Elon Musk
and a mass petition want a new UK election. Shall we do that – or just stick to
democracy?
Marina Hyde
I know many
are aggrieved with Starmer and co, but scrapping a government for Elon and a
Shropshire publican seems like a stretch
Tue 26 Nov
2024 13.29 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/nov/26/elon-musk-petition-uk-election-keir-starmer
By now you
will be aware of the petition demanding another general election. Finally, an
answer to what would happen if Maga had sex with the People’s Vote. I assume we
don’t use the phrase “bastard offspring” any longer, but in this case I’ll be
making an exception. To see the obnoxious essence of not one but two
excruciating political movements hook up and push out a screaming
signature-baby is not a pretty sight. I have immediately launched a petition to
forcibly sterilise all political movements.
To recap,
this is the petition started by a Shropshire publican after he’d Googled “how
to change the prime minister” and it told him to start a petition. Not a great
ad for Google’s search accuracy, let’s face it, but I guess we already knew
that was ageing like an unsealed bag-in-box of Phillip Schofield wine. Anyway,
the resultant petition has now garnered two and a half million digital
signatures, probably many more by the time you read this, and been pushed by
public figures ranging from Elon Musk to Michael Caine. Fine. The Jaws film
where the shark genuinely follows the Brody family all the way to the Bahamas
is no longer the stupidest thing Michael’s done.
We’ll come
to the perfectly reasonable complaints about the way Keir Starmer’s government
has been doing business shortly – and to the degree to which it has brought
this on itself. But first, I think we do have to consider the unfortunate fact
that the UK has once again caught the eye of the man soon to be found affixing
stickers reading “Elon’s room – keep out!!!!!!!” on the door of the Lincoln
Bedroom in the White House.
The Space
X/Tesla/United States of America boss keeps pushing the petition on his X
platform, with one word prompts like “Interesting” or “Wow”. I mean, not
really? Big wows, more like. And it’s hard to believe Elon’s attempts to play
dumbly impressed. He must know that in the UK and beyond, you can basically
Petition McPetitionface any old poll thanks to platforms like his. But if he
doesn’t, can someone trick Vice-President Moobs McMoobsface into agreeing that
this campaign to re-run a vote we honestly had 10 minutes ago should be called
“The People’s Vote”? I can see Elon gullibly liking the phrasing – even though
it’s a title which has always implied that yeah, you do realise some alleged
“people” already voted, but the result was something you didn’t like, so were
they ever even people at all? Time for the actual humans to vote.
Regrettably,
Musk hasn’t limited himself to wading into merely one aspect of British
affairs, also opting to repost a picture of far-right Tommy Robinson
self-swaddling in a prison-issue blanket, with Elon inquiring: “Why is he in
prison for 18 months?” Oh. Normally I would respond to a particularly obtuse
online inquiry with a cordial: “Do you have the internet? If so, you could
Google it!” But given Elon owns part of the internet, there must be something
that keeps him from carrying out this basic task – possibly a growing distrust
of Google’s search accuracy.
In which
case, happy to oblige. Robinson is in prison for contempt of court, because he
wouldn’t stop repeating false claims about a refugee teenager. And it’s not
even the first time he’s been in prison for contempt of court. He went before
for trying to collapse a grooming trial, which would have put multiple female
victims through the horror of having to testify twice. It’s almost as if he
doesn’t give a toss about the women, repeatedly indulges in behaviour that in
effect makes him their groomers’ and rapists’ friend, and does the entire thing
for clicks – and the ready cash that follows. As a man who recently caught a
space rocket with some chopsticks, Elon should surely be the person to grasp
that the Robinson grift is not exactly rocket science.
Anyway, back
to this petition. About 487 leaps down the food chain, Elon is ably supported
by Richard Tice, the mid-90s knitwear catalogue model beta-ed out of the Reform
leadership by Nigel Farage. Tice is another one that seems to have gone full
crybaby about a vote result. Richard once called the People’s Vote campaign a
“losers’ vote”, but is now pushing daily for the petition to become “the
biggest petition ever” in the UK. Can he have it both ways? Can the QAnon
shaman and Steve Bray make a spiritual baby? I wouldn’t have thought so, but
the internet is once again refusing to be constrained by facts. As indeed is
Richard.
However.
Having said all that, what did Labour expect? We live in chaotic times where
conventions and norms are disintegrating by the day. As many, many people said
at the time, Labour not being straight with the electorate about money during
the election campaign always threatened to go tits up sooner rather than later.
Making silly obfuscations about “opening up the books” was warned against by
everyone from the heights of the Institute for Fiscal Studies to the depths of
this column. Promising revolution via trivial cuts to taxes or services was
always putting Starmer’s would-be administration on a hiding to nothing. So
here we all are. If populism is claiming there are simple answers to complex
problems, then Labour’s manifesto at the recent general election was squarely
populist. And if you don’t treat the people like adults, you can hardly
complain when they go in for juvenile petitions.
Marina Hyde
is a Guardian columnist
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário