Nobody should be surprised at the faux whining from
right-wingers this morning following yesterday evening’s Olympics opening
ceremony. As soon as those lights spelled out GOSH (Great Ormond Street
Hospital) followed by NHS, one instinctively knew that some out there on the
fringe would take offence. That the one stupid enough to stick his head over
the parapet was Aidan Burley surprises no-one.
Burley’s Twitter outburst comes from someone whose recent
political career presses all the buttons of the New Conservatism: he was a
Hammersmith and Fulham councillor, he’s allied himself with folks from the
Young Britons’ Foundation (YBF) in taking part in the Trade Union Reform
Campaign (TURC), which does not seek to reform unions but wipe them out, and has
been sacked for a Nazi themed stag party.
Groups like the YBF routinely teach that the Tory Party is
not Conservative enough, and like the groups in the USA on which it bases
itself – such as the Freedom Association and Young America’s Foundation – it majors
in educating and placing ideologically
sound Conservatives into business and politics. And this is increasingly a
problem for the Tories.
The Tory Party has always – of necessity – been a broad
church. The Party has recognised the need for compromise not merely with other
parties and interest groups as it seeks to influence opinion and pass
legislation, but also within its own ranks. This ability to accommodate a range
of views is in direct conflict with the ideologues, for whom no compromise is
permissible.
So for those people, nothing, but nothing, can be said to be
good about the NHS. Anyone saying otherwise must be shouted down and ridiculed.
This is both a rite of passage for aspiring New Conservatives, and a duty for
established players. Burley is now one of the latter. He is merely reacting as
trained.
Burley complains about rappers – see his less than
successful attempt to convince in a Sky News interview HERE –
yet there was only one, Dizzee Rascal, who was born close to the Olympic Park
in Bow. He whinges about multiculturalism, and couples it with all things “leftie”. He expresses dismay at seeing
the CND symbol, but misses the huge following the movement enjoyed in the 60s.
After all, in 1963 there was a fortunately brief look into the
pit, when the USA and USSR came frighteningly close to what would have been
nuclear war, over the Cuban missile crisis. Danny Boyle’s production included
not merely progress, but also protest, something that sets us apart from the
Chinese. That one of the most prominent New Conservatives has a problem with
protest is instructive.
The intolerance of the New Conservatism will be its
downfall. Hopefully for the rest of us this will happen before this poisonous
strain gets its hands on the levers of power.
1 comment:
Not rap - *grime*.
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