We'll be singing when we're winning
Jul. 5th, 2024 05:22 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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.
no subject
Date: 2024-07-06 07:59 pm (UTC)I have to imagine that he would have been better at handling the pandemic than Boris Johnson, but I think when it comes to every single other major challenge of the past decade, he proved himself incapable to the task, or would have been actively harmful if he'd been in power (in the case of the UK's response to the fullscale invasion of Ukraine). And, as I say, he is unelectable as a Labour leader seeking to lead a government: capable of electrifying the Labour base and piling on votes in constituencies in London, other big cities, and university towns, but completely unable to broaden his appeal to build a broad voting coalition in a big enough number of seats to actually get him elected. His supporters have rewritten reality so that the elections of 2017 and 2019 — which, let's not forget, he lost — are somehow staggering vindications not just for left-wing policies, but for Corbyn personally because they 'went to the election with the most progressive Labour manifesto ever' and got a really high percentage of votes (clustered in a small enough number of constituencies for it not to matter).
Anyway, these people have made Corbyn their whole personality, and I'd rather spend this post celebrating what we have — which, let's be clear, is a miraculous and staggering electoral comeback by the Labour Party after they were consigned to oblivion in 2019 (to the point that I thought it would take two or three electoral cycles before they would return to office) — so I will stop ranting about him.
no subject
Date: 2024-07-06 08:18 pm (UTC)