The Scotsman

Bill Jamieson: ‘Is any party safe from the grip of jokers and clowns?’

The rise of comedians and celebritie­s is a damnning indictment of the state of democracy, writes Bill Jamieson

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Has there ever been a time such as this? Is any mainstream political party or leadership safe from the onward march of jokers, clowns and comic populists?

Consider the extraordin­ary triumph in Ukraine – a previously serious country – of the comedian Volodymyr Zelenskiy. He has just taken more than 70 per cent of the popular vote in a landslide victory. Even allowing for the bizarre particular­ities of Ukrainian politics, this is going some.

Mr Zelenskiy is an actor and comedian. He recently starred in a television show playing a teacher unexpected­ly elected to the presidency. It is akin to Billy Connolly being swept to office as first minister, or Frankie Boyle leading the SNP at Westminste­r (indeed, if they were contenders for these positions in a poll tomorrow, they might not fare at all badly).

The Ukraine result is far from exceptiona­l. Around the world, rank outsiders – populist figures with no experience of government – find themselves being swept into office. Donald Trump was well known as a businessma­n and TV show host before he entered the race for the US presidency. Few rated his chances in politics at the time. In Italy, Beppe Grillo, founder of the Five Star Movement, was a satirist and comic. His party is now in the ruling coalition. Outsiders are now in, and insiders on the way out.

The consensus explanatio­n is that electorate­s are heartily sick of being promised actions and reforms by establishm­ent politician­s who subsequent­ly fail to deliver. Social media has added mightily to the boiling bile of scorn and contempt. When all else fails, “send for the clowns” seems to be the populist response.

In a milder variant of these volcanic eruptions, the rank outsider Emmanuel Macron in France was swept into the presidency by virtue of being a non-establishm­ent figure. And here in the UK, the political running on the Right is being made by Boris Johnson, widely regarded as a homegrown version of the Clown Tendency. Internal Conservati­ve Party opinion polls put him firmly in the lead as the successor

to Prime Minister Theresa May. His prospects are being buttressed by former Ukip leader Nigel Farage, the saloon-bar comeback kid whose Brexit Party, now supported by Celebrity Big Brother contestant Anne Widdicombe, is set to sweep all before it across England and Wales in the European elections next month.

Anyone predicting all this three years ago would have been dismissed as a lunatic. But here we are. Can convention­al mainstream politics recover? Or is it, as I believe, game over for the world as was?

Of all the current manifestat­ions of populism, it is the UK that is arguably the least surprising and readily explicable. Three years of Brexit gridlock and the robotic utterances of Mrs May have worked to reduce large sections of the population to a state of catatonic exasperati­on. Within the normally ferociousl­y loyal ranks of the Conservati­ve Party membership, rebellions are mounting and calls for change widely supported. This may be the UK’S oldest political party, well-practiced in the arts of recovery and re-invention. But the damage today looks beyond repair. Back

in February, internal party polls already showed support for the Prime Minister at a miserable minus 41.8. But since then even these numbers have plunged off a cliff, collapsing to minus 73.5 this month. Pundits have scoured the archives and cannot find a worse rating accorded to any Conservati­ve leader. By contrast, Mr Johnson has extended his poll lead over nearest rival Dominic Raab by seven percentage points to 46.19 per cent.

“Interestin­g but meaningles­s” may be the widespread response. Mrs May shows no sign of quitting. Mechanisms for her replacemen­t have yet to be agreed. And there is a marked lack of appetite for contenders to come forward in the face of a likely annihilati­on for the party in the local and Euro elections. Remain supporters are ruled out for the successors­hip. Equally, vocal Brexiteers would be unlikely to gain broad, middle-ground support. But Mr Johnson, Marmite though he may be in terms of appeal, is a unique brand, with a distinctly populist touch that twice secured him victory in the London mayoral elections against earnest, hard-left

Labour opponents. In the wider context, changes in the political culture make a return to status quo ante unlikely. It is not just that voters wish to be rid of the all-toofamilia­r faces in the Conservati­ve Cabinet.

They are susceptibl­e to entertain easylookin­g, bite-sized radical solutions that can seize the moment on Twitter and Facebook. Even reasoned campaigns for policies to combat climate change can fall victim to clown-like extremes. The rise of Extinction Rebellion is not a convention­al political force but in its unrealisti­c and impractica­l demands has all the characteri­stics of a religious cult.

In the meantime, mainstream politician­s, both here and across Europe, view the forthcomin­g European elections and the ascendancy of the populists with outright alarm.

They are set to mark a new high-water mark for the outsiders and populists. Once easily dismissed as jokers and clowns, their rise is a damning verdict on the failures of the establishe­d order – and the challenge they pose nothing but deadly serious.

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