There is no more sad and pathetic sight at this year’s
Labour Party Conference than one former member so desperate for attention but
given the time of day by hardly anyone: step forward Whingeing Dan Hodges,
formerly the Colonel Nicholson of the party, but now a figure adrift who gives
the impression of a stuck record as he drones on and on about how useless Mil
The Younger really is.
He still isn't coming back, Dan
Today’s example – “The
One Nation Labour balloon is punctured, drifting, and slowly sinking. Can it
stay afloat long enough?” is typical: whatever Miliband does is
rubbish, the party thinks he’s rubbish whatever they may tell the media, any
policy announcements are rubbish, the voters know he’s rubbish whatever they
may indicate in the opinion polls, and PLEASE LISTEN TO ME, LABOUR PEOPLE.
The problem for Hodges is that nobody wants to bother with
what is fast becoming a kind of monotonous background noise: “Ed
Miliband strode into the TUC's house. And then he bottled it, and ran away”
was the line being trotted out a fortnight ago – in other words, Ed’s rubbish
(et cetera, et cetera, et cetera). Any reform of Labour’s link with the Trades
Unions was rubbish.
Besides, there had to be some kind of tie-up with the
Unions: “Labour
needs its link with the unions, to save it from its own middle-class
metropolitan guilt” followed just the following day. Yes, the party of
Kier Hardie, Aneurin Bevan, Eric Heffer, Dennis Skinner, Alan Johnson and John
Prescott is weighed down with “middle-class
metropolitan guilt”. And so the monotone continues. And Ed’s rubbish, by
the way.
One day later came “Labour's
crusade for the poor is morally commendable. But it's political suicide”
as the idea of abandoning the so-called “bedroom
tax” was equated to the abandonment of that fabled middle ground. So a
party that is supposed to stick up for ordinary working people and fairness
should ditch such ideas, and if they don’t, they can’t occupy the centre ground
(and are rubbish). Sounds daft? It is.
But still he ground on, whining that “It's
as we thought in 2010: Labour is still in the wilderness”. They were
lurching to the left, and Young Dave was going to win next time. But someone
gave him the time of day: “A few weeks
ago I was speaking to one No 10 insider about Labour’s stance on welfare. She
asked me, in absolute seriousness ...”. Susie Squire’s his new pal, eh?
Just about says it all.
Hodges cannot get his head round those pesky facts:
repealing the so-called “bedroom tax”
is popular. Looking again at the way Government treats disabled people is
popular. Ending the waste of “Free
Schools” where there are already plenty of places in the area is popular.
Wanting everyone to play ball on the minimum wage is popular. Everyone else
writes off Miliband at their peril.
And nobody who matters cares a jot what Dan Hodges thinks
any more. The end.
His mother must be so proud of him.
ReplyDeletedid anyone care, ever? He was always a relaly rubbish I'd have thought his fate, and reputation, were sealed after the New Statesman got rid of him for only ever having one opinion on anything (to quote BorisWatch, disaster for flailing Miliband) and for his refusal to write about anything else.
ReplyDeleteI was watching a webchat with him on the telegraph site a while back where someone asked him why, if he supports more or less every single Tory policy (which is the case as he admits), he continued to be a Labour member. His answer - 'tribal loyalty' - was barely worthy of a primary school debate. And now he's exited the party he's left with absolutely nothing.