I don’t know
whether this is a symptom of entering Curmudgeon-hood but I’ve noticed more and
more going to vote and participating in the phenomenon of ‘voting while holding
your nose’. Essentially voting for the
least worst option, even if you don’t agree with that least worst option. So far, I’ve done this twice – the Independence
Referendum and the 2010 General Election.
Judging by the utter clusterfeck that is the current ‘Leave’ campaign in
the ongoing European Referendum those two choices pale into insignificance
compared to voting with the most overtly racist and correct fact-less
campaign… well, since the Tories &
UKIP battled to reach the lowest common denominator last year.
And there's way too much of this... chap... too. |
As has been
pointed out before, UKIP’s deliberate conflation of Immigration (which we still
control for people coming from non-EU countries) and Freedom of Movement
(within EU countries) is disingenuous and outright racist – painting Bulgarians
and Romanians as thieves and gangsters.
How dare those people come across here, we’ve got plenty of home grown crims… For the Leave campaign to adopt the same UKIP
styling’s after working so hard to marginalize the pound shop Mosley shows a form
of desperation and a lack of imagination.
It is not just
those Eastern European countries that are already within the EU that have
attracted the focus of the less imaginative of the Brexiteers. The application of Turkey to join the club
has become a lightning rod for those looking to stir the pot. We would, if those Brexiteers are to be
believed, be at the mercy of more criminal and terrorist gangs. There is one small problem with their
argument, apart from the most obvious one about not all Turks being villains straight
out of Hollywood casting. Their leader
Erdogan is not… shall we say… exactly on
the same page as the west & the EU in terms of their dealings with
Daesh. It is therefore not that likely… at the moment… that that application from
Turkey to join the EU will be successful.
Alongside the
constant mention of the £350m figure, which has been shown to be false,
immigration is the issue which is providing the most self inflicted wounds on
the Leave campaign, certainly up here in Scotland. It is somewhat timely perhaps that the
Government have shot themselves in the foot over the handling of the Brain family. The reaction, certainly in the media has
shown a sharp dividing line between a community orientated Scottish sensibility
and Westminster’s own denial act about the existence of ‘Society’. If our public services are stretched to
breaking point, and there is a crisis in housing, then who’s fault is that then
that we have had governments committed to either providing public services on
the cheap or have cut back on those services.
One of the things
I’ve always said about UKIP is pertinent here, that to win votes here in
Scotland they’d have to change their message.
The Leave campaigners, to pick up votes here, really need to dial down
the racist rhetoric and push the undemocratic nature of the EU. If elections are seen to be referendums on
parties and individuals, then why isn’t this referendum seeing the figures of
Jean Claude Junker, Donald Tusk and Martin Schultz at the front and centre of its
campaign, especially from the Leave camp?
These are the
figures that lead the main European institutions, yet we’ve never voted for
them. We’ve never voted for their
policies or direction of travel. Yet these figures are largely anonymous throughout
a campaign where we should be asked to judge their performances.
Arguably the
pro-Independence campaign two years ago was undermined by their arguments being
over complicated. A campaign built
around the simple idea of Scottish People running Scotland should have been
much more the centrepiece. Like that
campaign, the Brexiteers are falling into the trap of fighting the status quo
with a campaign designed to fight (and fail) on ‘Remains’ favoured
battleground. The thinking that
Immigration is the trump card to win them the referendum is a flawed idea. Immigration is not the issue here that it is
in parts of England and as a result the referendum could be decided here in
Scotland.
No comments:
Post a Comment