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Should politics 'russell re-brand' itself?



 

 

 

Take two people called Russell and Jeremy in a hôtel room in London, and ask one of them to put the world to rights.

Fringe meetings for Labour Party conferences for as long as I can remember have run panel discussions about how we can engage more people in the political process. For virtually of these fringe meetings which I have attended, almost invariably is the fact that political parties introduce policies for which people didn’t vote almost every parliament.

These issues remain dormant on the mainstream media for months on end, and yet continue to enrage people in the social media. Many issues under the umbrella of social justice continue to cause anger and resentment: these include the closure of English law centres, or the NHS reforms. The media continues to be skewed against such issues. For example, the flagship programme on BBC1 every Thursday, “Question Time”, regularly features a candidate from UKIP, a party which as yet has failed to elect a single MP. They have never featured a candidate from the National Health Action Party, and yet the running of the NHS continues to be a totemic issue.

Blaming the media would be like a bad tap-dancer wishing to blame the floor. And yet protest votes are not easily dismissed. Recently, in France, the right-wing National Front has taken the lead in an opinion poll before elections for the European Parliament, in a development that has truly shocked the French political establishment. The survey, which gave Marine Le Pen’s party 24 per cent of the vote, marked the first time that the party founded in 1972 by her father has led before a national election. The centre-right Union for a Popular Movement, which led in the previous equivalent poll, stood at 22 per cent and the Socialists at 19 per cent.

Part of David Cameron’s problem is that the initial friendship towards his Conservative Party was lukewarm to begin with. The intervening years (2010-2013) have seen a Party which just appears ‘out of touch’, which makes Sir Alec Douglas-Home look trendier than a hip-hop artist. But likewise, Russell Brand is not a ubiquitously popular man himself. Whilst some people feel he stands up for their views, irrespective of his reported wealth, others find him narcissistic and nauseating.

Russell Brand is however successful at being famous, and this is a peculiar British trait. He often begins his set by talking about his love for fame: ‘My personality doesn’t work without fame. Without fame, this haircut is just mental illness.’ He has found his way of getting his name in the news, and in the tabloids. His comedy is not even that popular, but at least he has the ear of the British media. The National Health Action Party would have loved ten minutes with Jeremy Paxman, although it’s quite unlikely a ten-minute video with Clive Peedell would become an instantaneous viral hit.

Meanwhile, in a parallel universe, the UK Labour Party almost seems to have re-discovered its mojo. The triangulation of the past appealed to those in Labour who felt they could win simply by appealing to floating Tory voters. But it is a strategy that ran out of steam in 2010, leaving abandoned Blairite commentators to become embittered and self-consumed in a passion of self-destruction, while spitting bullets at Ed Miliband. Labour’s traditional supporters did not come out and vote, while floating voters saw through the cynical vote-grabbing exercises. Labour did not appear particularly ‘socialist’ any more.

Russell Brand didn’t mention the deficit once. Russell Brand did not have to appeal to his fans to say that there will be no return to the days of lavish spending. He did not have to say that he had learnt lessons from the past.

And yet deep-down voters do have excuses, if not reasons, not to vote Labour. There are some people who believe that Ed Miliband will need to identify Labour’s mistakes – the blind eye to a City running wild; an over-reliance on both high finance and a house-price bubble; or being ‘weak on welfare’.

And yet we are in a society which is absurdly superficial. Should Russell Brand have to bite the bullet for riding the crest of this banality? This strange Universe is not just occupied by reality TB stars. Many famous people are famous for being famous. Nicole Kidman is famous for being famous. Arguably, Nicole Kidman famous for divorcing Tom Cruise. At the same time when Russell Brand was selling what he sells best, that is Russell Brand, Cher was on BBC1 on ‘The Graham Norton Show’. And nobody sane can claim that Cher is the world’s best singer.

This does not necessarily mean that Labour should ignore the polls, although Labour will invariably say it ignores the polls when they are bad. From level-pegging to an 11-point lead in 10 days, Labour has plainly had a good conference, in terms of public opinion polling. After a difficult summer, YouGov’s poll put Labour at its highest level, 42%, since June. 30% now said Ed Miliband is doing well as party leader – his best rating since May. When people were asked who would make the best prime minister, Miliband (25%) was now within three points of David Cameron (28%). That was the narrowest gap since Miliband became party leader three years ago.

Ed Miliband is the one who keeps on saying that he wants ‘to tell you a story’. After the recent coverage of Ralph Miliband, paradoxically people appear to have warmed to the narrator as much as the story. In Russell Brand’s case, there is a curious mixture of some people liking the narrator as well as the story.

And yet for all of Russell Brand’s themes, such as global warming, inequality, or dominance of corporatism, for Brand it is simply entertainment. For many viewers, it is simply entertainment. Life is far from entertaining from some who have deeply suffering in this Government. Social injustices, such as in the personal independence payment or Bedroom Tax, have literally taken their casualties, and the myth of ‘the record number in employment’ has been blown out-of-the-water.

Russell Brand can be thanked for his form of escapism. But at the end of the day it is superficial crap, and not the solution to more than thirty years of failed triangulation in UK politics.

My blogposts on Section 75 Health and Social Care Act and NHS England Procurement Regulations (SI 2013/057)



 

Since 7 January 2013, I have written a number of blogposts detailing the legal and policy implications of the Health and Social Care Act and the statutory instrument 2012/057.

These are on the “Legal Aware” blog. 

Main article:

Competition Regulations issued under Section 75 of the Health and Social Care Act (2012) will lock CCGs into arranging all purchasing through competitive markets

SI 2012/057:

National Health Service (Procurement, patient choice and competition) Regulations 2013: what is “best value”?

The legal issues in the statutory instrument (2013, No. 257) on NHS procurement in England

Possible letter to send to the Clerk of the Committee

VERY IMPORTANT. Tomorrow is the last day to the write to the Clerk about SI 257

Lord Owen’s Bill:

Lord Owen’s NHS (amended duties and powers) Bill: an eight-clause Bill to restore a comprehensive NHS accountable to parliament

History:

Was “The Health of Nations” by Dr Madsen Pirie and Dr Eamonn Butler a blueprint for NHS privatisation?

 

This one on stakeholder reaction is published on the ‘Socialist Health Association’ (independently authored) blog:

Rainbow coalition warns about section 75 NHS Regulations

 

 

Focus on 'All About Law': a brilliant, trustworthy site for law students



‘All about law’ is a very useful website for all students of law, whatever their stage in training. It is an excellent one-stop overview of career options for law students, and is a  helpful and dynamic website.

What I love about this website is its intuitive social dimensions, where it treats students as contributing to shared value of a community with a common purpose. It even has a platform, designed with the help of educational psychologists, which invites the student to consider whether law is the right career for him or her. This is at a time when law students are increasingly considering whether the value of their legal education, as well as the material cost. Is it for example a good idea to complete the GDL or LPC, if law firms do not then call you for interview? This Survey bases its feedback on the basis of the behaviour, personality and skills demonstrated in the answer, so is therefore extraordinarily helpful.

There are forums (sic) for students to get involved with, including for students who are pre-university, undergrads, postgrad, non-law, or international. I feel the “tools of the trade” section is really impressive, and has useful hints-and-tips on courses, careers, applications and interviews, and pro bono. I feel the news section is also spot-on, tailored for the current needs of students. For example,  in an item just a few days old now, All about Law reveals that BPP has announced that it is offering places at its centres across the UK to start a degree in May 2012 on its accountancy, business and law programmes.

What is refreshing about this blog is that nobody is trying to sell you another. This is brilliant, a law firms often produce glossy propaganda to sell how wonderful they are, when the reality of working in their firm is well-known to be far from the picture presented by their advertising material. I therefore love the range of blogs, including the student blogs (why no LPC  blog though guys), as well as the blogs from the trainee solicitor, legal executive, paralegal, and inhouse lawyer, to name-but-a-few.

The Student Lawyer – a brilliant initiative for law students to embrace



A great initiative for law students to embrace

I think ‘The Student Lawyer’ is a brilliant initiative for law students to embrace. Some say that being a student is the happiest time of a lawyer’s life, as you immerse yourself in a very intensive experience of case law and statute law, and critical thinking. There are many ‘soft skills’ that employers and colleagues look out for, including creativity, teamwork, attention-to-detail, proactivity, a commitment to quality, and a commitment for excellence. They also love clear communication skills. Unsurprisingly, these tend to be the same competences actively sought out on training contract application forms.

I strongly recommend law students to read, comment on, and write for the Student Lawyer, which is an outstanding contribution to legal education.  The Twitter thread is relatively new, but well worth a follow! The sections, including contemporary news, civil, crime, education and practice, public, the world, literary review, guest contributions, and opinion, are very well written, and will be interesting to any law student, including barristers and solicitors to-be. New inventive features include the new front page and the ‘panels’, and make for a very rewarding experience for any online legal blog. In this regard, it is probably at the forefront of existing blogs. However, I think it is the quality of helpful articles for the student lawyer that sets this blog apart from its ‘competitors’, such as Amy Dimond’s guide to the LPC (and even solicitors’ accounts!)

I wish the blog very well, as I am hugely passionate about inclusivity. My aspiration is for all students to be at the heart of the legal education system, and contributing online is an excellent way for people to contribute (especially people who are physically disabled like me). In this increasingly competitive environment for training contracts and pupillages, you can do no harm, at the very least, by wishing to write for ‘The Student Lawyer’. People like to take on trainees with bags of energy and enthusiasm, and  that is what is in abundance in ‘The Student Lawyer’. Because of the recent informative articles on mooting and the criminal law, this blog may be particularly inspiring for criminal barristers to-be.

Some broadsheet journalists indeed deserve a very bad press



The arrogance and self-opinionated, badly-evidenced, garbage of some broadsheet journalists beggars belief. I should like to keep Mary Riddell out of this, whose article on the branding of David Cameron I think was the best piece of journalism this year, and Polly Toynbee, whose views on social democracy are far stronger than me but whose articles are always erudite and thought-provoking. Provoking I suppose is another word for the other end of broadsheet Fleet Street, such as Victoria Coren and Paul Waugh, whose ramblings seem insightful prima facie, but actually border on prejudiced and imbalanced on frequent occasion: more inciteful than insightful. Please don’t get me wrong; there’s a lot of brilliant investigative journalism done by the red tops and others, which enriches the accountability of people in power and influence.

I suppose my wrath was first incurred by Andy Marr’s latest contribution in the Guardian:

“The BBC’s website has nearly 100 blogs and invites its readers to “have your say” on an enormous range of topics, from Westminster to the weather.

But one of the corporation’s most familiar faces, Andrew Marr, has dismissed bloggers as “inadequate, pimpled and single”, and citizen journalism as the “spewings and rantings of very drunk people late at night”.

Marr, the BBC’s former political editor who now presents BBC1’s flagship Sunday morning show, said: “Most citizen journalism strikes me as nothing to do with journalism at all.

“A lot of bloggers seem to be socially inadequate, pimpled, single, slightly seedy, bald, cauliflower-nosed young men sitting in their mother’s basements and ranting. They are very angry people,” he told the Cheltenham Literary Festival. “OK – the country is full of very angry people. Many of us are angry people at times. Some of us are angry and drunk”.

For Andy Marr, this surely is a case of “don’t bite the hand that feeds you”. The relationship between blogging and the mainstream press has recently surfaced, for example at the top of the Gherkin.

Could it possibly be that the only reason that Andy Marr feels so bitter about blogs is that he has trouble in getting superinjunctions of them? Meanwhile, top blogger Iain Dale makes a very valid point that the news about William Hague MP was not ‘mainstream’ until the Foreign Office had issued a statement on it, and that was only because Guido Fawkes had successfully raised the issue in the blogosphere. I remember the abuse on Twitter thrown at Andy Marr by my Labour friends and colleagues when he mooted with Gordon Brown the notion that he was on the anti-depressant. His sources? I can find no mainstream source of this, prior to the blogosphere. My Tory friends have been making much hay of this, as if it’s a very central public isssue. It really is not – people should not stigmatise mentally ill people who lead successful lives, in much the same way that homosexuals go about their business in professional life with enormous skill and ability.

Broadsheet journalists should not have the monopoly of informed opinion. They incessantly go on about the disabled and bankers, like Mary Riddell did today. However, as a disabled person, I would like my views to be taken account. For that matter, as a person who has six real degrees to a high level in both undergraduate studies and postgraduate studies, I have well informed opinions about the graduate tax and student finance in general. For example, I have an opinion about ‘making people pay back more’, given that I personally have not been in salaried employment since 2006, which is an enormous strain for me and my parents with whom I live in Primrose Hill. I don’t want to read journalists pontificating about this everyday – but let’s face it this is how they sell copy. Likewise, when I was in medicine, I don’t remember people asking underpaid immigrant nurses for their views about living in a more globalised UK, and the thorny issues of insecurity, aspiration, and fairness. Get out of your ivory towers. I am disabled. I live in the real world, with only my disability living allowance as a regular source of income. I find your articles patronising, and it’s obvious you haven’t spoken to the people involved? Talk to the bankers whom you intend to impose your levy on, but for heaven’s sake keep discussion of them outside discussion of me (the disabled). I understand totally, however, your predicament of considering us ‘in the round’ as we are all part of the Big Society, notionally, but our problems are different to theirs!

Dr Shibley Rahman

Queen’s Scholar, BA (1st.), MA, MB, BChir, PhD, MRCP(UK), LLB(Hons.), FRSA
Director of Law and Medicine Limited
Member of the Fabian Society and Associate of the Institute of Directors

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