Monday 17 August 2015

Managed Democracy

Politicians of all main parties dribble on continuously about "voter apathy"; about "engaging people"; and about how terribly regrettable it is that so many "can't be bothered to go out and vote". They wring their hands and slowly shake their heads in disbelief and disappointment. What utter nonsense! They don't want 'involvement'; they don't want 'engagement'; and nor do they want people to be 'enthused'. Or at least, only if those same people are 'involved'; 'engaged'; and 'enthused' with them and their cause. They don't want democracy - they want what Sheldon Wolin calls "Managed Democracy". 

Look only to Scotland and the sheer panic that the Establishment displayed when it looked as if they might not be able to manage the independence vote last September. Running around like headless chickens trying to convince people by fair means or foul to vote for the status quo. A status quo that favours only them and no others. A status quo that has, for generations, been maintained by "apathy", by "disengagement"; and by lack of "involvement". The supporters of independence may well have lost the vote but they showed the way.

And so the same is happening all over again with Jeremy Corbyn. As soon as there was even a sniff of a chance he would be elected Leader the Labour Party Establishment big guns came out and started lobbing shells at him and his ideas. The falling Labour Party membership, so long bemoaned and whinged about by Labour Party members and Labour Party Parliamentary politicians alike has increased by (just about) three fold. But rather than being excited and happy about this they see it as a curse from the gods. In fact it seems all those recently joined are "entryists" (whatever the hell that means) and/or "Trotskyists" and/or subversive "hard left extremists" when actually it's all about not being able to control this new democratic upsurge and turn it to their advantage. They want the status quo to remain. They are Emperors ruling an Empire they infiltrated and eventually took over some twenty five years ago. It is they that are the "entryists" not those that want the Labour Party back or those who are joining because Jeremy Corbyn offers hope. A commodity in very short supply for many a year as far as being on offer from the Labour Party. 

Democracy can be very inconvenient but it is still democracy. The irony is that it was the right wing of the Labour Party that instigated this new 'democratic system' in the first place. "Be careful of what you ask for because you may get it." They wanted it - they got it - they don't want it. And they don't want it because they can't control it.

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