The Electorate’s Silent, Withering Rebellion Against the Political Class


Sunday, 06 May 2012 12:31


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‘If you needed any further proof that the political class inhabits a different moral universe to normal human beings, look no further than this morning’s analyses of yesterday’s elections. “It was a good night for Labour,” chirp Ed Miliband’s delusional cheerleaders. “It shows that Cameron must re-engage with traditionalists,” say Tory desperadoes. “It confirms the British public’s rejection of the mayoral system,” intone deathly dull political studies lecturers. All of these yawn-inducing attempts to decipher what message the British electorate was trying to send to the political class yesterday overlooks what the majority of us chose to say to them: absolutely nothing. Zilch. Diddly squat.

Sixty-eight per cent of eligible voters did not vote in the elections, a bloc of people so big it could be described as “the vast majority”, or certainly “most people”. Most people chose not to take part in these elections, and in doing so they implicitly rejected the political class in its entirety; its ideas, its policy proposals, its representatives – all were very publicly and humiliatingly cold-shouldered.

What we witnessed yesterday was a silent, withering rebellion against the political elites of this country. A good night for Labour? Are you kidding me? Labour got roughly 39 per cent of the vote on an estimated turnout of 32 per cent. This means around 12 per cent of the eligible electorate voted Labour. To put it another way, 88 per cent of us – the heaving mass of society – did not vote Labour. If that’s a good night for Labour, I’d hate to see a bad one.’

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