What could be a bigger turn-off for an electorate than to
have a candidate so devoid of appeal that his supporters have to pretend that
he is popular? The point was originally made by the Monty Python team decades
ago, with a sketch about a by-election in the rather obviously fictional
constituency of North Minehead, where a Mr Hilter was standing for the National
Bocialist Party (geddit?!?).
Bit more difficult than appearing on Fox News
Even though he appears devoid of a sense of humour, someone ought to sit James “saviour of Western civilisation” Delingpole down and play this video for him. Why so? Well, Del Boy has entered the fray and is standing as an anti wind farm candidate in the forthcoming Corby by-election, a contest precipitated by the departure of Louise Mensch.
And by his own admission, Del isn’t
faring too well with the locals, some of whom are not lapping up his
sneering dismissal of any idea that does not meet with his approval, or his
unwavering self-confidence in Himself Personally Now. He is having difficulty
introducing nuance to his arguments, or even tact to his encounters with
voters. Like Mr Hilter, he is frightening them off.
Del firstly tells how he encountered one likely recruit to
his cause, told him about “bat-chomping,
bird-slicing eco crucifixes”, but did not get the response he expected:
that voter remained unconvinced that wind turbines were the evil that Del
claimed. Yet he then asserted that he was in the contest “to give a voice to all those rural people ... in East Northants”.
Not that one he wasn’t.
Yet still he rants on: “Normally
in politics there are two sides to every argument. What’s unique about this one
is that proponents of wind simply haven’t a leg to stand on”. This does
not sit well with last week’s news that wind power had met over 10% of the
country’s electricity demand over a sustained period, and in doing so had driven
the spot price down, which suggests all those “expensive” claims are rot.
But this thought is not allowed to enter as Del keeps on
putting his foot in it. Blinded by the certainty that he is right, and anyone
that suggests otherwise is of lesser intellectual standing, he concludes “The wind industry is so wrong in every way
that to be against it ought to be no more contentious than being against
paedophilia”. Yes, wind power, like
Paul McMullen’s privacy, is for paedos.
What will happen next in the saga of Delingpole the
candidate? Will there be rallies? Will he manage to debate the issues without
resorting to sneering abuse? Will the legendary air quotes be deployed? Or
perhaps pundits will be left thinking of the parallels with Monty Python and the
voter declaring “I don’t like the sound
of these ‘ere boncentration bamps”.
Still, if you’ve got £500 to spray up the wall, eh? Welcome to the real world, Del.
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