The Pak Banker

Blighted Britain

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The notion that Britain’s royal family represents the superglue that keeps the kingdom united is a gross exaggerati­on, but the House of Windsor can be relied upon to provide a useful distractio­n every now and then.

Amid a wide range of alarming political and economic trends, a substantia­l proportion of the media’s feeding frenzy has been focused on a photoshopp­ed image of the Princess of Wales with her three children.

For what it’s worth, the officially released photograph was in the first place a response to weeks of speculatio­n about Princess Kate’s well-being, alongside the thousands of words devoted to the king’s health concerns.

Prostate exams, let alone allegation­s of paedophili­a, such as those unconvinci­ngly denied by Prince Andrew, is probably not what Walter Bagehot imagined when, more than 150 years ago, he identified the monarchy as the ‘dignified’ part of Britain’s political structure. But then, Bagehot also referred to cabinet government as the ‘efficient’ part of the political establishm­ent.

Efficiency has hardly been a hallmark of British governance for most of this century. And while the Thatcher regime could indeed be efficient, it is rightly remembered for its ruthless brutality, best exemplifie­d by its response to the miners’ strike 40 years ago, in which all the coercive arms of the state joined forces to crush the challenge to the economic status quo.

It took decades for the union movement to find its feet again, and for the purportedl­y progressiv­e mainstream party to recover from its ‘New Labour’ incarnatio­n under Tony Blair, which Margaret Thatcher recalled as her greatest achievemen­t, apart from anointing Blair as her favourite heir.

Even though New Labour’s devotion to neoliberal­ism depleted

its vote share, it remained in power until Blair’s decision to back the Bush war in Iraq, followed by Gordon Brown’s dedication to rescuing banks and financiers in the wake of the global financial crisis, marginally shifted the dial.

David Cameron stepped into the breach on behalf of the Tories, armed with ‘austerity’ and a plan for a referendum on EU membership. Both backfired, paving the way for Theresa May, Boris Johnson (whose epicurean tendencies fed his epic tendencies towards incompeten­ce), Liz Truss (who avoided offering even the vaguest impression of efficiency), and, finally, Rishi Sunak.

The incumbent PM’s strategy for limiting the extent of the Conservati­ve wipeout evidently involves tacking further to the right.

That’s partly a response to born-again New Labour under Keir Starmer reclaiming the centre-right ground and sidelining the party’s left wing, often via suspension or expulsion, by taking a sledgehamm­er to almost every mildly progressiv­e Labour platform in the interests of demonstrat­ing a fealty to markets, the captains of industry, and conservati­ve values.

Starmer’s predecesso­r as opposition leader was dislodged via a campaign spearheade­d by the Israeli embassy in London and reinforced by local Zionist groups, the media, plus the Tories and much of the parliament­ary Labour Party. Jeremy Corbyn was elected by Labour’s membership (twice) because the innate decency and principled politics reflected in his long record seemed like a novelty.

That record included resistance to racism in any form.

The smear of antisemiti­sm ought to have been dismissed as absurd, it was clearly a vicious reaction to Corbyn consistent­ly defending the Palestinia­n cause as part of his broader commitment to human rights. Even the tiniest likelihood of a British PM who might refuse to worship at the altar of Israeli supremacy was anathema to the Zionists and their acolytes.

Starmer effectivel­y played the role of a snake in the grass, and now doesn’t dare offer any pronouncem­ents on the Gaza genocide without checking with the Israeli authoritie­s. That includes the deviously achieved recent parliament­ary resolution on a ‘humanitari­an ceasefire’, which translates as a brief interval in the deadly proceeding­s. After all, ceasefires are humanitari­an by definition.

Anyhow, the change in government that will follow whenever Sunak takes a break from redefining ‘extremism’ as chiefly a left-wing, Muslim or ‘woke’ problem to announce the next election won’t alter Britain’s political landscape much. Growing poverty, hunger and homelessne­ss, plus alarming degrees of alienation and racism, cannot be resolved via marginally superior management skills.

 ?? ?? It took decades for the union
movement to find its feet again, and for the purportedl­y progressiv­e mainstream party
to recover from its ‘New Labour’ incarnatio­n under Tony Blair, which Margaret
Thatcher recalled as her greatest achievemen­t, apart from anointing Blair as her
favourite heir.
It took decades for the union movement to find its feet again, and for the purportedl­y progressiv­e mainstream party to recover from its ‘New Labour’ incarnatio­n under Tony Blair, which Margaret Thatcher recalled as her greatest achievemen­t, apart from anointing Blair as her favourite heir.

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