Truth be told, I hadn't really heard
of her. A year into her first term as MP, she will have been expected to have
been just making her way in politics. The fulsome tributes tell a different
story though. A story of someone that could have gone far. If the tributes are even
half true, our tragedy is the one of not knowing just what she could have
achieved. Possible future leader? Possibly the first woman to be a Labour Prime
Minister? The left wing version of Blair/Thatcher that us lefties have been
craving. That's the thing about the death of someone young and pretty much at
the start of their time, it all looking at what has been done already and
extrapolating things from there.
The murder of Cox will have serious repercussions. There have been five MP’s murdered in the
past 40 years – all at the hands of the IRA.
The Tory MP's Airey Neave (just before the 1979 General Election) & Iain Gow (in
1990) were assassinated by car bombs, Anthony Berry was the only MP to
perish in the bombing of the Grand Hotel in Brighton during the Tories party
conference in 1984, while the Ulster Unionist MP's Robert Bradford & Edgar Graham were shot by IRA gunmen in 1981 & 1983 respectively. Those attacks and
others led to a tightening of security which began the process of politicians
becoming ever so slightly removed from the general population, the gates at the
bottom of Downing Street being the first sign.
You do hope that this attack doesn’t
create a bigger gap between our politicians and the electorate. The minority of politicians that allow
themselves to become insulated from the general public brings down the public
perception of every politician. With
more security, it will further exacerbate the divide between politicians and
the public. By all accounts, this was
something Cox was very keen on avoiding – the pictures of her with a local
cricket team shows that she was keen on being an integral part of her
community.
The most immediate reaction to her
death though is being felt on the EU referendum campaign. Cox was a campaigner to improve the lives of
refugees and spoke in favour of more refugees fleeing Daesh coming to this country. Views like those, perfectly sane and rational
to a great many people in this country, would be seen as vile & treasonous
to a minority. Principally the minority
that have been roused by UKIP’s distastefully poisonous and duplicitous
campaign during this referendum.
There is a suspect, and the police
are currently investigating the assassination.
There are however some ‘facts’ that have come out into the public
domain. There are also things that have
appeared on social media. While
investigations are ongoing, we should be wary of straying into sub judice
territory. If the rumors/information
proves to be correct and the suspect is charged and convicted, then both UKIP
and the right wing fringe group Britain First will find itself at the centre of
a storm of epic proportions.
Let us suppose that the suspect was
involved with Britain First, there is photographic evidence that he did appear
at demonstrations though his involvement further than this has not been correctly ascertained at this point - his claim in court this morning being the first confirmation that those rumours are true but no confirmation of the extent of his beliefs in the aims of, or involvement with, Britain First. If this plays out the way things look like going, a group previously seen as
right wing rabble-rousers will now be seen in the eyes of the British public as
a terrorist organization. For Britain
First, and possibly for UKIP as well, a Rubicon has been crossed and while they
were never given very favourable coverage.
If they are found to have played any part in this assassination, then
there will be outright hostility to them from the authorities and the public at
large. In effect they will be very much persona non grata.
Regrettably though it also looks as
if some people will be intent in blaming, not just the official Leave campaign –
which is deserving of the criticism for the UKIP-esque lowest common
denominator campaign they have ran – but Brexiteers as a whole. This attempt to shut down a part of the
debate smacks of censorship at it’s very worst.
I completely disagree with the strain of Euroscepticism which is rooted
in a fear of foreigners, but it’s not my fault the ‘remain’ side have proven to
be completely impotent in the face of Johnson, Gove & Farage’s dissembling. Look, I did point out the flaws in their
deliberate conflation of free movement and immigration – it’s not my fault
nobody thought about using the flaws as a basis to debunk these arguments.
Like the Independence referendum
nearly 2 years ago, things will not be the same again in the aftermath of this
referendum. Even before Referendum Day,
the political landscape has been altered by the killing of Jo Cox. Something has perceptively changed in UK
politics, where violence against politicians is now acceptable to some
people. There is now the real prospect
of something dark happening to this country in the aftermath of next Thursday’s
vote. The show will go on, the victor
will take the spoils, but something has been lost in the battle that we will
never ever regain.
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