All good things must come to an end

I’ve been blogging here for a year now* and before that I spent four years on a similarly titled blog making a total of five years I’ve spent blogging.

Five years is a fair length of time and I think I’ve done my stint. When I started blogging there were few political blogs and even fewer left political blogs and even fewer left political blogs without rubbish politics. Now there are loads and I don’t have the time necessary to regularly post material here. Writing stuff every couple of weeks isn’t really worth the effort, particularly if you actually want people to read it.

As regular readers over the last few years will have noticed the topics I’ve covered here tend to be small in number and I reckon if I say much more on many of them all I will be doing is repeating myself even if I do think much of what is said here could do with repetition.

So I’m calling time on this blog and announcing my retirement. You heard it here first.

I’ve enjoyed writing a blog and the many charming people I’ve encountered from right across the political spectrum in that time.

A happy new year to all most of my readers, thanks to all of you who’ve stuck around over the years.

*As an aside, check out the predictions for 2009 in the first post on this blog, not bad eh?

Update: Following an offer I couldn’t refuse in the comments below, I’ll be blogging infrequently over at the excellent Though Cowards Flinch. A clear case of blog liquidationism.

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The centre cannot hold

Some weeks ago, via Bob, I found that someone’s taken the time to produce an interesting review of this blog on politics.co.uk (even if they did give it 5/10!):

From the photo of the Helvellyn range which sweeps across his blog, Duncan clearly likes to get away from it all, which is rather apt.

For the politics of Duncan’s world is a socialist vs BNP battle for supremacy, with the middle ground rather cut out.

This is opinionated, gritty politics with a northern perspective.

Good on strikes, very good on fighting fascism.

I think the above is a fair comment and I’m impressed that the reviewer, whoever they are, recognised the Helvellyn range in the picture above.

I never set out to provide a comprehensive political blog, mainly because I find what passes for mainstream politics terminally tedious, endless bickering over soundbites, outrage over non-events (who is Damien McBride anyway?) frantically consumed by denizens of the Westminster bubble and little in the way of substantive policy disagreements.

Events like the greatest financial and economic crisis since the 1930′s hasn’t substantially altered this. Input data that the global financial system has gone into meltdown and the outcomes from New Labour, Tories and the Lib Dems are policy proposals that basically boil down to winding it up and letting it go again with the public footing the bill.

It’s not simply a matter of personal preference though. I think that what passes for mainstream politics is gradually becoming less important.

Of course, next year’s General Election can only be won by the Tories or Labour, with the possibility of the Lib Dems appearing as a side-kick, and the overwhelmingly majority of voters will back one of these three parties. That’s not the point though.

My argument is simple. In Britain, support for all three mainstream parties is in long-term decline. This means that these votes are up for grabs. Engagement with the formal political process, as indicated by acts such as voting or joining a political party, is declining and among those who still indulge in these activities they are more likely to back alternative parties such as the Greens or UKIP.

A look at a couple of recent anecdotal examples from the last two parliamentary by-elections illustrates these trends.

The main stories about the Norwich North and Glasgow North East by-elections were that the Tories and Labour won respectively not that these predictable victories masked what could be worrying trends for the victors.

In 1997 in Norwich North, on a turnout of 75.9%, 94.8% of voters backed one of the three main parties. In the by-election earlier this year 45.9% of eligible voters turned out and, of these, only 71.1% voted for either Labour, Tories of the Lib Dems. Turnout is generally lower at by-elections but turnout dropped by a similar figure between 1997 and 2001 as between 2005 and 2009.

A comfortable win in Glasgow North East cheered up Labour partisans fearing a total electoral wipeout next year yet their total vote, 12,231 votes, is the lowest total scored by the party in this constituency, and Glasgow Springburn which had largely the same boundaries, since a Coalition Conservative candidate won the seat in 1918. It’s also roughly 10,000 votes lower than Labour used to score in this seat in the 1980′s and 90′s.

Isolated examples? Voters unmotivated by by-elections or using it as a chance to cast a protest vote? Unfortunately, that is if you work for the Labour Party or in Conservative Central Office, there’s more to this than the odd piece of anecdotal evidence.

During the course of my degree I spent some particularly dull time looking through the electoral statistics of established European democracies since the mid-1960′s. The evidence is tedious but the conclusions make for interesting reading. The evidence suggests that social-democracy in Western Europe is in long-term secular decline and that there is little that can be done to halt or reverse this. I don’t have the figures to hand and anyone (anyone?) interested would do well to consult the invaluable book The European Voter. The authors make a compelling case.

The results of the last European elections more or less confirmed this suspicion in my mind. Whether in government or in opposition, social democratic parties were punished by voters across the continent.

Traditionally, social democratic parties, such as Labour Party in Britain and the SPD in Germany, have drawn their support predominately from working-class voters. Therefore, it is disproportionately these voters being disenfranchised and opening up political opportunities for other parties, even if they, such as the multitude of groups on the socialist left, are seemingly unwilling to take them.

Whatever happens next year I doubt whether these long-term trends will be halted and I confidently predict that parties without the words ‘Labour’, ‘Conservative’ and ‘Liberal Democrat’ in their names will score some of their best results yet. The mainstream political parties will continue to decay and the most interesting political developments will be which political forces, if any, from the right or the left manage to harness this support.

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Nick Griffin surprise winner in Bond villain lookalike contest

A genuinely unnerving Christmas message from a man who thinks sitting in a dimly lit room with a cat on his lap constitutes a nice, friendly public image.

Now, where have I seen this before?

Nick Griffin discusses the importance of maintaining

an image of ‘moderate reasonableness‘ at all times.

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Putting our money where our mouth is

For a long time now the Socialist Party has argued the best way to cut across support for the far right is to challenge them politically, expose their utter failure to act in the interests of their chosen core constituency and put forward a political alternative on the basis of class politics.

I agree with this argument so I’m pleased to see it being put into practice by Stoke Socialist Party who are putting up a candidate in Stoke-on-Trent Central at the next General Election.

Stoke is one of the BNP’s strongest areas nationally and they have 9 councillors in the city, with 6 of them representing wards which are in Stoke Central, making the above a particularly welcome development even though it’s highly likely the BNP will score a much higher vote.

I anticipate a lot of criticism along the lines of splitting the anti-BNP vote (as if there was such a thing) and letting the BNP in as this is one of their target seats for the next election. The problem is though, if we’re serious about socialist politics then this situation will arise eventually as the far right aren’t going to go away. If we’re not going to challenge them now, then when?

Say what you like about the current crop of fascists in Britain, they don’t lack ambition. Over a decade ago they gave themselves a kick up the arse and decided their vision of the future involved more than the occasional ritual of a city centre demo to antagonise the local Asian population and the reds. They got their act together and started winning elections and clocking up votes almost in the millions.

We can do the same.

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Two out of three isn’t bad

Posted yesterday by Ray at The bad old days will end:

I am not at all surprised to hear that the crew of the British yacht being held by Iran “somehow strayed into Iranian waters”. Having spent a large chunk of my life working with merchant seamen, Thames Watermen, fishermen etc. I think that I can honestly say that yachties are without doubt the most clueless bunch of bastards you are likely to drift into.

In fact the old saying that “the two most useless things that you can have on a ship are a lawnmower and a ex-naval officer” could equally well apply to yachties. I am not able to confirm the rumour that three of the five crew members are called Ollie, but it seems likely.

In this morning’s paper:

Oliver Smith, 31, from Southampton, Oliver Young, 21, from Saltash, near Plymouth, Sam Usher, 26, from Scarborough, North Yorkshire, Luke Porter, 21, from Weston-super-Mare, and Bahrain-based radio presenter David Bloomer, understood to be in his 60s, were on board.

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Pub closures

Cockermouth is home to some of the county’s finest pubs and outside the pages of the trade press, like the indispensible Morning Advertiser, the loss of so many in the recent flooding has attracted little attention so far*.

Thankfully, all the decent pubs in Keswick and Workington are on higher ground but most pubs in Cockermouth are along Main Street where the water level peaked at 8 feet.

Badly damaged are The Fletcher Christian Tavern, The Bush, The Wordsworth Hotel (refurbished earlier this year), Hunters, The Brown Cow, The Globe (no great loss there) and the Black Bull.

Unfortunately the level of damage means it’s not clear when they will open again. This means most of these places will miss out on the Christmas trade.  The Black Bull, the pub nearest the river, will be closed for months as it may have suffered structural damage.

At a time when around 50 pubs are closing every week it’s unclear how many will re-open.

The Bush is a particularly sad loss as it’s one of the best pubs in Cumbria. A proper traditional place with real ale (seven taps if I remember rightly), real fires and food served in huge portions. The last time I was in there I paid about £6 for as much food as I could each at a single sitting.

Amazingly, three pubs I thought would have been wrecked have already re-opened. The Bitter End, the one pub which comes close to displacing The Bush as the best pub in the town, is open as normal as is The Castle Bar and 1761. The interiors of these last two venyes may resemble the results of a collision between them and a wine bar coming too fast down Kirkgate but both are well worth a visit.

Some other good news:

Flood-hit Jennings is set to restart work at its historic Cockermouth brewery in January.

And, until then, 10p from every pint of its beers sold in the UK will be donated to the Cumbria Flood Recovery Fund.

Until then, panic buy.

*Note, I’m not saying this is a such a bad thing. Losing a good pub is bad but nothing compared to someone losing their home and all their possessions. Coverage of the floods as rightly focused on people who have suffered this.

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Spain is nice at this time of year

Slow on the uptake for the second time recently, how did I miss reports of Nick Griffin’s recent trip to Spain?

It’s already been picked up in several places though these reports have focused on the fact that a rival fascist mob turned up at the Democracia Naciona Party event Griffin was attending, tried to force entry and were arrested.

I think it’s more relevant to look at exactly sort of event he was attending was.

Now many Brits take regular trips to Spain but Griffin seems to be taking tips from no guide book I’ve ever read.

The clue that Nick is not your average holiday maker and is in fact the country’s most prominent fascist can be seen through seen with his choice of destination. Deciding to skip the Costa del Sol, he instead opted for a commeration of the former Spanish dictator Franco and José Antonio, founder of Spain’s fascist movement La Falange:

The MEP and British national Party leader was a special guest at the meeting held by the Spanish far-Right National Democracy Party at a central Madrid hotel on Saturday…

Police were on high alert in the capital on Saturday as demonstrators marched through the streets to commemorate the death of Gen Franco, who died on November 20 1975.

Several hundred supporters of the regime gathered in Calle Genova, the birthplace of Jose Antonio Primo de Rivera, founder of the Falange party, before taking buses to the Valle de los Caidos, Valley of the Fallen, where both he and Gen Franco are buried.

This year, for the first time since the death of the dictator, who ruled the country with an iron-fist for 36 years, there was no mass held at the mausoleum in the hills to the west of Madrid to mark his death.

Spain’s fascists traditionally gather at the vast basilica, which took 19 years to build using forced labour by Republican prisoners, to pay homage to the late dictator on the Saturday following the date of his death.

The man is a political schizophrenic. In Britain he’s a nice, modern, non-racist nationalist. Abroad, he’s happy to travel to attend commerations for dead fascists and dictators. 

I wonder if any of his new Asian friends made the trip with him. No? How strange.

He’s lucky the British press are so crap and haven’t picked up on it yet.

Update: In a bizarre post on the main BNP site, the group who attacked last Saturday’s Democracia Naciona Party meeting are described as:

a fascist group closely aligned to the English Defence League“.

The Movimiento Patriótico Socialista are apparently an unrepentant neo-Nazi group and hate the Democracia Naciona Party for seeking to emulate the example of Le Pen and others (that is, moving away from the historic symbols and positions of the extreme right).

In contrast, the English Defence League are so desperate to appear non-racist that they burn swastikas, claim to be multi-racial and group the BNP under the label ‘extremists’.

How likely is it that these two groups have close links? Total silliness.

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Housing shortages and immigration

A couple of brief reports have caught my eye in the last week that demonstrate pretty clearly the link between two contentious political issues, housing shortages and immigration.

In Cumbria it’s pretty obvious that there is a real shortage of social housing and affordable housing. The waiting list for homes in Cumbria was 12,900 in 2008, about four years.

Long waiting lists for housing are common all across the country and there are a variety of groups (from oddball political groupings to think tanks to national newspapers) who seek to draw a link between this fact and immigration.

However, Cumbria has experienced next to no immigration in recent decades. In fact, the population of the county fell between 1991 and 2001 (the most recent year for which I could find statistics). Despite this there remain thousands of people waiting for housing. How is possible?

Primarily for the two following key reasons: In the past 30 years around half of Cumbria’s social housing stock has been sold off and not replaced while four thousand empty homes remain in the hands of private landlords:

More than 4,000 “ghost houses” are being left to rot by private landlords across Cumbria – but just one council is using powers to bring them back into force.

Empty dwelling management orders (EDMOs) are designed to kick out a landlord refusing to co-operate with attempts to bring a property back into use.

Two properties have been refurbished in Carlisle in that way – and just 27 nationally. No other Cumbrian council has used the powers. Carlisle City Council attempted to use the powers a further two times but homes were sold before action was completed.

Latest figures show there are 1,180 privately-owned empty homes in Allerdale, 1,488 in Carlisle, 1,310 in Copeland and 379 in Eden.

In addition to the above, the other report which caught my eye this week is from Manchester and is even more clear cut as is made clear in this report for the excellent Mule magazine:

Official statistics show an estimated 13,000 homes are currently unoccupied in Manchester. Meanwhile, the waiting list published in June details more than 23,000 people waiting to be re-housed – an increase of 1,768 in 12 months….

The amount of empty housing in the area can be partly attributed to the private ownership of these properties, with owners waiting for another boom in the housing market. With Manchester’s Labour council still suffering from the legacy of the Thatcher years and the ‘Right to Buy’ scheme, large numbers of council houses were sold off but not replaced. Many rich landlords snapped up a vast amount of affordable social housing, and the baton of providing new housing stock passed over to the private sector. Unfortunately for those who languish at the bottom of the waiting list, the private sector makes more money out of the richer tenants and buyers than the poorer ones.

23,000 people waiting to be re-housed and 13,000 empty homes. What’s the obvious solution here?

That’s right, stop immigration immediately and start deporting people. Then, erm, there will be enough houses for people in Manchester.

People blaming a national trend, the housing shortage, on immigration have to account for a similar shortage of housing in areas which have experienced virtually no immigration. They won’t do this though because people who make arguments like that aren’t interested in the housing crisis, or if they are they are very badly informed, they are interested in making cheap political points and stirring up hostility to migrants.

This would be bad enough on it’s own but it neglects the important point that a focus on blaming immigration for housing shortages lets the obvious culprit off the hook and ignores the obvious solution. There is a housing shortage because of the total neglect of housing by successive governments. This is something which is unlikely to change after next year’s General Election and a tightening up of immigration laws, far more likely to happen, will do nothing to ease the crisis.

Update: Shelter have set up a website where you can report empty properties.

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Washed out

The scenes over the last 48 hours in Cumbria have been unbelievable.

We’re no strangers to bad weather but the rain over the last couple of days has been unreal. I don’t see what sort of preparation there could have been for an event like this. Large areas of the county are still underwater and at least three towns have been badly damaged by surging flood waters.

When the flood waters finally recede I imagine they could do with a few volunteers to help with the clean up but anyone from further afield wanting to help should consider sending a donation to the Mountain Rescue. They’re funded almost entirely by donations from the public and have done an amazing job throughout this disaster.

Update: The Cumbria Community Foundation has set up a flood recovery fund.

For anyone local:

The Sheep & Wool Centre and Cockermouth School have enough clothing and towels. Please take them to the Cock and Bull pub or the Save the Children shop in Cockermouth instead. Volunteers are still needed at the Sheep & Wool Centre to dish out food and drink at meal times though.

In the Whitehaven area there are collection boxes for the flood appeal in the following places: Wilkinsons, Cleator Moor Co-op, Richardson’s, Tescos, Morrisons, Crosby’s, WH Smiths, Burton’s, Whitehaven News, CBC, Weatherspoons, The Waverly and St. Nichola’s church.

In Maryport, the Settlement on High Street in asking for people to bring clothes, blankets, anything people might find useful in times like these on Monday November 23rd between 9 and 4:30.

Updates on road closures and public transport available here.

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Data protection for slower learners

Don’t know how I missed this: David Irving’s emails hacked and posted on Wikileaks.

What is it with far right nutters and a total inability to protect their data?

Anti-fascist hackers have got access to the Holocaust denying ‘historian’ David Irving’s emails and posted his email archives and customer list along with a list of attendees for three of his planned meetings in the US.

Many of the details listed are of the usual suspects, the small number of people who still have time for a sad failed historian like veteran Holocaust denier Michelle Renouf and fascist printer Tony Hancock, though there is one email address of particular interest:

specialprojects@bnp.org.uk

Whose email address is this? No less a person than the next MP for Barking Richard Barnbrook!

Now how did a nice guy like that end up in David Irving’s contact database? I can’t think what they would have to talk about.

Meanwhile David Irving remains defiant and Focal Point Publications now displays the following message:

APOLOGIES for our absence! The traditional enemies destroyed our websites on November 13th, costing us thousands of dollars.

But they did not silence us! David Irving’s US speaking tour has gone ahead as planned, despite this brief interruption. Still left: Niagara Falls, Indianapolis, Chicago: ASK FOR DETAILS

As you can see, we’re now back online with improved security. Please be patient as we work on putting the main website back together. By the way: we can assure you that no credit card information was compromised in the attack.

Any guesses as to who David Irving considers his ‘traditional enemies’ to be? Unfortunately the section on his website listing his ‘traditional enemies’ is currently down due to a technical problem.

Anyway, as Irving says, apart from this brief interruption the tour has been going well so far.

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