Podcast Ep. 5: Budget 2015, the Tim Hunt controversy and an alternative Labour leader

George Osborne at a reception following The Royal Wedding, 29 April 2011, by FCO

In this edition of the podcast Jimmy is joined by a friend to tackle the burning issues of the week, plus whatever made us laugh.

Topping the bill is the Tory budget, chancellor George Osborne’s first offering since shedding the pesky Liberal Democrats at the general election back in May. We discuss why the ostensibly radical plans are far more retrogressive than they initially appear.

Next in line is a discussion of scientist Tim Hunt’s controversial remarks on women in science, which last week came to a conclusion as University College London (UCL) ruled that it would not be reinstating Hunt despite a grovelling apology. But is this just another crude censorship of left-field ideas from what should be a curious, open-minded research body?

Lastly in our silly segment we suggest five new candidates for the Labour leadership, responding to the lacklustre crowd that have made it onto the ballot paper. Listen in to find out who made the grade.

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Header Image – George Osborne at royal wedding, April 2011 by Foreign and Commonwealth Office

Podcast Ep. 4: Are You Beach Body Ready Controversy, Third Runway at Heathrow and 4th July – What IS America for?

Beach Body Ready - Ellen Rose

We are joined in this week’s podcast by Ellen Rose (icklenellierose on YouTube and Twitter) who laughs and debates along with Jazza and Jimmy for 45 minutes.

We discuss #ThighGapGate, also known as the Protein World “Are You Beach Body Ready?” controversy, which has been officially declared inoffensive by the Advertising Standards Authority. What kind of message do these adverts send? Should an organisation be able to decide whether something is offensive or not? Or is this just good advertising?

Meanwhile the Davies Commission has come down firmly in favour of the third runway at Heathrow Airport, leaving Gatwick and the dream of a new Thames Estuary Airport out in the cold. But after David Cameron (#DavCam) has said he would categorically not back a third runway at Heathrow, where do the Conservatives go from here?

Finally, we recorded this on the 4th July, Independence Day and the US’s national celebration of getting rid of the monarchy (though they seem rather obsessed with Kate and Wills’ breeding patterns at the moment). We talk about America’s role in the world and who are our favourite picks for the US presidential elections in 2016.

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Header Image – Beach Body Ready ad by Protein World, photographed by Ellen Rose

Far from being edgy, Jason Manford’s anti-racist spiel just lashes out at the marginal

Jason Manford, Jan 2013, University of Salford Press Office

Every era has its own political boilerplate, statements that can be unthinkingly uttered to win you friends whilst gaining you few enemies that matter.

These are based on the taboos, prejudices and groupthink of the times. If you wish to play to the gallery, after all, you need to know what they like. And once you have that you can soak up the cheap applause:

Right now in our island’s history, it is a bad time to be a racist. Better, perhaps, than when New Labour felt confident enough to “rub the Right’s nose in diversity”, but much worse than the decades following the Second World War, and especially the old days of the Empire which rather shows up the institutional racism we now practice.

Fascism is in similar straits. The fringe left in Britain loudly proclaim their commitment to combating it, but the modesty of this was highlighted by the groups themselves when they confronted some chapter of the far right at Piccadilly Circus in a London demo earlier this year. As the lefties accurately observed at the time: “There are a lot more of us than you.”

Sniping at fringe righties, far from being brave and edgy, is thus the definition of the punching downward that comedians on the Left are supposed to disdain. After all, the front benches of the Commons are not stocked with “closest racists” (in prime minister Call Me Dave’s phrase) but with those that largely hold socially liberal views, especially as regards migration.

True enough, there are some establishment backers of the Kippers and their political kin. But as anybody with a brief acquaintance of these groups could tell you, they are largely made up of white, working-class, middle aged men – in other words those that the Islington intellectuals in Labour used to court, but now treat with disdain and mockery.

There’s no sorrow in the fact that racism is treated with scorn and hostility, nor that fascism or homophobia is given the same reception in most civilised quarters. But there’s no nobility in trashing the ignorant, inarticulate and inept, and nobody should pretend otherwise.

Header Image – Jason Manford, January 2013 by University of Salford Press Office

Podcast Ep. 3: The Point of LGBT Pride, The #Greferendum & No Black Spiderman?

Stonewall at London Pride, 27 June 2015

In a world of huge LGBT Pride parades, the US going really gay after the Supreme Court ruling, and decades of success for the gay liberation movement, why did Jazza even bother marching at London Pride this weekend?

Greece is continuing to be a point of contention. They get a Greek referendum (#Greferendum, obviously) which may lead to a #Grexit and there will be no more #Greuro. (No, we don’t think there are too many hashtags.) But is this showing the democratic deficit in the EU?

Finally, Spiderman: Should he be black? No, we’re not talking about Venom, but the Sony hack emails that show Peter Parker is contractually white, straight and middle-class. The Internet went crazy, find out why Jazza and Jimmy can’t be fussed, and why there are similarities with James Bond.

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‘End Austerity Now’ protests show how marginalised the fringe left is

End Austerity Now, 20 June 2015, JC Servante

Outside of King’s College’s Strand building a crooner had dressed himself in black tie and put on a badly made mask of Iain Duncan Smith, work and pensions secretary in the government for the last five years. Out of a speaker sat next to him a cover of Frank Sinatra’s Mr Success bellowed, albeit with some minor alterations: “Screw the poor, no redress/ That’s why I’m Mr Success!”

It’s a song that captures the mindset of the fringe left that has been bad tampered since the Tories were re-enthroned with their first majority in the Commons for some twenty years. The day after the election a crowd assembled outside of Downing Street, angry that their enemy David Cameron would enjoy a few more years as prime minister, leading to the phrase “Fuck Tory scum” being scrawled on a nearby war memorial.

On Saturday June 20th, with IDS crooning merrily, a similar crowd trooped from the Bank of England on Threadneedle Street past Fleet Street and onto on the lawns of Parliament Square – a neat tour of the homes of finance, journalism, and politics, which have all felt the ire of those marginalised in the current Westminster system.

Standing outside a pub near Mansion House Michael Wright, a Socialist Party member, tried to keep his cigarette alight as he spoke to The Right Dishonourable about that election result. “I think it’s pretty clear there’s a total democratic deficit in this country,” he said, citing the fact the Tories claimed a majority on a mere quarter of registered electorate’s votes.

Why even that many voted for austerity policies is pinned on a number of demons by the fringe left, including the media and Ed Miliband’s Labour party, which was poorly represented among the protestors’ banners despite London mayoral hopeful Diane Abbott turning up to a mini-rally near the start of the march.

“The media don’t report how much hostility there is to austerity,” said Huw, an unaffiliated protestor who had travelled in from Bath. “Labour doesn’t do a very good job of making the argument against austerity,” he said, a policy he dismissed as “junk economics”.

The view that cutting public spending is damaging to growth has been widely expressed since the chancellor George Osborne first started to focus the public’s mind on deficit reduction in the wake of the financial crisis. As the Oxford economic professor Simon Wren-Lewis put it, Labour “spends too much time listening to people in the Westminster bubble and fails to spend time thinking about basic electoral strategy.”

The reason he makes this argument is that public’s support for austerity is hardly unanimous. In March of this year a survey by ComRes found that only a third wanted to maintain or increase spending cuts to close the deficit. The two-thirds that disagreed with this must have comprised many of those who did not vote for the Tories at the election.

Among them was Jean, a worker from a community health trust who came down to protest over disgust at the way cuts have affected the NHS. “I have seen the damage that’s been do to the service and the staff as individuals,” she said. “Services are getting worse, but they think they should run it like a business.”

A number of those that The Right Dishonourable spoke to at the march noted the varying fortunes of this loose band of protest groups over the last few years. The viciousness of some of these groups has already drawn negative publicity, and is not approved of by many at the march. “Privately, I think David Cameron’s a wanker,” one man admitted as the protest readied itself to set off. “But I wouldn’t put that on a banner.”

But other than show there anger at marches like this, it seems there’s little the anti-austerity crowd can do. With a fresh, if slender, mandate the Tories will surely argue that they have earnt their chance to alter the country more to their liking. And with up to five years to keep the momentum of the marches going, it’s going to be a long walk for the fringe left.

Header Image – End Austerity Now, 20 June 2015


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