When going to a polling booth in the UK, voters are always faced with three
choice. No matter what other parties appear on the ballot (be it growing ones
such as The Green Party or regional parties such as SNP) Labour, The
Liberal Democrats and The Conservative Party always appear. However the lines
that separate these three parties are blurred. In the last two decades these
parties have grown closer and closer, creating a political system in which the
three main parties are all close to centre. What happened to the good old days
of a left wing Labour party, instead of one that threw out Clause 4 and gives up
on nationalisation? Centre politics sets up a system where politicians appear
to care more about staying in power by not appearing to take a strong opinion,
and sacrifices politician's who fight for what they believe in. The longer the
main three political party stay with this system, the more the general public
feels disinterested in politics. The United Kingdom is leaving "government
of the people, by the people, for the people" and instead turning into a
government that never seems to change, despite of public opinion.
So how do you change a centrist system based on its own self preservation?
Well, at the moment, it seems to be doing a good job of destroying itself. The
2010 election results were not, as The Conservatives claim, showing a public
who no longer trusted the Labour party, they were the result of a public who feel they
can no longer distinguish between the political parties. Current opinion polls
show the Liberal Democrats have lost most of their public support (this is what
happens when you are the scapegoat of the coalition) and The Conservatives and
Labour stick around the 40% mark. In a time when one party is horrifically cutting
public spending you would expect the public would support the rival party.
However because the other party, this time being Labour, appears to offer the
same thing as the party it is the rival of, choosing a political party has whittled
down to which colour you prefer. If the three main parties stay on the
centrist route, they will either have a public who feels that nothing ever
changes so why bother voting or face some good old 1848 style political
revolutions and uprisings.
However hope is not lost. All it would take is for one political party to
stick its head up out of the sand and walk into no-man’s land shouting " Actually
I feel pretty strongly that....", and not just on one policy but many
policies. I am not saying that compromise is a bad thing but don't jump the gun
and not even bother having a stronger view on something. If one party started
to have strong views it would force the others to have strong views to counter
the opposition’s views. Which party would stick their head out, if any, remains
to be seen but I sincerely believe we are in the end days of centre politics. Hopefully
its death will come sooner rather than later.
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