Although WR has contested European elections in the past,
this was when the constituencies were smaller, single-member ones that did less
damage to regional identity. We have no
candidates this time, having been systematically disadvantaged both
geographically and financially.
The geography doesn’t help because the ‘regions’ used for
the regional constituencies are still the (supposedly abolished) Prescott zones, not real
regions with historic identities. Wessex is split between two, the west added to Cornwall, the east
embraced by the outer Londonian belt.
To contest two ‘regions’ would cost £10,000 in deposits
before even a single leaflet could roll off the presses. The election deposit is essentially a tax on
smaller parties. You get the money back
if you poll more than 2.5% – but while you’re building up that support you’re
repeatedly punished for having the nerve to challenge the established cartel.
Surely it would be worth it to get a party election
broadcast though? If only. Stand in Scotland
or Wales
and you get your airtime even if you stand nowhere else. Stand in one English ‘region’, or even two,
and you don’t get a thing. To qualify,
you have to stand in all nine English ‘regions’.
That’s nonsense, of course.
It dismisses the whole point of a regional party. Our audience is in Wessex,
not Northumbria or East Anglia. As Scotland
and Wales show, there’s no
technical reason why it can’t be done, since broadcasting in England still
has a regional basis. It’s pure
ideological spite on the part of the London
regime: a refusal to facilitate debate about the future of England, insisting that we are One
– and that THEY are that One.
It would be possible to get round the rules by having some
sort of ‘English regionalist list’, but why should it come to that? It’s clearly not our business to stir up other
parts of England
that aren’t interested in rousing themselves.
And there’s no ‘Celtic nationalist list’, for good reason: the Celtic
nations are all different, with different priorities. And so are the English regions. One thing we don’t want to do is play down
our differences at the very point where proper constitutional accommodation of
those differences is coming to be recognised as the real alternative to a
dysfunctional UK dominated
by London.
So you’re a Wessex Regionalist. There’s no WR candidate. Can you vote for any of the others? Last time, in 2009, there was a Mebyon Kernow
list in ‘The South West’, but that was a one-off. MK were fortunate enough to find the funds to
fight. Despite polling 6.8% in Cornwall, they still lost their deposit because they
weren’t so popular outside Cornwall. Hardly surprising. But hardly fair. In the absence of both WR and MK, what about
the Greens then? Well, what about the
Greens?
The Greens are not regionalists. They may talk about ‘small is beautiful’ but
they don’t practise it, preferring to remain organised as ‘the Green Party of
England & Wales’ and putting up candidates against nationalists and
regionalists whose policies are actually far more green than the Green Party’s. (The Greens, for example, favour
renationalisation of the railways, not the decentralised common ownership that
is needed but simply a return to the catastrophe of micro-management from
London, meaning London’s demands get priority treatment every time.)
Recently, the Green Party leader, Natalie Bennett, was
spotted in Cornwall
lending support to the campaign for an assembly there (rather as the FibDems
did, long ago). The Greens’ No 2
candidate for ‘The South West’, Emily McIvor, has a positive record on
devolutionary issues. But if you do vote
Green, you won’t get Emily.
If the Greens are lucky, they will win one seat in ‘The
South West’. It would take a landslide
to win two. Which means that a vote for
the Greens is not a vote for Emily but for the No 1 candidate, Molly Scott
Cato, who currently leads the Green Group on Stroud District Council (but works in London). And has a past.
In 1992, Cynog Dafis was elected as Plaid Cymru MP for
Ceredigion & Pembroke North, with Green Party support. The
deal worked well enough for most members in both local parties, the Greens
recognising that half an MP is better than no representation. Not so Molly Scott Cato, who was one of the
pact saboteurs who worked to break it.
An exasperated Dafis eventually withdrew from the deal, leaving the
Greens with no presence in the House of Commons until the election of Caroline
Lucas in 2010.
On his own website, Cato’s former partner, Chris Busby, explains
the anti-pact campaign as motivated by a belief that the Blaid as a whole wasn’t
green enough, on issues such as nuclear power or travellers’ rights. However, a pamphlet co-authored by Busby, Cato
and others in 1995, Nationalism in Wales,
exposed the real agenda as one hostile to any way of thinking that failed to
match their arrogant metropolitan prejudices.
(An example: they defined nationalism in Wales not empirically but by
reference to selected dictionary definitions that enabled them to conflate it
with Nazism. Facts were not allowed to
spoil their argument: the nationalists, obviously, were just concealing their
true nature.) Cato, settling in a
community where Welsh was the normal medium of communication (and had been for
many, many centuries), refused to learn the language and then complained of
being lonely. Given this track record,
it is difficult to see her championing the cause of regional autonomy or
cultural identity. More a case of ‘save
the world but sod the locals’.
Greens and regionalists share much in policy terms – and sit
together in the European Parliament. But
they come to the same policies from very different starting points that must
influence how those policies are understood and applied.
Greens appear to have no concept of history, of being one part of a continuing local or regional story set in linear time and from which it is possible to learn useful things about the nature of the area. Including its ecological nature. According to Simon Schama, “Green politics is sited in the present and the future, with only the very remote past (at least in Europe) invoked as a sacred ancestor.” This fits well the tired, post-war narrative of suppression that views all Europeans as incapable of making healthy use of their heritage. (Interestingly, the intervening millennia of experience judged illegitimate are those not shared with the USA.) The Greens, given their oft-alleged far-Right origins, are more sensitive than most to such accusations and therefore all the more keen to throw mud proactively.
Greens appear to have no concept of history, of being one part of a continuing local or regional story set in linear time and from which it is possible to learn useful things about the nature of the area. Including its ecological nature. According to Simon Schama, “Green politics is sited in the present and the future, with only the very remote past (at least in Europe) invoked as a sacred ancestor.” This fits well the tired, post-war narrative of suppression that views all Europeans as incapable of making healthy use of their heritage. (Interestingly, the intervening millennia of experience judged illegitimate are those not shared with the USA.) The Greens, given their oft-alleged far-Right origins, are more sensitive than most to such accusations and therefore all the more keen to throw mud proactively.
Molly Scott Cato remains a fervent advocate of bio-regionalism, a neo-Jacobin project to erase all historic human communities
and replace them with new identities defined solely by objective geographical
resources. For the Greens, ordinary humans
are the problem, so their varied cultures obviously cannot be allowed to shape
the universal solution. Regionalism it may
be, but not as we know it. The question
of power remains absent, especially the question of power projected from
without. Greens can be easily
caricatured as those who have come to a community with the deliberate aim of
undermining the sense of difference that attracted them in the first place, once
that sense of difference demands anything of them in return. Sometimes the caricature is really quite
fair.
We have to conclude that there is no party standing in the
Euro-elections in Wessex
that we can support sufficiently to recommend a vote in its favour. All to some extent oppose Wessex and desire its continued destruction by the London regime. There is nothing concrete to suggest otherwise and therefore nothing to be gained by voting.
So you’re a Wessex Regionalist. What do you do? What you can do is the following (modified as
necessary if yours is a postal vote).
Take a thick felt pen to the polling station. Spread out the ballot paper. Write WESSEX REGIONALIST across it. Fold it, and place it in the ballot box. Those supervising the count will notice such
things: the papers end up in a separate pile.
Let’s aim for a record number of spoilt papers. A wasted vote? No. A
negative action? Far from it. Under the current electoral system, anti-democratic and centralist to the core, it is the only positive step we are
allowed to take.
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