The Guardian (USA)

Michael Gove’s love of Stormzy is not to be sniffed at

- Stewart Lee

Many years ago, while wearing a Navajo jacket, I was accused of cultural appropriat­ion. I told the zealot harassing me the jacket was a gift from a Native American shaman-clown, under whom I had studied. She backed down, humiliated, like Major General Arthur St Clair before the forces of Little Turtle and the Potawatomi, at the Battle of a Thousand Slain, on 4 November 1791.

My accuser and I began a short but tempestuou­s relationsh­ip, based on the thrill of committing ever more offensive ideologica­l thought crimes. One sick night, I imagined a public library with deliberate­ly inadequate disabled access, while she made a scale model of a unisex toilet and then vandalised it. Within weeks, our imaginary atrocities exhausted, our twisted affair ended. But I realised there may have been some truth in my ex-lover’s accusation­s of cultural insensitiv­ity. Luckily, I still had the receipt for the jacket and so I returned the racist garment to Camden market, where I had bought it while shopping drunk months earlier.

The idea of “cultural appropriat­ion” is a minefield, especially in the “political correctnes­s gone mad” times that we live in now, in today’s “politicall­y correct” world of “so-called” “political correctnes­s” “gone mad”. But I don’t doubt for a moment that Michael Gove’s decision to quote the rap singer Stormzy in a tweet on Tuesday was without malice. If Gove isn’t a Stormzy fan how would the blotchy foundling know that the rapper’s hit Shut Up included the phrase “I set the trends dem man copy ”? Daniel Han nana nana nana na nan’ s decision to reply to Gove’s tweet with the emphatic urban phrase “Big man ting!” is less easy to justify. As the words do not relate to a specific Stormzy lyric, one can only assume Hanna nan ana nan ana nan thought them appropriat­e simply because Stormzy is black.

It would be interestin­g to see if Hanna nan ana nan ana nan felt comfortabl­e saying“Big man ting !” in person to a black person – Sir Trevor McDonald, Lizzo, Anthony Braxton, or Michelle Obama for example – while explaining his views on Brexit. “Absolutely nobody is talking about threatenin­g our position in the single market. Big man ting!” In short, would a “Big man ting” in the mouth of Daniel Hanna nan ana nan ana nan seem uncomforta­ble, or would it be a perfect fit, as if it had always belonged there?

In the interests of full disclosure I must confess that I sing some Stormzy in my current show, Snowflake/Tornado. A line from Crown, “heavy is the head that wears the crown”, helps the audience understand the pressures I have faced since the Timesdecla­red me the “world’s greatest living standup”. But no one has suggested that I am racist quoting Stormzy, perhaps because I do not work for a man who has called black people “picaninnie­s” with “watermelon smiles”.

Minds immeasurab­ly superior to mine have suggested that Gove’s controvers­y-generating tweet was manufactur­ed on his behalf by culturally savvy Conservati­ve content providers, primed to cause plausible online distractio­ns while dog-whistling to the coveted Arsehole Vote, historical­ly a key part of any Tory victory.

But Dominic Tosser Raab explained last week he thinks “people don’t give a … er … toss about social media”, which is why his party doesn’t spend money on re-editing news footage to smear their opponents online. Except that it does. Never mind. Tosser is probably confused, like when he didn’t know the difference between sea and land. And anyway, if the Conservati­ves wanted to woo arseholes, they could just let Jacob Rees-Mogg open his mouth, instead of hiding him on a remote Somerset fen, like the flesh-eating recluse played by Don Henderson in The Ghoul (Freddie Francis, 1975), who said his hitchhiker victims deserved to be cooked and eaten because they lacked the common sense to not be cooked and eaten.

It is likely that Gove, however, feels a genuine connection to Stormzy. Both men, for example, have been accused of using class A drugs, a charge Stormzy denies. But a young black man accused of class A usage would face the full force of the law, whereas an elderly white Conservati­ve politician like Gove can admit to having snuffled as much cocaine as he likes and the offence is soon forgotten. Least said soonest mended, I always say. Gove was further traduced for saying Stormzy, who supported the Grenfell fire victims and funds scholarshi­ps to Cambridge University, should leave politics alone because he is “a far, far better rapper than he is a political analyst”. Black people, it seems, need to carry on singing and dancing for their masters and leave the thinking to big brains like Michael Gove.

But is this interpreta­tion of Gove’s words unfair? What if Gove is such a Stormzy fan that he is afraid he will lose his idol from music to politics, and then there will be no more of the rap music that he loves? Is Gove trying to put Stormzy back in the black box simply because he loves him too much?

If the online comment sewer is flowing beneath this piece this week, doubtless readers will ask why this column isn’t questionin­g the Labour party’s ongoing open-goal antisemiti­sm shambles. This is a legitimate criticism, except that we have the entire rest of the media to ask that question repeatedly while, as usual, the Conservati­ves’ relentless top-down racism remains relatively unexamined.

It’s a startling fact that 25% of the prison population is from a BAME back

ground, whereas none of it is from parliament, perhaps due to the unequal systems of punishment Gove’s nonconvict­ion proves are in play. Had Gove been imprisoned for his drug offences, as he should have been, his fluency in urban slang would have been a great asset inside. “Ah! Stop it!! It hurts!!! My haggis nozzle !!!! Big man ting !!!!! ”

Extra London dates of Stewart Lee’s latest live show, Snowflake/Tornado, have just been announced at the South Bank Centre in June and July, and ittours nationally from January

 ??  ?? Illustrati­on by David Foldvari.
Illustrati­on by David Foldvari.

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