Championship record
Nov. 13th, 2010 08:25 amIn the race between the three main parties at who can be the slimiest and most unprincipled, the LibDems have taken what seems so far an unassailable lead. It has been revealed that, two months before they went to the polls on a written pledge from every candidate to oppose university tuition fees, the LibDem leadership already regarded such pledges as worthless in the event of a coalition government. As a coalition government was the only likely way for the LibDems to enter government, this means that the LibDems offered written pledges to their electorate that they knew to be worthless. This is championship standard stuff, well ahead of Cameron's "cast-iron promise" with the built-in rust and miles beyond Gordon Brown's attempt to blame anyone but himself for his own choices.
no subject
Date: 2010-11-14 12:14 am (UTC)I suppose that honestly I simply don't think of what politicians say - and especially in the context of an election campaign - to be in that category. As I said, I would feel disappointed and aggrieved if a party's actions in power bore *no* relation to what they had laid out in a manifesto, but I just don't think of any particular point in a manifesto or specific pre-election pledge as being a statement of the witness statement/promising-my-toddler-sort. I don't think that makes the vagaries of political speech and our interpretations and expectations of it uninteresting - far from it; it does (for me) make the Lib Dem U-turn on tuition fees pretty unremarkable.
no subject
Date: 2010-11-14 01:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-11-14 11:15 pm (UTC)That's been my position for years. Nobody over here seems to agree with me, though. I just keep getting told I'm being unrealistic or the like.
Principle means less to the electorate because it means to little to both the political ruling class and much of the press. I am reminded of the statement: "We get the government we deserve." That makes we wonder why I live here.
no subject
Date: 2010-11-15 04:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-11-15 04:36 am (UTC)Two mon. ths later...
Date: 2011-01-27 08:25 pm (UTC)Re: Two mon. ths later...
Date: 2011-01-27 09:25 pm (UTC)I didn't vote for them so I don't feel personally let down by them. But I find the political and psychological mechanics of the coalition fascinating in practice.
Re: Two mon. ths later...
Date: 2011-01-28 05:12 am (UTC)Re: Two mon. ths later...
Date: 2011-01-28 05:26 am (UTC)