Last week’s Oxfam Twitter campaign, which, as I noted
at the time, provoked a number of less than totally alert Tory MPs to
immediately plead guilty and decide that they were the ones who had to defend the
“Perfect Storm” of zero hours
contracts, high prices, benefit cuts, unemployment and childcare costs, when no
one party had been accused, now has the right-wing commentariat in a terrible
froth.
After the likes of Conor Burns, as always shamelessly
trading on his having met Mrs T a few times in her latter years, had tried to
suggest that a charity sticking up for the poor was engaging in political
campaigning, a significant number of their fellow campaigners rallied to Oxfam’s
support, signing
a letter to the Times, published
today. This had to be comprehensively rubbished.
So it was that yesterday afternoon the Guido Fawkes blog launched
a pre-emptive strike: “Third Sector Media
Tantrum – Labour’s Charity Allies Attack Tory MP” declared
the headline. And which of the Fawkes rabble wrote this magnificently
dishonest drivel? “Charity third-sector
... taxpayer-funded charity mafia”, with misuse of the hyphen and a blatantly
false premise, identifies the culprit.
Step forward the odious flannelled fool Henry Cole, tame
gofer to the perpetually thirsty Paul Staines. Only Cole has the oversized chip
on his shoulder about the funding of groups he dislikes, together with that
distinctive tendency to shonky grammar. And the rest of the post is no better:
he picks on six of the letter’s signatories in support of his “Labour” smear. That’s less than 10% of the total.
And, as if Master Cole’s effort were not lame enough on its
own, two more of those less alert Tory MPs have joined in: Priti Patel,
self-promoting Member for Herself Personally Now, whined
that “left-wing propagandists are
hoping that so-called independent charities and other organisations can produce
misleading campaigns to try to smear the current Government” at ConHome.
Ms Patel was supported by Dominic Raab, writing
at the Spectator that “Oxfam sounds like an echo chamber for the
Labour Party – and taxpayers aren’t there to subsidise that”. But both of
them have already fatally devalued their stock by signing
on to the infamous smear “Once they
enter the workplace, the British are among the worst idlers in the world”.
Irony is lost on some at Westminster.
What all these prize clowns have managed to miss is that not
only is the current Government a coalition, but that the junior partner,
despite its lack of popularity, has not jumped on the charity-smearing
bandwagon. All we have here is a bunch of variously clueless right-wingers
pleading guilty in response to a campaign that seeks to raise awareness of
poverty, while accusing no party or politician in the process.
Oxfam is right to make us remember the poor, whether the right approves or not.
1 comment:
Politics, from the Greek politikos, "of, for, or relating to citizens".
Innumerable MPs seem to have forgotten this, preferring to think that politics is best left to politicians like them, and the citizenry just need assuaging every five years to guarantee their continued employment.
If Oxfam rebrands itself as a think tank, there would be less of a fuss. Many politicians can work with those parameters.
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