News arrived on Zelo Street late last month (no
names, no packdrill) that Nigel “Thirsty”
Farage and his fellow saloon bar propper-uppers at UKIP had secured the dubious
talents of Raheem “call me Ray”
Kassam to
spin for Mr Thirsty. Kassam is famous for, er, not very much, except that
his expertly self-crafted Wikipedia entry was deleted because, unlike the
l’Oreal advert, he wasn’t worth it.
Now it's squeaky spinner finger up the bum time
The appointment is
in many ways predictable: Kassam has been among those at the batshit
collective that is Breitbart London, along with the equally over-rated James “saviour of Western civilisation”
Delingpole, and Milo Yiannopoulos, failed entrepreneur and amateur human being.
Breitbart organised Farage’s recent trip Stateside as part of promoting UKIP as
the “UK Tea Party”.
Mr Thirsty was received by the likes of Rand Paul,
Republican Senator, and Laura Ingraham, radio host and stand-in for Bill
O’Reilly on Fox News Channel (fair and balanced my arse). Breitbart
told that “Breitbart News hosted
Farage last week in New York and Washington, D.C. in a trip orchestrated by the
Breitbart London team which focused on the parallels between the U.S. and
British political landscapes”.
Pretentious? Who, moi?
Giving Kassam a berth may be seen as payback from the
Kippers, and they will be hoping that his presence is rather less disruptive
than it was at The Commentator, from
which “call me Ray” departed after an
acrimonious falling-out with humourless founder Robin Shepherd, which,
according to Iain Dale, ended up with the services of Mr Ephraim Sue and his
pals being sought.
But Raheem Kassam will be an ideal appointment for UKIP:
appallingly narcissistic, mildly
paranoid, and laughably pretentious. He was the one who
responded to the question “Do you
consider yourself a Libertarian or a NeoCon?” by answering “Neither, honestly. I consider myself a
Goldwater conservative”. Kassam may think that Barry Goldwater is so long
ago that he can get away with that one.
Kassam's hero - Barry Goldwater
Sadly for “call me Ray”,
though, the former five-term Senator from Arizona was famous for two things:
persuading Tricky Dicky to quit the Presidency in 1974 in the face of almost
certain impeachment, and securing the Republican nomination for the 1964
Presidential election, in which Lyndon Johnson defeated him in a landslide. He
was not, outside the USA, well-regarded at the time.
Indeed, Private Eye
magazine put him on the cover of Issue 67, with the most unfortunate of photos
giving the suggestion that Goldwater was talking out of his arse. That quality
is what Raheem Kassam will bring to UKIP: someone about to go down to a
monumentally heavy defeat, who talks out of his arse. And someone whose high
opinion of himself is not shared by the real world.
So let the reign of Raheem at UKIP begin. Get the popcorn in, folks.
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