How do we make a new politics based on caring?

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I wish this year was not ending as it was. I know I am far from alone. 2020 will be remembered, but not with much affection.

It seems as if it is the destiny of fate that as Christmas approaches things are at what might be their lowest ebb yet. This was, of course, what Brexit pessimists like me always predicted. How could leaving the best (even if mightily flawed) trading relationship we could ever have, which had coincidentally delivered European peace for multiple generations, ever go well? It very clearly has not, and has no prospect of doing so.

But no one could have predicted that the appalling management of Covid 19 in the UK would combine with Brexit to deliver the prospect of international isolation on an unimagined scale. And yet, until the British variant of the coronavirus spreads beyond our borders (as I suspect, unfortunately, that it will) that is the prospect that we face. Being in international isolation for one reason is bad enough. For two is nigh on impossible to manage.

There will be those who will more than happily blame coronavirus for all that is happening. That will be disingenuous, at best. Of course the current outbreak will make things very much worse. But both disasters are so predictable. And both have similar cause.

Theresa May, living in fear of her backbenchers, thought free market sentiments would deliver a benign Brexit of advantage to all, because that's what the supposed guiding-hand of free enterprise does, in their opinion. How little they did and do understand about the whole complex nature of human relationships where profit maximisation is never once given a thought.

Johnson thought letting the virus rip through the UK population would have the same consequence: it was suggested by those of a free market mind set that the guiding hand would soon see it expire. We would lose our grannies on the way, but as they're unproductive, so what? How little they did and do understand about the whole complex nature of human relationships and virus contagion, where profit maximisation is never once given a thought.

The same, hopelessly flawed, belief that if only the ‘natural order', which happens to amount to the unalloyed pursuit of self interest, were let rip all would work out fine for those fit enough to survive (amongst whom the wealthy would, naturally, be a pre-eminent part) was allowed to prevail by governments made up of deeply flawed and uncaring people possessed of intellects stunted by the toxins created within the cauldrons of Oxford University. And now we pay the price for that.

That we share a common humanity is now apparent.

That there is such a thing as community should be equally obvious.

That economics does not dictate all politics should be clear.

And whilst compassion, empathy and the simple ability to care about the person not known, but who is known to be in need, may remain beyond the comprehension of anyone in this government, is it beyond hope that they might have noticed that others think this way?

My argument is very straightforward. It is that the price we are paying is the reward for governments that are indifferent to others. Given that I think that there are such things as morals, this can alternatively put: we are paying the price of our immorality. Or selfishness, to be blunt.

What can we do about that? I admit I do not know. In Scotland and Northern Ireland, where there have long been different moral sentiments and so, overall, very different societies, the answer is to leave this cesspool that is the creation of English politics, which they very clearly no longer wish to participate in.

For Wales, the suffering will continue.

And of England? What hope is there when almost 40% still back the Tories, and Starmer appears to have absolutely no fight within him?

In England the need is for something that I see, all around me, but which gets no expression. That is a need for moral revival. But, beware: populists also go there, of course. And they pollute this idea. So too do some who make this religious, when morality is not their preserve to claim. And yet we need it.

We do care.

We do have compassion.

We do love our neighbour, even if not as we love ourselves.

But, how do we make that into a new politics of caring? That's a question for Christmas. I have no answer, as yet.


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