#oneaday Day 27: Time for Change?

As I type this, the results for the General Election in this country are being announced. It looks likely that Labour are going to win a landslide victory, giving the Conservatives a seriously bloody nose in the process, but it also looks like the Reform party are going to make a few gains along the way, too.

I’m not going to pretend to know enough about politics to provide any more in-depth commentary than that, but I am relieved that we are at least looking likely to have a change of government. The last 14 years have been pretty rough for the UK, and some change is what we need. The question is, of course, whether the incoming new government are willing to do anything noteworthy or, as is probably more likely, they will continue to let things just tick along and gradually slide further and further into enshittification.

The rise of Reform is a little worrying, though I suspect their gains will be less noteworthy than the somewhat exaggerated hyperbole suggests. We’ve already heard some Reform representatives on the BBC’s coverage of the election complaining about “woke nonsense” without actually saying what they believe “woke nonsense” to be, and very carefully taking care to not say that they hate immigrants and transgender people.

The BBC has been pulling its punches a bit, though. It looked like the Reform candidate was going to be questioned on the “woke nonsense” line, but the presenters pulled back after she pretty much ignored the question. There was also some confrontation of “vile” comments made by some Reform candidates, but those weren’t pursued either. It’s a little frustrating to see coverage that is just on the cusp of doing some interesting journalism, but then pulling back in the name of… what? Impartiality? Perhaps.

Looking into it, it appears that the BBC did actually do some journalism into this back when it happened. And yeah, there is some pretty bad stuff in there. Naturally, Reform leader Nigel Farage claimed that the comments were being “taken out of context”, but there’s really only so many contexts in which you can take someone complaining about “the cultural feminisation of the west”, as Bexhill and Battle candidate Ian Gribbin did, and none of them are particularly complimentary. Same for Ynys Mon candidate Emmett Jenner’s obviously transphobic comments from 2018, though he claims his now-deleted Twitter account was a “parody”. (Of what, he didn’t say.)

There was an interesting point made on the BBC’s coverage, though, which is that there are quite possibly some voters out there who genuinely have no idea that Reform candidates have said some truly horrible things in the past, and simply voted for Reform as a “protest vote”. These days, I’m inclined to say that there’s not a lot of excuse for not knowing the true colours of various public figures, even if you’re not on social media, but I guess it is possible, particularly among the older generation.

But anyway. I’m not going to stay up and watch too much more of the coverage, but I do find it quite interesting for a little while. It’s going to be going on for about 10 hours, though, so we won’t have an absolutely final answer on what’s happening to the country until tomorrow morning. The exit polls would seem pretty damning for the Conservative government, though, and I am 100% fine with that. We’ll just have to wait and see what that really means.


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