Scottish Daily Mail

Blurring of boundaries between politics and showbiz serves none of us well

- Grant GRAHAM

KEIR Hardie, t he founder of the Labour Party, once wrote that ‘socialism proposes to dethrone the brute-god Mammon’.

One wonders what he would have made of Kezia Dugdale, former Scottish Labour leader, and her bid to recast herself as a reality TV star.

She is donating her salary for the duration of her appearance on ITV’s ‘I’m A Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here!’ to charity.

But she will keep part of the hefty fee she is expected to earn – ‘less than six figures’, we are told. So much for Mammon, who remains firmly on his jungle throne…

Richard Leonard, Miss Dugdale’s newly elected successor, has revealed she did not get permission from the party for the jaunt to Australia and s he may f ace suspension.

It seems she was less than forthcomin­g about the reasons for her Antipodean trip when she spoke to Mr Leonard and Anas Sarwar, his l eadership rival, merely telling them she was travelling abroad for charity work.

Well, it can be tough to get by on a salary of only £61,778, and as Miss Dugdale is a list MSP, she doesn’t have any constituen­ts as such, so her colleagues can take up the strain while she’s away.

Of course, she can also educate the public by chatting about politics in the jungle – after all, it’s a show that is well-known for highminded political discussion, amid lingering shots of shapelier contestant­s showering in a waterfall (what will strident feminist Miss Dugdale make of those?)

Cack-handed

Producers are sure to include as much footage as possible of the former Labour supremo defending plans for a smacking ban, as she did in a rather cack-handed way in a recent edition of Question Time.

‘We are not banning smacking – your kitchen is not going to be raided by police because you pulled your kid away from a hot pan and tapped them on the bum,’ she said, despite the fact that the Greens’ Bill, backed by the SNP, does indeed propose a ban on smacking.

Her choice of the word ‘we’ was also instructiv­e: plans for the ban have been instigated by Green MSP John Finnie and the SNP has said it won’t oppose them.

Perhaps Miss Dugdale is pondering a switch to the party of her partner – Nationalis­t MSP Jenny Gilruth – when she emerges from the jungle. Loyally, Miss Gilruth has come to Miss Dugdale’s defence, tweeting: ‘I see Scottish Labour have developed their own unique take on the final day of #AntiBullyi­ngWeek. Huge props, comrades! #TeamKez.’

On the SNP benches, Miss Dugdale may find her intellectu­al match – Miss Gilruth once spoke passionate­ly in favour of the SNP’s chaotic Named Person scheme, insisting it wouldn’t create extra work for teachers.

Last month, the EIS teaching union warned it had‘ growing concern’ about the‘ viability’ of the state guardian initiative.

With such a fumbling grasp of the basics of these fundamenta­l policies, the duo of Miss Dugdale and Miss Gilruth may well prove unstoppabl­e.

Nicola Sturgeon also showed her support for Miss Dugdale by tweeting ‘#TeamKez’ after tuning into the show for the first time on Sunday, and overall the SNP’s reaction has been markedly warmer than the reception from her own party.

Corbynite Neil Findlay has said – quite rightly – that Miss Dugdale’s decision to take part in the programme is ‘utterly ludicrous’ and that it ‘de means politics when people get involved in that’.

It hasn’t occurred to some of Miss Dugdale’s supporters that the SNP’s backing may not be all it seems – as Napoleon said, ‘never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake’.

Miss Dugdale’s most memorable contributi­on to the Labour movement was sending the party into third place behind the Tories at the last Holyrood election, a feat hitherto seen as verging on the impossible.

It must have been simply bad timing that caused news of Miss Dugdale’s jungle break to overshadow the announceme­nt of Mr Leonard’s triumph in the gruelling contest to replace her.

Mr Leonard himself appears deeply uncomforta­ble with her decision to head Down Under – though the interventi­on of his master Jeremy Corbyn, who has backed Miss Dugdale, may well save her from suspension.

It may be that Miss Dugdale has taken her inspiratio­n from Alex Salmond, who also turned to showbiz after he was ousted at the snap election in June – first with an Edinburgh Fringe production and now as the host of his own chat show on Kremlin-backed RT, formerly Russia Today.

But there are some cautionary tales for Miss Dugdale from the history of reality TV: remember George Galloway’s turn on Celebrity Big Brother while he was an MP?

Credibilit­y

The spectacle of the Honourable Member for Bethnal Green and Bow pretending to be a cat licking cream from the hand of actress Rula Lenska – ‘Would you like me to be the cat?’ – dealt a blow to his credibilit­y from which he has arguably never recovered.

He also sported a red leotard on the show, and as a result of his participat­ion missed a series of votes in t he Commons.

Former Scottish Socialist MSP Tommy Sheridan took part in the same show after being charged with perjury.

But is this the example Miss Dugdale really wants to follow – joining the ranks of the washed-up and the disgraced on trashy TV? In 2012, Tory MP Nadine Dorries lasted only 12 days in the jungle but faced similar accusation­s that she had abandoned her voters. She was also the subject of parliament­ary scrutiny for months afterwards and was forced to apologise for failing to declare the fee she earned for appearing.

It is true that in Donald Trump we have a US President who owes his position, at least in part, to his role hosting (not taking part in) The Apprentice, another reality TV show; the boundaries between showbiz and politics are blurring.

Voters are also long accustomed to parliament­arians chasing the limelight – it’s more fun than the l owerprofil­e business of dealing with the conveyor belt of constituen­ts’ gripes.

But they know that public service shouldn’t be about the pursuit of fame, or cash, even i f many of us have given up hope that the rotten political system i s capable of redemption after the expenses and sex scandals of recent years.

Is it any wonder that one of our elected representa­tives, emerging from this unedifying milieu, should display such blatant contempt f or the electorate?

Quite what Miss Dugdale makes of the row is anyone’s guess – she’s under contract to ITV and can’t comment.

Hardie, in all l i kelihood, would have regarded her escape from the bitter cold of the Scottish winter to embrace the ‘brute-god Mammon’ not only as politicall­y dim-witted but also as morally wrong.

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