a million times a trillion more (
dolorosa_12) wrote2024-07-05 05:22 pm
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We'll be singing when we're winning
We left the house in the early, sun-drenched hours of the morning to cast our votes when the polls opened at 7am. Our polling station had a queue outside the door, which I hadn't seen in previous elections, and took to be a good sign. I wandered back around 8pm (with two hours remaining before polls closed), and the place was still doing a brisk trade, with a queue, and family groups of voters continuing to arrive on foot (often while walking the dog) or pulling up in cars. As I turned to walk home, I was followed all the way by a middle-aged couple who were talking earnestly about how they'd researched various tactical voting guides online in order to ensure they voted most effectively to remove our useless Conservative MP.
The other good — and hilarious — sign was that, at 10am when I went to buy groceries, Waitrose was already partly sold out of bottles of champagne and other types of sparkling wine. (Possibly the peakest of peak upper middle class sentences ever written.)
In the end, it wasn't even close. The exit poll at 10pm predicted the Labour landslide that all the previous surveys of voters had all anticipated, and I literally burst into tears of relief. And then we sat up, watching the coverage into the early hours of the morning, watching the losses roll in and Labour's lead grow. By the time Jacob Rees-Mogg and Liz Truss (the latter in the most ungracious manner imaginable) lost their seats, I was delirious with exhaustion, but glad I'd stayed up to witness it. We collapsed around 8am and fell asleep at last, just as my sister in Australia was texting me wanting to dissect the vote.
My tasks yesterday were to vote, to clean the bathrooms and toilets in our house, and to put out the garbage for collection.
The metaphors write themselves.
There will be time enough to handwring about the rise of the far right (which, to be clear, has translated into four or five seats and a second-place vote share elsewhere that while worrying, is something that can be neutralised by the new government if they are sufficiently focused and effective in policymaking that has recognisably positive concrete effects on people's lives). There will be time enough to start complaining that the current iteration of Labour is insufficiently left-wing for the tastes of its voting base. Right now, I don't want to hear it, and I particularly don't want to hear any sentiments along the lines of 'the lesser of two evils' or 'they're all the same': anyone who truly believes such things hasn't been living in this country for the past fifteen years.
That toxic sludge of a 'government,' that pack of grasping, petty, vindictive, narcissistic, unserious, malicious incompetents is gone. We have outlived them!
Let us have this moment of cathartic celebration. We voted for it, and we deserve it.
The other good — and hilarious — sign was that, at 10am when I went to buy groceries, Waitrose was already partly sold out of bottles of champagne and other types of sparkling wine. (Possibly the peakest of peak upper middle class sentences ever written.)
In the end, it wasn't even close. The exit poll at 10pm predicted the Labour landslide that all the previous surveys of voters had all anticipated, and I literally burst into tears of relief. And then we sat up, watching the coverage into the early hours of the morning, watching the losses roll in and Labour's lead grow. By the time Jacob Rees-Mogg and Liz Truss (the latter in the most ungracious manner imaginable) lost their seats, I was delirious with exhaustion, but glad I'd stayed up to witness it. We collapsed around 8am and fell asleep at last, just as my sister in Australia was texting me wanting to dissect the vote.
My tasks yesterday were to vote, to clean the bathrooms and toilets in our house, and to put out the garbage for collection.
The metaphors write themselves.
There will be time enough to handwring about the rise of the far right (which, to be clear, has translated into four or five seats and a second-place vote share elsewhere that while worrying, is something that can be neutralised by the new government if they are sufficiently focused and effective in policymaking that has recognisably positive concrete effects on people's lives). There will be time enough to start complaining that the current iteration of Labour is insufficiently left-wing for the tastes of its voting base. Right now, I don't want to hear it, and I particularly don't want to hear any sentiments along the lines of 'the lesser of two evils' or 'they're all the same': anyone who truly believes such things hasn't been living in this country for the past fifteen years.
That toxic sludge of a 'government,' that pack of grasping, petty, vindictive, narcissistic, unserious, malicious incompetents is gone. We have outlived them!
Let us have this moment of cathartic celebration. We voted for it, and we deserve it.
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Hell yes!
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Possibly the peakest of peak upper middle class sentences ever written.
I dunno, getting my alcohol-free prosecco in the Ocado delivery probably is a close contender!
It's so refreshing, having cabinet ministers announced and not thinking what a pile of chancers and incompetents they are. I remember Yvette Cooper and David Lammy from last time around! I didn't always agree with them but they are a huge improvement on the people they're replacing.
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Ha!
I totally agree with what you're saying about the cabinet ministers. I was saying something similar on Facebook when discussing this with a friend — that listening to Starmer speak, and watching the members of the shadow cabinet smoothly transition into the equivalent ministerial positions with no fuss, no drama, and no vicious internal feuding felt like a weight being lifted from my shoulders. Quiet, professional competence should be the baseline, expected norm, but our political life has been so debased by the depths to which the previous government dragged us that our expectations for political behaviour are in a crater on the ocean floor.
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I'm an ex-Cambridge scholar and last week I was visiting some old friends in Ely and East Cambridgeshire and had the chance to inform them of the best tactical voting option for the constituency (they were planning to vote Labour and hadn't realised the Lib Dems stood a better chance), so I feel glad to have played a small part in that victory, even though my gerrymandered safe Tory seat stayed Tory.
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You're extremely welcome — the post was written in response to seeing similar sentiments, including on non-Dreamwidth social media feeds. I felt could you not even let us feel relieved celebration for a single day without starting with the doom and despair? and this post is the result. As a friend pointed out elsewhere, with this change of government, we have in an instant consigned the Rwanda deportation scheme to the garbage bin, and we have a government in office that doesn't want to scrap the Human Rights Act. That, alone, makes an immediate, material difference to some of the most vulnerable people living in this country, and anyone who refuses to acknowledge this is refusing to accept reality.
I'm an ex-Cambridge scholar and last week I was visiting some old friends in Ely and East Cambridgeshire and had the chance to inform them of the best tactical voting option for the constituency (they were planning to vote Labour and hadn't realised the Lib Dems stood a better chance), so I feel glad to have played a small part in that victory
Thanks for your efforts in this regard! I was arguing with myself in my head all the way to the polling station and right until I got to the voting booth, trying to convince myself to do the right thing and vote tactically (even though that would mean voting with my head and not my heart). In the end, the thing that managed to convince me was the prospect of waking up the next day and seeing that the Conservative MP had clung on with a majority of a small handful of votes, when I could have done something with my vote to prevent that — and so I did. It's rare in the UK for me to feel like my vote actually contributed to genuine change. Sorry to hear about your seat though.
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Second of all: Waitrose was already partly sold out of bottles of champagne and other types of sparkling wine. If you don't get the opportunity to put this line in a historical novel someday, it will be a waste!
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And thank you.
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I particularly don't want to hear any sentiments along the lines of 'the lesser of two evils' or 'they're all the same': anyone who truly believes such things hasn't been living in this country for the past fifteen years.
Completely agree. The now thankfully former MP for my area had campaign leaflets consisting of demonizing immigrants and how he wanted to fight back against "woke ideology" and that's only scratching the surface of how terrible he is. Labour, for all their faults, are nowhere near as awful.
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As an immigrant myself, it has been incredibly psychologically damaging to have to live for nine years (they weren't really as bad about this under the coalition years) with a government that just constantly demonised immigration, legal or undocumented, as something inherently damaging and suspicious and talked about immigrants as this group of thieves and parasites depleting available public service resources and 'stealing' citizens' jobs. It wears you down, because it makes this discourse become the acceptable norm. I am hoping — given the scale of Labour's majority, and the fact that their votes have come from the left to the centre right — they don't have the same constant fear of being outflanked on the right by Farage and his gang, and don't feel the need to pander to such sentiments. Apart from anything else, competent centrist-to-centre-left government policymaking should hopefully lead to visible, tangible concrete changes to people's lives that make them less susceptible to blaming immigrants for everything broken in the country, and leech out a lot of poison from this kind of rhetoric.
And congratulations on your new MP!
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Also re: 5 far-right seats, could have been so much more worse oh boy.
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And yes, there are some worrying signs with the far right, and we can't afford to be complacent, but they're not exactly at the gates of power right now, and people should stop pre-emptively despairing and instead think about what they can do in the next five years to prevent them from gaining more of a foothold.
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So much this! Other than losing my glasses on the way to the polling station, I have no regrets.
Actually, as a Labour member who sits further to the left than the party currently is and who sees that they had to be pragmatic in the face of ridiculously hostile media, I found that a tactical vote for the Lib Dems suited my conscience nicely. I look forward to writing our new MP a lot of letters. It would have been nice to have them the official opposition to keep Labour honest, but if they weren't going to do amazingly better than expected (as opposed to quite a lot better than expected!) that would have had to mean more Reform MPs and nobody wants that.
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I'm an Australian immigrant to the UK, and we have a similar political system — parliamentary democracy, two main (centre-left and centre-right) parties with other smaller parties, same toxic Murdoch press and social media disinformation. There are some quirks of the system — compulsory voting, alternative vote rather than first past the post, smaller number of parliamentary seats — plus sociocultural factors that make it a bit different to the UK, but essentially it's broadly similar. In 2019, we had a general election in very similar circumstances to now: unpopular conservative government which had been in power for a long time, lots of toxic infighting which had led them to change their leader/the Prime Minister multiple times without an election, a Labor government which was assumed to be a foregone conclusion based on opinion polls. The then-Labor (in Australia it's spelt without the U when it's the political party, although the verb/noun is spelt the UK way) leader took his party to the election with a fully costed, detailed set of policies that they intended to implement. And then the conservative government, their cheerleaders in the Murdoch tabloids, and anonymous social media accounts seized on one policy in this manifesto, and fearmongered their way through the whole election campaign in such a way that Labor lost the unloseable election.
The lesson that Labo(u)r parties around the world have learnt from that is to be as vague as possible in opposition when contesting election campaign — no bold, detailed policy proposals, nothing that could paint a target on your back. Just talk vaguely about change, point to the chaos, constant lies, and lack of integrity of the government, and step gingerly towards an election victory. That's what Labor did the next time around in Australia (in 2022) and won, and it's obviously what Starmer did here. It's infuriating for their voting base who want a bit more social democracy, but I'd rather have them play that game (and even be a bit more centrist than I am) and win office than be ideologically pure social democrats and spend every election campaign as the punching bag of the Murdoch tabloids, and lose.
I was arguing with myself all the way to the polling station to talk myself into voting tactically — which would mean voting with my head and not my heart — and what swung it for me was the prospect of waking up on Friday and finding out that our incumbent Tory MP had retained her seat by a handful of votes. There was something I could do to stop that, and so I did. As you say, I'm feeling quite good about that too, and I have a long letter planned as the first of many I hope to send to our new MP!
Sorry you lost your glasses, though!
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The fact that it happened at 5am after zero hours of sleep on my part just increased the surreal nature of the whole situation. And that's not getting into the fact that Jacob Rees-Mogg lost his seat while standing next to a man in a baked bean print balaclava, and the whole thing with Liz Truss.
I am ecstatic.
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