The Brexit Saga Enters Its 'Final' and Potentially Most Critical, Dangerous Phase: Part One:
While newbie British Prime Minister Boris Johnson cops flak from all directions for pulling out all the stops to leave the European Union by Halloween, come what *may - or others of her 'ilk' - may well think, as an exercise in political comparison, it's an interesting spectacle to behold the stark contrast between a political partisan of the first order, aka U K Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn, and Irish Premier/Prime Minister Leo Varadkar - who arguably has as much 'skin in the game' (albeit indirect) as does Corbyn and his party.
Admittedly as a nation's leader Varadkar - as all such political figures arguably are - is only too aware that diplomacy is 'the name of the game' in terms of seeking the best deal he can coax out of his British counterpart, Boris Johnson - **while the latter is the one he has to deal with; and so he can afford to be patient and longsuffering when dealing with someone whom many - though not Yours Truly - ***seem to regard as a refractory, ornery and increasingly untrustworthy, even *****despotic character.
But not only yesterday/today with the present U K Prime Minister, whilst Theresa May graced that exalted office he ever and only - or at least insofar as the public record reveals, anyhow - seemed to try his level best - unlike some EU folk, that's for sure - to be as conciliatory as possible in trying to find some feasible solution to (the actual, on-the-ground outworking of) the ongoing Brexit dilemma.
And upon one such occasion - as with Jeremy Corbyn (as outlined below, in my copious footnotes) - I fully intended to commend his sterling character thereabouts...for making just the right noises (but doing so in a wholly transparent, self-effacing and productive manner, with no shades whatsoever of sordid, petty, partisan political game-playing). So sharply in contrast with (the newfangled) Mr Corbyn, as you'll see in detail if you peruse the footnotes following.
But suffice for now - for those with a lesser attention span - to state on the record that my relative gripe with the Labour leader is (and has been for some considerable time now) his patent unwillingness to, quite simply, 'play the statesman'...thus 'besting', if you will, 'Messrs' Cameron and Johnson and 'Madame' May...because he rose above this petty partisan fray and took the moral high ground, in so doing winning the hearts of his fellow Brits (Scots, Northern Irish, Welsh and English).
But Corbyn has evidently long since abandoned any genuine attempt to do so - his 'negotiations' with Ms May coming over as a mere face-saving, do-as-little-as-possible-and-yet-look-as-though-you're doing-something-substantial-and-meaningful gesture for praise-eliciting media consumption. And as for his incessant attempts of recent days, weeks and months to scupper anything but a very narrowly-focussed Brexit (pretty much in name only), it's a sad reflection upon his apparent inability to distance himself from his ******native political instincts and 'seize the day' and opportunity - to be the man for the moment, as was ever his historic chance and even destiny (had he so chosen).
In so doing he could and would have kept faithful to his own longstanding Eurosceptic inclinations and yet rallied support of his fellow Brits to the great cause he could have truly championed as his own as well, had he so, and really, wished...-but as the saying goes...
I came to a fork in the road, and found two diverging tracks, and didn't take the road less travelled - and that has made all the difference...
*Just couldn't resist the purely intended pun...
**And who knows how long that will be, what with the innumerable obstacles and ongoing challenges - including of late serious legal ones - that have increasingly beleaguered and bedevilled Johnson as October 31st draws nigh.
***Yes, as ever I'm playing the devil's advocate, or perhaps more accurately I ever seek to portray the arguments or viewpoints of my ideological 'opponents' in their correct light; misrepresenting one's political 'enemies' being an increasingly evident and unpleasant characteristic of the modern Western 'culture wars' and the like - and certainly neither an endearing quality nor really all that helpful in seeking to have and to hold a well-informed debate upon any serious matter.
Then you may well question as to why I portray Jeremy Corbyn in such highly pejorative terms - especially as stated in my blogpost title? For this reason: although it's unrealistic for me to imagine or assume that anyone reading this latest post has read any let alone many far less all of the literal abundance of blogposts I've posted upon the topic of Brexit ever since - indeed well before - the fateful day of June 23rd, 2016, for equally obvious reasons it's likewise unrealistic for readers thereof to expect me to restate much less re-explain my own views vis-a-vis each of the various 'major players' involved each and every time I post an additional commentary upon the subject.
And so, believe me or otherwise, the very reason I use such strong, unflattering language in regards to the ****reasonably long-serving Labour Party leader is my deep disappointment in the man; from early on being over the moon with the completely unexpected choice of him as leader and scribbling a fairly glowing pre-blogpost thereabouts, which I somehow failed to post at the time, and, to my great frustration, I've never managed to thus far re-locate...
...to the settled conviction I've sustained over recent years - especially post-referendum - that he's really not a whole lot different from ye average politico (in Western lands, anyhow); talking a real good talk - 'saying all the right things' - whilst seeking to follow a narrow, ideologically-circumscribed and all too predictable, politically partisan agenda. Never rising to the honourable status of statesmanlike much less attaining to a position as a real statesman. Unlike, incidentally, Hilary Benn, the grandson (I believe) of that true and ever honourable leader - in all but name - of the British Left, Tony Benn.
****Especially and all the more so in light of his (well-known) 'pedigree' as easily the most left-of-centre - indeed left-wing - leader they've had in their modern history, the possible exception being Michael Foot in the early 1980s; with the consequent 'dissonance' within his party over whether he has the proper credentials to ever become U K Prime Minister (even were he to stand half a chance).
*****Such commonly-bandied about claims as that Johnson has somehow - in 'proroguing' Parliament - conducted some kind of a coup (d'etat) are patently laughable, were they not only so serious but also *******downright hypocritical.
******That is, his instinctual, politically partisan, tory-bashing attitude - not his longstanding Eurosceptic stance (which in my view was quite commendable, and had been his consistent stand).
*******Especially so coming from the likes of nineteen-nineties' Conservative Prime Minister John Major, who evidently used precisely this very political mechanism himself. For noble and uplifting purposes? Not on your life, but for el typical partisan political ends, apparently.
Friday the 13th: Part Two: The Broader Picture and Seismic Realignment of British Political Life in the age and wake of the historic Brexit referendum result
So where do we - or rather the Brits (English, Welsh, Scots, Northern Irish) - stand now (at this crucial, none-more-critical phase) as October 31st looms ever larger on the horizon?
Yes, the spectacle is one of the United Kingdom's Prime Minister being stymied - frustrated, thwarted, contradicted and opposed - at every turn as he seeks any and every which way to effect the very thing for which he - *perfectly understandably - feels and believes he (and his colleagues) have been mandated by his and their British compatriots with putting into effect...
So while the watching, wondering world witnesses the very best wishes and (in my view) honourable intentions of hardline brexiters (I happen to agree with) go askew and indeed literally fall apart left, right and especially centre, as the British P. M. sees some of his closest and/or most senior cabinet colleagues either bail out in disgust or be effectively shuffled out (upon his orders) then effectively cross the floor/resign en masse - deserting in droves - as they balk and hesitate and turn back at the dire prospect of Boris driving the islands over the cliff as he expedites the scenario of the United Kingdom leaving the European Union come October 31st - no ifs, buts or maybes considered...
...with no seeming way for that 'hard option' not to **hit the nation and Britons hard and mercilessly ...as the political class and commentariot - even the supposed 'old fogies' of the House of Lords - round upon Boris Johnson to deny him both a no-deal brexit as well as his 'do or die'/'die in a ditch' declaration of allowing - not - yet another extension to the never-ending European Union talks...
...what do we see when we look at her Majesty's ***loyal opposition? A good question indeed.
What with former prime ministers of both major parties - i.e. the Conservatives' John Major and Labour's Tony Blair and Gordon Brown - not only roundly, if not necessarily soundly, condemning Johnson's take-no-prisoners approach/(preparation for a) no deal scenario/ultimatum...and seeking, by whatever means they can, to do all in their power to stop him in his tracks from carrying out his determined purpose...
...meanwhile Labour - ****unlike the good ole *****Liberal Democrats - has trotted out a really principled and statesmanlike stance upon the same...
...which is what, precisely? Again, a really apt question...and so perhaps it's little wonder that while 'Bojo' appears increasingly abandoned by one and all and pretty well left to self-destruct...an electoral time-bomb which he himself has helped to detonate is going off in Labour's traditional heartland: Yorkshire evidently being a prime example.
In fact, it's apparent that in such longstanding bastions of 'Labourism', their traditional, most staunch and undying supporters are deserting them...
...not in mere dozens or even droves, but the trickle is rapidly crescendoing into a veritable stampede...as the 'people at the bottom' of the socio-economic heap look towards 'their' leaders - then over at Boris Johnson - then back at Corbyn & Co - then back at the P.M., and, without further ado, simply conclude: whereas Jeremy et al are promising anything and everything to everyone and anyone - and meanwhile doing whatever is in their own partisan political interests (to stymie not only BJ et al but moreover the express will of UK citizens in a certain referendum almost 3 years and 3 months ago)...
...the United Kingdom's new Prime Minister, however at times blundering and blustering, blubbering and blabbering, bluffing and/or 'bull.....ing..., is, nevertheless - and notwithstanding all the aforementioned - the real thing, the real deal, no man's debtor nor mere puppet-on-a-string...not only of his party's machine but of those 'mysterious men in dark corridors' in Brussels...
and I'd argue, even wager, that to most Britons - Welsh and English, anyhow, if not Scots and Irish - that matters a heckuva lot more than following a long-predetermined politically correct songsheet...
...and one, moreover, which - far from merely opposing the limited entry into the U K of certain ethnicities and nationalities who we are given to suppose really rile up half the people in the United Kingdom - many thoughtful souls believe holds a truly secretive agenda...whose specific program will only become completely clear and totally transparent in time to come...
...*********when the long-prophesied United States of Europe come into effective being...
*Or as I tongue-in-cheek expressed the matter when emailing RNZ National's First Up programme this morning after they reported on the newest phase in court rulings thereabouts...
Hey, what a demagogue, even unregenerate fascist that dude is - he's actually trying to effect the democratically-mandated will of the people!
...and a little later...
To put it in everyday lingo, Boris has the nerve to be doing the very thing that the people voted (elected him) for - the sheer cheek of the spectacle!
**Indeed, the latest 'yellow paper' issued today puts things in the direst terms...
***Certainly to themselves and their own partisan political interests.
****My use of that word 'unlike', as you'll gather here (and above) is of course entirely ironic: for - as with UKIP - the Liberal Democrats (and the Scottish National Party, anyway) all happen to be maintaining a principled - if not necessarily statesmanlike (in the latter two cases) - stance vis-a-vis Brexit; whether one tends to agree or disagree with the particular stance they happen to have adopted...
*****Whatever I happen to think of their anti-Brexit, pro-Bremain stance... Indeed, over the years and decades of closely following British politics they're the main party I've ever and always identified most closely with, this being, oddly enough, the one - major or otherwise - matter I've ever happened to disagree with them upon...
...whereas the selfsame matter of Europe was - coincidentally enough - the one, and quite possibly only, substantive subject upon which I - and incidentally, such longstanding luminaries of the British Left of yesteryear as Tony Benn and Bryan Gould - happened to agree with ******that old 'wicked witch of the West', Margaret Thatcher...
******As I can hear Smeagol-Gollum putting things (in an attempt to extricate himself from a hole he's dug himself into): "No, there's no bad feelings...none at all!" (i.e. towards long-serving and pivotal, however controversial Prime Minister Thatcher, in my so describing her).
I suppose it simply puts in a nutshell my own childish (though then in my *******late teens through mid-twenties) image of her while she ********'reigned'; and hence, when she died, the Wizard of Oz's wicked witches came instantly to mind - and moreover that song 'The Wicked Witch is dead'...much as Elton John's 'Candle in the Wind' did when Lady Diana Spencer died - and before I heard anyone publicly floating either of those memorable songs...as a means of commemoration.
*******Would Frodo, Samwise Gamgee et al have deemed that 'tweens'?
********'Reigned' seems an appropriate description/depiction of the 11-year tenure of the woman who - next to the three long-serving British queens - Elizabeth the First, Victoria and Elizabeth the Second - has without doubt been the major female figure bestriding (both recent and past) British history since it became a nation centuries, even millennia ago...
*********Believe in this long-held **********'conspiracy theory' or not, however for your interest it's an entity about which the name of long-serving U K P M Tony Blair has often - since his resignation in 2007/2008 - been closely associated/**********bandied about...so, indeed, the ***********"demon-eyed" 'New Labour' convert to Roman Catholicism might well yet have a role to play in last days events...though he might have to relocate to Ireland, say (in order of course to be eligible for election to the EU Parliament) in order to achieve it...
...though last I 'heard' (or understood on good biblical authority anyhow) there's another (far more) well-respected, highly influential individual presently bestriding the global stage in line for that particular post, and somehow I suspect he'll ultimately be a shoo-in...
...especially as final events move into virtual overdrive...and the world fervently, frantically seeks, even demands, a man of peace to bring some sort of solace to this war-wracked and weary world.
**********Actually, it's not a mere 'conspiracy theory' - which do indeed appear a veritable 'dime a dozen' these days - but a long, millennia-foretold scenario destined to ultimately pan out in the very final and most problematic moments of human history...as well-referenced in the Apocalypse, i.e. the biblical book of Revelation, chapter 17 especially...and note particularly verses 7 through 18; and most graphically in verses 12-14, 16-17.
*********(*)Just as the names of longtime leftwing kiwi politicians Jim Anderton and Helen Clark were themselves oftentimes discussed in certain circles as being potential future leaders of a one-world government...and certainly Ms Clark - New Zealand's long-serving and indeed three-term Prime Minister - eventually had a fair go at achieving something broadly approximating such, it could hardly be denied...
***********As one-time Labour Party M.P., former actress Glenda Jackson, then described him.