A frustrating aspect of political life is the way activists
exaggerate the differences between their standpoint that of others who
supposedly occupy the opposite pole of that imaginary political spectrum we
refer to as left and right. Or left and left or right and right or up and down. It's never easy to pinpoint these things.
For example - for years I have been accustomed to think of
Jeremy Corbyn as an old style trade union communist. Yet occasionally I see him as a fascist,
supposedly at the opposite end of the political spectrum. This issue is
perfectly familiar and it even has a name - horseshoe theory.
In political science and popular discourse, the horseshoe theory asserts that the far-left and the far-right, rather than being at opposite and opposing ends of a linear political continuum, closely resemble one another, much like the ends of a horseshoe.
If pressed I’d go further and suggest that anyone so inclined could easily
maintain the argument that Corbyn is indeed a fascist who has spent his
political life making common cause with overseas fascists even though we do not
generally refer to such people as fascists. It's an argument one could make because political language is so loose.
This is the problem - the imaginary gulf between extreme political positions because extreme political positions are rather common. If one listens carefully to everyday
conversation then huge numbers of people hold extreme political views anyway. Many
would nationalise vast swathes of the economy, control prices, drastically
increase punishment of criminals and extend judicial punishment to any number
of social or political misdeeds. Many seem to be far left and far right rolled into one.
Huge numbers of people see the government as the only significant actor on the political stage, as if anyone else who ventures onto the stage should be kicked off it. The government should do something, the police
should do something, “they” should do something. Guardian readers are particularly keen on this approach.
Almost always it is the central power which should do something and that something tends to imply a drastic curtailment of liberty. People in general are not particularly liberal politically and among the most illiberal are those who purport to be liberals. That’s the problem of political language working its malign magic.
Almost always it is the central power which should do something and that something tends to imply a drastic curtailment of liberty. People in general are not particularly liberal politically and among the most illiberal are those who purport to be liberals. That’s the problem of political language working its malign magic.
One consequence of the corruption of political language is
that many MPs in the House of Commons should not be there. They are not suited
to the role and apparently unaware of their own deficiencies. Yet we lack the
clear and distinct language to say who they are and why they are unsuitable. We
fall into the swamps of party loyalty, abuse, ridicule or convoluted political analysis
none of which really meets the need.
Too many MPs are merely public employees who cannot do the
job, never will be capable of doing it and ought to be dismissed. Many have no
real experience beyond the political bubble. Yet we do not have the common
ground to say this as cogently as we should. We do not have politically
untainted language, the factual language we might use to assess the
capabilities of any employee. And MPs are employees – we tend to forget that. But maybe that’s the way they like it.
6 comments:
I suppose that one test is would you like to meet an MP for a drink and a natter. Maybe 3 MPs pass that test. The rest and their speaker belong in a zoo or daytime TV.
My village invited Greg Clark to express a desire for road safety.
All was set up, the papers duly photographed the event, we met once more, with a 'yeah whatever shit' chat and absolutely nothing happened after that.
He's lost my vote now, so see Scrobs' next post when I can get this confounded computer to behave...
Very interesting point about our current inability to identify and sack useless MPs. We lack the language, I think, because traditionally MPs were given a good deal of deference and we never really got to grips with the notion of accountability. We tended to vote them out of office because we were sick of the effects of a set of policies and wanted a change. Now, increasing numbers of people realise that politicians are likely to be disordered personalities who are the last people we want in charge.
Thanks for the new term - horseshoe theory. Previoulsy I used the analogy of a maxi-min thermomemeter.
"Now, increasing numbers of people realise that politicians are likely to be disordered personalities who are the last people we want in charge."
Good point Sam, I now think they always were, but true Brits, and many others like them, usually show good manners, and try to respect people in public office, that is, before they were lied to by the likes of Blair and Brown.
Luckily, it doesn't work that way any more, and the next few weeks will be great reading in the sensible press, which excludes the BBC and the Grauniad of course!
There'll be plenty of 'parp parp' on anything Dimbleby presents...
Graeme - as many as three?
Scrobs - and if he'd explained why it wasn't going to happen people might at least have given him a point for honesty.
Sam and Scrobs - yes I remember the deference and it wasn't so long ago. Maybe they were also disordered personalities but generally we didn't know because it wasn't reported unless it became too blatant. We know some certainly did not deserve the deference.
Sackers - I still think we need a better analogy but unless these things become reasonably familiar they fall flat.
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