase BAME diversity through the management pipeline.
Read more... »
 

Opinion Formers press releases


 
 

NASUWT comments on A-level results


"These results have been achieved, by the hard work and commitment young people and their teachers"
Read more... »
 

Businesses need long lead-in period for post Brexit customs system


The Chartered Institute of Taxation (CIOT) has urged the Government to act swiftly to turn the proposals in its new paper for a future customs relationship with the EU into agreed measures that will give businesses a long lead-in period before Brexit.
Read more... »
 

 

 

Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
Website
Website
Copyright © 2017 Senate Media Ltd, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at www.politics.co.uk

Our mailing address is:
Senate Media Ltd
18 Vine Hill
London, EC1R 5DZ
United Kingdom

Add us to your address book


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences 

Friday, 11 August 2017

Politics at Friday Lunch: Gina Miller and far-right terrorism

"I love this country and I am fighting for it." - Gina Miller
View this email in your browser

George Osborne had dinner with the Financial Times a little while back. The journalist was surprised that the former chancellor, who was not exactly a figure of adoration in the country, was treated kindly by the other diners, even after years of grinding austerity.

"Very occasionally you'd get people come up and they were angry or upset," Osborne said. "But it happens surprisingly rarely. British people are inherently quite polite."

That's not how it goes for everyone. Gina Miller, the campaigner who forced the government to consult parliament on triggering Article 50, gave an interview this week in which she revealed she'd received threats of acid attacks for months and was afraid to leave her home.

"My life has completely changed," she told verdict.co.uk. "When I see someone walk towards me on the street with a bottle of water or something, I just freak out. I get people who send me death threats who include their name and full address on the letters. People are so bold that they just don't hide."

This isn't her being overly sensitive. It's the result of months of legitimate threats to her safety.

The interview comes just weeks after Rhodri Phillips, the 4th Viscount St Davids, was jailed for 12 weeks for demanding someone try and kill her.

Just after she won her Supreme Court case against the government, he wrote: "£5,000 for the first person to 'accidentally' run over this bloody troublesome first generation immigrant. If this is what we should expect from immigrants, send them back to their stinking jungles".

Now she has 24-hour security installed in her home, has been forced to hire security guards and spends most weekends at home with her family. She's also had to consider leaving the country.

"If it came to the point that it was just too much to bear from a security point of view, if I sat down with my police teams and we felt that it was a really serious threat, I would have to seriously consider leaving the UK. This would break my heart because I love this country and I am fighting for it. But we might have to."

The response to the interview from Ukip figures and Leave.EU, the Kipper flank of the Brexit campaign, was telling. There was not a single note of alarm at the fact one of their political opponents was terrified of violent assault, nor any attempt to use their influence to discourage attacks on her. Instead, Leave.EU's official account published a celebratory gif, while Nigel Farage ally and former Ukip donor Arron Banks said the fact she might have to leave the UK was "cracking news".

If the Banks and his allies had any real commitment to their principles, they'd be celebrating Miller. After all, they campaigned for months claiming to support the principles of parliamentary sovereignty. But when Miller forced the executive to buckle and consult parliament on a crucial constitutional issue, she turned into a hate figure.

It doesn't have to be like this. Figures on right and left are perfectly capable of debating their opponents hard while always knowing where the line is. Here is John McCain, responding to a supporter saying he was scared of Barack Obama during the 2008 election.

But instead of taking the McCain example, the harder reaches of the right are sinking into more destructive positions, seemingly without any basic moral standards to limit their descent. If anything, things now seem set to get worse. The new generation of Ukip leadership candidates trades in outright Islamophobia and narratives of a nation under siege. It's this storyline - of a clash of civilisations, of a plot by traitors to destroy the country - which produces the violent threats seen by Miller.

Far-right terrorism is real. It cannot be ignored. Just over a year ago, it took the life of Jo Cox. We appear to have learned nothing from that incident.

Latest Articles

 
 

DWP fights to block publication of fit-for-work documents  


 

On Aug 07, 2017 12:53 pm
Legal battle launched to stop fit-for-work documents being released
Read more... »
 


 
 

Fixed odds betting machines are ruining lives


 

On Aug 10, 2017 02:27 pm
The government is stumbling before the might of the gambling industry, but action is needed now.
Read more... »
 

Channel 4's latest poverty porn makes entertainment out of a crisis


 

On Aug 09, 2017 10:30 am
New property show normalises the idea of the deserving and undeserving poor
Read more... »
 

Road to purgatory: Indefinite detention in the UK


 

On Aug 09, 2017 10:07 am
If we want to call ourselves a civilised country, it's time to put an end to indefinite detention
Read more... »
 

Corbyn is too cowardly to condemn Venezuela's slide into dictatorship


 

On Aug 08, 2017 09:30 am
Labour leader has shown double standards of the worst kind
Read more... »
 

The fight for Chingford: Is Labour on track to unseat IDS?


 

On Aug 07, 2017 09:38 am
The changing face of this constituency could force out one of the left's hate figures
Read more... »
 

Opinion Former videos

 

Prison overcrowding

 

On Jul 20, 2017 10:19 am
There are too many people in prison and many are left without support. Levels of suicides, self-injury and violence are at an all-time high.
Read more... »

Delivering diversity

 

On Jul 19, 2017 11:11 am
CMI's latest report shows how businesses can increase BAME diversity through the management pipeline.
Read more... »
 

Opinion Formers press releases

 
 

BASC gives MPs the facts on grouse


BASC has written to MPs to give them the facts on grouse shooting and moorland management.
Read more... »
 

Blog: Reflecting on the Neymars of this world


Talk in the media and among the public about the huge wage demands made by some footballers will reach a crescendo at the end of the transfer window this month
Read more... »
 
Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
Website
Website
Copyright © 2017 Senate Media Ltd, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in at www.politics.co.uk

Our mailing address is:
Senate Media Ltd
18 Vine Hill
London, EC1R 5DZ
United Kingdom

Add us to your address book


unsubscribe from this list    update subscription preferences