Good Morning Scotland
claims another victim. I can’t blame my
wife for banishing me to the spare room after I rudely awakened her by smashing
the radio alarm to smithereens with a wooden coat hanger. To be fair, I probably just dreamed the bit
about the morning papers being reviewed by Margaret Curran, Darth Vader and the
Duke of Cumberland, but it had the acid tang of plausibility. After that, the real-life introduction of charisma
bypass Miles Briggs was simply the final gamma-ray blast that stripped away my
veneer of self-control.
In my reflective moments, when it’s just me, a bottle of
wine and a couple of imaginary friends on the settee, I have to admit that my
anger management could do with some work. An adrenalin turbo-charge might be useful if my
daily visit to the Co-Op were regularly bringing me face-to-face with a peckish
sabre-tooth tiger. But when the trip’s
main challenge is a frantic search of the news-stand to discover where the
local arsehole has hidden today’s National,
it’s a myocardial infarction waiting to happen.
Theresa May clearly has similar issues. Tories don’t do reflectiveness, because if
they ever peered into the abyss of their souls they’d all end up in
straitjackets. They don’t do detail
either, as five nanoseconds in the presence of David Davis will testify. But even a cursory self-analysis, scribbled on
the bit of the Post-It note left over after she’s run out of ideas on Brexit,
would reveal Theresa to be a spanner-bag of pent-up irritation.
This was true even before she drank the potion of powdered
glass mixed with vinegar and poor people’s tears served to all incoming Tory
Prime Ministers. Her policies at the Home Office were a shambolic cocktail of vindictiveness
and counter-productivity, defended with the stubborn tetchiness of a politician
who’d been absent getting porcupine quills fitted the day imagination was
handed out. Their legacy is still stinking
the place out, with Highland villagers facing a 20 km round trip for a pint of
milk after the closure of their community store because the family running it is
being deported. Rules is rules, chum,
and you’re one jot short of a tittle in meeting the requirements, so you’re out
on your ear, even though nobody this side of Alpha Centauri benefits.
Left to herself, I don’t reckon Theresa would have called
the General Election. Would she have wanted
to have her ideas, in all their jaw-dropping vacuity, challenged by ordinary
people? She’d rather have had a bucket
of tepid sick emptied over her. It
doesn’t fit the cover story, lapped up by the slavering sycophants of the BBC,
in which she gradually warmed to the idea during a walk in the Welsh hills,
with her hubby offering sage, owlish advice, fluffy Easter bunnies gambolling
around and a male-voice choir humming Cwm
Rhondda in the distance. I suspect
the bit that’s missing is Lynton Crosby screaming down the phone at her for two
hours.
When it comes to the dark arts, Crosby is the 100% cocoa
content guy. Say what you like about the
British having no negotiating skills, whoever brokered the exchange deal with
Australia that sent hapless numpty McTernan to advise their politicians and
laser-like assassin Crosby to advise ours is a freakin’ genius. Crosby’s heart may be a shrivelled walnut and
he may think scruples are devices for opening wine bottles, but he delivers the
goods, even if it means kicking down every door in the street.
Crosby immediately sussed that there was no way Theresa could
be exposed to bothersome questions from the public. Giving innocent hairdressers from
Macclesfield a death stare for politely asking why the local hospital has no
doctors tends to give voters the heebie-jeebies. So, even before the hideous screech of brakes
accompanying the General Election U-turn had died away, shadowy sources were whispering
that invitations for the PM to participate in a TV debate would receive a
two-word response with some sexual content.
Instead, Theresa’s been on a triumphal tour, doughnutted by
placard-carrying obsessives, taking no questions beyond Laura Kuenssberg enquiring
about her favourite colour, and sweeping away in a presidential motorcade, enveloping
crowds of energetic V-signers in exhaust fumes.
At Glaxo SmithKline, in her Maidenhead constituency, the workforce who’d
been cattle-prodded in front of her were forbidden from answering media questions,
and probably even had Special Branch tailing them home in case their spouses
asked what sort of day they’d had. Crosby’s
got the whole shebang exquisitely choreographed. I wouldn’t be surprised if Theresa has a
cyanide capsule hidden in her necklace in case a journalist accidentally
corners her.
There’s still the problem of her debating skills being
unable to stand up to a gust of wind, so Crosby’s got her and the entire Tory
parrot choir schooled in the key soundbites. I mean, bleed’n’ell, everyone, even the ones who need to
follow a diagram to put their socks on. According
to the mantra, the Tories offer “strong, stable leadership”, a world-view
incompatible with sanity, unless “stable” means “thing that’s full of
horse-manure” and “strong” just refers to the smell.
Meanwhile, the opposition is alliteratively tagged as a
“coalition of chaos”. Well, “coalition” seems fair enough, since even if the
public chose to elect 650 Labour MPs and no-one else, Jeremy Corbyn still wouldn’t
command an overall majority. “Chaos”, however, can occasionally be creative and
has a theory attached to it, so you might be inclined to rank it ahead of the
C-words you could place after “Conservative”. Cluelessness, cruelty, criminality and
catastrophe all spring to mind, and that’s just before the watershed.
And is our media calling this guff out for the blatant kindergarten-level
manipulation it is? Oops, no, it’s set
up camp in the same part of the dictionary: compliant, collusive, contemptible
and crap. On its jackboot wing, where
they head-butt the Caps Lock key for fun, anyone seeking to frustrate the Tories’
will is threatened with being chained up in the Tower of London or worse. On its propagandist conspiracy wing, the
hotlines to well-connected liars are already smouldering like a pair of
Carmichael’s pants.
Is Jeremy Corbyn doing anything to ward off this tsunami of tripe? Oops, no, he’s declared that, instead of brandishing
Theresa’s empty chair at the TV debate to show her up as a snivelling coward, he,
er, won’t bother turning up either. I
swear that every time this man comes to a fork in the road, he makes absolutely
sure it hits him in the face. What are
his advisers thinking, apart from “Wonder how long it’ll take me to tunnel out
of here using this teaspoon and my bare hands?”
And so to Scotland, where as usual the rules seem to have
been devised under the influence of industrial-strength hallucinogens. If the SNP doesn’t win 56 seats out of 59 again,
independence is a busted flush, Westminster will have us by the short and
curlies in perpetuity and Tesco can safely start ordering in stocks of British
haggis. If the Tories win even one extra
seat, all of the above statements apply, plus Ruth Davidson will be formally crowned
as viceroy, with the right to take away your motability scooter whenever she
fancies it. If Labour gets 59 votes,
that probably means that at least their candidates remembered to vote for
themselves.
Back on Good Morning Scotland,
here’s the review of this morning’s papers, and because of time constraints
headlines from The National will once
again be broadcast in semaphore. Can you
hear the flags swishing over Gary Robertson’s chortling?