icon bookmark-bicon bookmarkicon cameraicon checkicon chevron downicon chevron lefticon chevron righticon chevron upicon closeicon v-compressicon downloadicon editicon v-expandicon fbicon fileicon filtericon flag ruicon full chevron downicon full chevron lefticon full chevron righticon full chevron upicon gpicon insicon mailicon moveicon-musicicon mutedicon nomutedicon okicon v-pauseicon v-playicon searchicon shareicon sign inicon sign upicon stepbackicon stepforicon swipe downicon tagicon tagsicon tgicon trashicon twicon vkicon yticon wticon fm
19 Dec, 2018 12:44

Russophobic tide is rising as Britain is a basket case – George Galloway

Russophobic tide is rising as Britain is a basket case – George Galloway

In almost 30 years as a member of parliament and another 20 years watching it from the outside, I have never seen – or imagined – a basket-case Britain like this.

"It’s not one damned thing, it’s one damned thing after another," as the former Conservative premier Harold MacMillan once said. That Britain no longer has a functioning prime minister is just one damned thing. Add the dysfunctional government, a parliament of herded cats, a foreign policy deep in disgrace, a media subverted to the core by the deep-state, a wholly uncertain economic future, at "war" with the European continent and with our special relationship to the United States daily undermined by a parallel collapse of the power structures in Washington it’s hard not to be pessimistic about the future.

READ MORE: ‘We’ll remove Theresa May next year’: Attorney general plotted with ministers against PM – report

The sight of the prime minister literally rushing from the chamber seconds after Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn rather cleverly wrong-footed everyone (not least his own party) by tabling a no-confidence motion not in the government – which would have united her own side and their allies on the principle that turkeys seldom vote for an early Christmas, in this case an early general election – but in the prime minister personally. It was a rational assumption that some at least of the 117 Conservative MPs who had just expressed their own no-confidence in Theresa May might do so again, or even sit on their hands and abstain. They would, after all, be then rid of her and keep their government.

Rational too that the main ally of the government the DUP Protestant zealots from the north of Ireland might do so too given their recent anathematization of Mrs May in the language of sell-out and betrayal, their lingua franca for a hundred years.

But there's nothing rational about British politics in this weather.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, the Honourable Member for the 18th Century, who was practically outside the Palace on the Mall in his double-breasted pyjamas last week beseeching the Queen to dismiss the prime minister, is now in the position of declaring she's not fit to be the leader of the Conservative Party but well fit-enough to lead the country! Ditto his equally well-heeled anti-EU zealots on the Tory Right and even the DUP are this week, loyal again.

Nonetheless the prime minister is so confident that she would defeat this motion of no-confidence in herself that she is refusing to allow it time to be debated and voted upon. And the poor excuse for a parliament we have is letting her get away with it!

Meanwhile scenting that this death by a thousand cuts of the May premiership cannot long be for this world the May cabinet has begun to splinter in plain sight. Notwithstanding the normal rules of collective cabinet responsibility minister after minister has begun to emerge from the woodwork to express their OWN policy towards the Brexit impasse. Last week we had a rare cabinet by teleconference, this week we have a cabinet in spite of the collective government line. Conservative Leadership campaign Twitter accounts are being readied for the coming struggle for power, premises are being discretely secured, phone-lines purchased.

The EU leaders are stating publicly, daily, that negotiations with Britain are over and no further concessions will be made. The prime minister insists that talks are continuing – with whom, how and about what we are no wiser in this “parliamentary democracy.”

READ MORE: Dead end: UK's Theresa May has led her party & country into an impasse

At the same time as the British Parliament plumbs new depths in public esteem other estates in the land are revealed to be busy undermining the very idea of democracy itself.

As British old-age-pensioners shiver in the bleak midwinter, as millions of our children are revealed by the United Nations to be living in poverty some of them literally going hungry, as a crime and murder wave breaks around our shores we discover that our 4th estate – the media- instead of on all or even any of these things have chosen to cloister instead with their Intelligence “handlers” to obsess about...Russia. And, most ominously, about Britain's Parliamentary Opposition leader, Jeremy Corbyn.

The Russophobic tide in Britain has risen in inverse proportion to the country's perceived decline, something which can hardly be hidden, or a co-incidence. One doesn't need to be a psychologist to conclude that this is classic displacement activity. “Look over there” is the new motto on the imperial crest.

Also on rt.com Russia! The gift that keeps giving for the BBC, even on the streets of France

The more they cry about "Russian State media" the more our own state corrupts our own media. Day after day some of the most well-known media personalities in the land are revealed to be embedded with not just British Intelligence but MILITARY Intelligence in the "Integrity Initiative" – the illegitimate child of the "Institute for Statecraft". Their employers too.

The state-sponsored BBC is of course in the Van. This week they were caught red-handed "out for blood" in the words of their Moscow reporter seeking to establish a guiding hand in Moscow meddling in the mass protests of the Yellow Vests in France – protests which the British media had comprehensively ignored (except to complain that RT was reporting them). The French people as we all remember would not know how to storm the Bastille of a government which had outlived its usefulness. They'd have never dreamed of having a revolution in France if not for Vladimir Putin…

Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

Podcasts
0:00
25:59
0:00
26:57