Dawn breaking
Like many people, I drank a six-pack of Coors to celebrate the inauguration of President Obama this week. His elevation to leader of the free nations may have be causing ripples around the world – but he could hardly have anticipated the impact it would have on the streets of Brent.
Boundary changes have left sitting MPs Dawn Butler and diminutive Lib Dem Sarah Teather engaged in an increasingly desperate battle to win the new seat of Brent Central at the next general election.
But has gone OTT with her online announcement of an exclusive endorsement from Barack Obama, containing lines as astonishingly awful as:
“I say to the people of Brent you should have the audacity of hope and when someone asks you can she do it, you respond yes we can.”
Iain Dale was quickly on the case, asking: “Surely Barack Obama wouldn’t have written such a trite and self serving paragraph himself? Would he?” adding caustically: “Pass the sick bag, Alice”.
The authenticity of the saccharine note, printed on House of Commons paper, soon came under scrutiny, courtesy of the Unity on Liberal Conspiracy who reckoned a “bonehead stunt” had been perpetuated using Photoshop. Under pressure from the Standard blogger Paul Waugh, Butler stuck to her guns – claiming that Obama had pre-agreed the wording prior to meeting her at Downing Street, and then signed the endorsement.
Belfast-based xetera thought that this strange episode was symptomatic of the “Obama juice” phenomenon, where politicians desperately claw for a link to the President in “…the hope that, like some sort of secret potion, a tenuous connection to the man will provide a little personal boost”.
Whatever the truth, the endorsement is inaccurate. The claim that Butler is one of just two black women in parliament ignores the fact that there are two Houses of Parliament, and that one of them was led for several years by Valerie Amos.
What have we learned this week?
It isn’t just Brent that is touched by Obama’s magic – the Emerald Isle has been similarly transformed, as we learn via the ever-magnificent Slugger O’Toole.
Around the World
Jahanshah Rashidian on Rotten Gods gives some interesting history on the leftist factions in post-revolution Iran who perhaps unwittingly sold out the working classes to maintain strategic alliances with right-wing Islamic groups. He recounts:
“Their new independent trade unions were banned and replaced by Islamic societies formed by the Ministry of Labour. Their profit share and bonuses which were established under the Shah were nullified. The right of strike was rejected. Wages stayed low, many factories were shut down; and their workers were fired without any unemployment benefit.”
Today, Iran’s left faces a steep challenge to assert itself as a secular and pro-union force. The Haft Tapeh sugar cane workers strike of last summer was met with characteristic brutality by state (five strike leaders were recently charged with propagandising against the government) but undeterred, efforts continue to secure better pay and conditions. Iran’s loss is Britain’s gain, as exile Maryam Namazi continues to prove, as one of the country’s most passionate and articulate advocates of free expression and secularism.
Videos of the Week
In honour of the return of Ken Clarke to the fray, let us enjoy the sounds of the Kenny Clarke quartet.
Quote of the Week
“Brent Central was always going to be a dirty fight – Dawn has now provided the ammunition to make it even dirtier.”
Mike Smithson on Political Betting