A Note on the Election Result

The consensus among the commentariat is that Britain’s leaders benefited from an ‘incumbency effect’ last Thursday, with voters rewarding those parties that have been in power during the pandemic and punishing those that haven’t. Does this mean the cause of lockdown scepticism is a busted flush? Anti-lockdown candidates were trounced wherever they stood. Leo Kearse, who ran against Humza Yousaf in Glasgow Pollock on behalf of the Reclaim Party, got just 114 votes.

But before we fold up our tent and go home, it’s worth pausing to consider the advantage that the incumbent, pro-lockdown parties had. For one thing, Boris Johnson, Nicola Sturgeon and Mark Drakeford were able to spend tens of millions of pounds – in Boris’s case, hundreds of millions – on ads to encourage people to comply with their social distancing policies. Ostensibly apolitical, which is why taxpayers’ money could be spent on them, these ads indirectly endorsed the approach these leaders have taken to managing the pandemic. After all, an ad telling you how important it is to wear a mask on public transport may not be an explicit invitation to vote for the politician that introduced mask mandates, but the subtext is that the politician in question made exactly the right call – he or she is saving lives by insisting we all wear masks. It’s also worth bearing in mind that the governments of all three nations are buying up space across the media, including in newspapers, and paying ‘rate card’, i.e. full whack, which no other advertisers do. Not that there have been many other advertisers for the past year, at least not for concerts or films or exhibitions. That will have created a powerful financial disincentive for editors to criticise the lockdowns or the politicians that introduced them.

The same sleight of hand – messaging that on the face of it is apolitical, but has the indirect effect of boosting political incumbents – was in evidence during the televised ‘briefings’ that have dominated media coverage of the pandemic – in Nicola Sturgeon’s case, daily briefings until a few weeks ago. Indeed, Sturgeon suspended her daily briefings during the Scottish election campaign on the grounds that they could give the SNP an unfair advantage over the other parties, more or less acknowledging that she’s reaped a political dividend from giving them. Needless to say, Ofcom dismissed complaints earlier in the year that Sturgeon was using her daily briefings to promote her political standing.

To see how this worked in Boris’s favour, take the Government’s relentless pro-NHS propaganda. Nothing overtly political about every senior member of the Government from the Prime Minister on down praising the NHS, urging people to protect the NHS, telling the public how lucky we are to have the wonderful NHS. But scratch the surface and of course it’s political. This is a Conservative Government disabusing the public of any suspicion they might have that the NHS isn’t safe in Tory hands, which, for decades, has been the Party’s biggest political weakness, ruthlessly exploited by Labour at every opportunity. Not safe? Au contraire, general public. We love the NHS. We want to protect and nurture the NHS. In fact, we are the true custodians of the NHS.

And don’t doubt for a second that this was a cold, political calculation. It was Dominic Cummings, after all, who came up with the slogan: “Stay home. Save lives. Protect the NHS.” That’s the same Dominic Cummings who put the NHS front and centre of the Leave campaign – remember the £350 million a week we would be able to spend on new hospitals after we’d left the EU? Dom will have realised that every time the Prime Minister appeared on the television standing behind a podium bearing that slogan he was boosting the Tories’ electoral chances. The Downing Street press briefings, so slavishly covered by the BBC, ITV, Sky News and Channel 4, were misnamed. They should have been called Party Political Broadcasts for the Conservative Party.

Not that Keir Starmer is blameless. The problem with a national crisis, from the opposition’s point of view, is that normal political life is suspended and all the party leaders are supposed to rally round the Prime Minister. But did Starmer have to be quite so supine in his support of the Government’s decision to impose three lockdowns? His ‘opposition’ consisted of urging Boris to lock down sooner than he did – which, if you think about it, is a tacit endorsement of the policy, effectively acknowledging that Boris got the one big decision of his premiership spot on. Starmer’s position for over a year has been: Really good decision Prime Minister, exactly right, well done. Little wonder he hasn’t had much cut through with the general public. He might as well be another member of the Cabinet.

So, yes, the incumbents probably did get a boost from their handling of the pandemic, but not because they handled it well. They got a boost because they spent hundreds of millions pounds of taxpayers’ money telling the electorate they were doing exactly what they should be doing to keep us safe, and opposition politicians, as well as the mainstream media, enthusiastically endorsed their approach.

At one point I hoped that when life returns to normal, the furlough scheme ends and the catastrophic damage of the lockdowns becomes apparent, the public might begin to question whether Boris, Nicola, et al. did in fact make the right call. Could that create an opportunity for a well-organised anti-lockdown party with a charismatic leader to start building support? But given the boost the incumbents have got from the crisis, it’s clearly in their interests to extend it for as long as they can, which means ‘normal’ may still be some distance away. Oh, and the Government has just agreed a contract with a media buying agency to spend a further £320 million of taxpayers’ money on pro-Boris propaganda. So don’t expect a revolt any time soon. There will be a reckoning, but it will be some time coming.

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Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

Same story everywhere – England, Scotland, Wales, “Greater Manchester” – political leaders have made capital out of this. Who would have thought that the media and the “science” could be taken over like this, that we should find ourselves being governed in a way far more consistent with the People’s Republic of China than a country with proud traditions of freedom and equality before the law? And who is more useful to the government – Keir Starmer or Steve Baker? Where is the opposition?

And when hundreds of thousands go to London to protest these human rights abuses, the media virtually ignore it. Seriously, what can we do? I’m fed up and disgusted.

I’ve said it before, just go on living old normal, even if it means doing things you’ve never done before, and just maybe there will be something left to salvage if we ever win this battle. I’ve also said, it’s a coup d’etat by big pharma and it’s been a long time coming. Democracy – what democracy? Now perhaps you’ll believe that the country’s going to hell in a handcart. And that’s putting it mildly. Good night. And good luck..

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

How prescient of Joseph Goebbels

mojo
mojo
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

It is a slow propaganda story that many are too scared to talk about. We need a Raheem Kassan in this country and we need to stop accepting meekly that our elections are fair and democratic. It took the Americans 100 years to realise that the left stole elections through fear and intimidation.

We are noticing that our strongly small c conservative country is being wantonly moved further to globalist/totalitarian control. This has to be by political design just as we were lied to in 1975 when joining the EEC.

So many of our journalists are now accepting, as so many American journalists did, that the hard left is the future. None of them realise that they will have no jobs, no homes, no lives if they give in to tyranny. Most trashed DJT because they were too scared to stand against the CCP and the Globalists. What a sorry mess we are in. The last thing we need is even more cowardice.

chriswatch
chriswatch
4 years ago
Reply to  mojo

The postal vote, implemented by Tony Blair as PM, is the downfall of elections and subsequently democracy, in our country.

Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago
Reply to  chriswatch

It existed before Blair – the Conservatives were notorious for being able to organise it better than their Labour opponents.

mojo
mojo
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The divide and conquer rule is always applied by the communists. People have been starved of news on their MSM. All they hear is vaccines must be had if you want freedom. All they get is dumbed down rubbish entertainment. everyone who speaks out gets shut out. Many virologists and immunologists are now leaving to work with Ron DeSantis in Texas. The UK will vote the way they are told, many will not have voted. The result will be as when Blair told us he won a landslide election on a 32% voter turnout. We need to wise up and accept that voting is not honest or democratic. It is usually rigged one way or another. Either by presenting a set of candidates we did not want in the first place or by ballot rigging. We now have the Dominion machines in this country. Not one journalist or politician has brought this to light. Until we stop whining and start attacking the left and playing them at their own game by using their own language against them, we will lose and Boris will be PM for as long as the globalists need him. Just as with Biden in America. Only… Read more »

LMS2
4 years ago
Reply to  mojo

The MAGA movement had a figurehead to rally around. We have no one here. Even Farage has left to tour America to rally MAGA voters. He should have been here, opposing lockdown, but like Kassam, he’s skipped town. Richard Tice simply doesn’t have the same media presence. Neither does Laurence Fox, as much as I like his policies.
We have no Desantis or Trump in opposition, but someone even further left than Boris, and even he’s closer to Biden than not.

Susan
4 years ago
Reply to  LMS2

A long time ago the British gave up their guns and bodies to the state. The continued erosion of individual rights is no surprise.

LMS2
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Not just this country. The province of Ontario has a 4-week curfew that’s in its fourth month, and a two-week lockdown now into its second year. And church ministers are being arrested and jailed for breaking rules that don’t have jail-time as a punishment.

HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

Hey, you can’t use my name! 😉But yes, you are right. And an excellent article by Toby too. Perhaps these are the arguments we should use to put before the zeolots, how the parties have used this “pandemic” to seriously push their own agendas.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  HelenaHancart

Sadly, it won’t work. Zealots don’t listen. They have swallowed the propaganda hook, line and sinker: having invested so much emotional capital they will not lose face by admitting they have been played like a trout on a line.

KFH
KFH
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

The nation state is finished and politics in this country is dead. Lobbying and weak and corrupt government has allowed global companies to insidiously worm there way in to every aspect of our lives, starting with neo-liberal madness of Margaret Thatcher, leading to absurdities such as Virgin “Healthcare” suing Surrey council for denying them a contract. The proud traditions as you put it only applied if you were docile and even then not always. I can think of many miscarriages of justice. If you challenged the iniquities and inequities of the state you felt the full force of the law. Keir Starmer is probably a plant put there to ensure that there is no opposition and no left-leaning person ever gets near power again so what do you expect? We are now in a one party state and when Scotland gets independence as they surely will there will be a one party state in Scotland.

Hugh
Hugh
4 years ago

“I always voted at my party’s call and I never thought of thinking for myself at all” (Sir Joseph Porter, HMS Pinafore – cancelled for your own safety, or something). Things don’t change much do they?

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  Hugh

No indeed. Sir Joseph, and his real-life counterpart, became ‘rulers of the Queen’s navee’ although they knew nothing whatever about naval matters. These days they’d be SAGE experts, telling the government how to tyrannise over us.

flick
flick
4 years ago

Please don’t fold up your tent and go home,
People are still in the grip of fear and uncertainties.
In fact I think there will be a problem of reluctance to give some of this up.

I don’t like being frightened so gave it up lol.
Its done by looking at facts and opinions , all sorts sooner or later the British Public will have to that.

Lockdown Sceptics is and will be a significant part of this process.
So , keep on ‘ controlling the hysteria.
Ta muchly

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  flick

Seconded.
And thank you, Toby, for adopting a vigorously critical tone. A nice change from articles that feebly précis msm nonsense, snd/or intone praise of the Holy Snake Oil.

HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Yes, this really is a strong written article by Toby. I’ve noticed too in his London Calling podcast with James Delingpole, that they have become a force to be reckoned with! I highly recommend it if you haven’t already.

Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
4 years ago
Reply to  flick

We fight on.
A journey of 5,000 miles starts with a single step.

FlynnQuill
4 years ago
Reply to  flick

We have a very long way to go from what I witnessed yesterday.

I was at and outdoor covered market in Tynemouth and I was shocked to see at least 30% of people masked up!! Young, old, children, middle aged and old. It was a depressing sight!! My wife and I just walked around angry and chastising people when they were in earshot. We don’t half have a cowardly supine, spineless core running through this once great country.

LMS2
4 years ago
Reply to  FlynnQuill

Not just supine but clearly ignorant.
They only know what the government and media tell them, and as they don’t expect to be lied to on such a scale, they believe it.

HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
4 years ago
Reply to  FlynnQuill

Blimey, you sound like me and Mr H! This is our trip into town everytime! But I am noticing more and more people maskless in shops. I’ve started making eye contact and nodding. They probably think I’m mad but it has yielded a few knowing glances back.

Dave Angel Eco Warrier
Dave Angel Eco Warrier
4 years ago
Reply to  HelenaHancart

Smaller shops, yes, but supermarkets are still a depressing bastion of mask wearing compliance. I think people lose their bottle in places where they perceive they are more likely to get challenged. In my experience they don’t challenge you at all (I don’t wear a ‘badge’) and quizzical looks are the extent of their protest.

HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
4 years ago

We have to continue to ensure that our strength shines a light on their weakness. I refuse to be beaten down into a negative state of mind. This is exactly what they want!

huxleypiggles
4 years ago

Same here.

And I am ALWAYS ready to give both barrels if I am challenged.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  FlynnQuill

Depressing indeed. This morning I took my grandchildren to school in Northumberland. Out in the open air, every parent was wearing a muzzle as they approached the school gates. It was like a scene in a dystopian film. A horrible example of supine compliance in front of impressionable young children.

Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
4 years ago
Reply to  FlynnQuill

ABSOLUTELY PATHETIC COLLABORATING SHEEP.

Mike Yeadon
4 years ago
Reply to  flick

It’s not enough. We must explicitly tell the public that they’re being lied to deliberately.

It’s not a difference of opinion.

mojo
mojo
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

Totally agree. So many are far too polite. So many hedge their bets for fear of being silenced. It’s time we stood out and it’s time we encouraged the thousands of nurses to stand up and speak put loud what they know to be happening.

We must create opportunities for a different health service to give them encouragement. Most of all we need the journalists to stop being too scared to investigate.

Tillysmum
Tillysmum
4 years ago
Reply to  mojo

Talking to a man yesterday whose girlfriend is a nurse who said that the unions are very involved. Any nurse who speaks out (and there has been nothing going on for months) is out of work, union rules I gather.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

I appreciate the sentiment but it won’t work with people who have chosen to believe the lie.

IanC
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

Anyone know someone with circa £320 m quid to spare to spend on an advertising campaign selling the truth? Crowd funder? Sadly not any would contribute. Already beguiled I fear.

Tillysmum
Tillysmum
4 years ago
Reply to  IanC

Circulate ‘The Light’, talk to everyone, send videos of Mike Yeadon and Reiner Fuellmich and everyone with the truth to tell. Better to do something small sooner than nothing. Crowdfund? Yes, but I’m a complete technophobe.
Can someone do it and I’ll send my donation?

Tillysmum
Tillysmum
4 years ago
Reply to  Tillysmum

Terrific video of Mikes arrived this morning and I managed to circulate after watching. Tonight it’s been removed, such a pity.

MechEng
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

In my engineering work the principle was to welcome all suggestions we may be doing it wrong, that our product may be wrong even when we think we’ve fully validated it. We welcome/seek anecdotal evidence urgently for careful consideration without requiring the person providing it does all the work and provides full peer reviewed reports before we’ll even look at it; that may be okay if you want to rewrite the textbooks but in critical product development etc it’s too late by then. The way we do science today seems to have the whole process upside down for these kinds of scenarios and I think this is so dangerous. I don’t know what to make of what may or not be going on except surely something has gone dangerously wrong and very soon it will probably be too late or there’s something we’re not being told, but I do feel, even if you only watched the BBC surely people must be noticing it just doesn’t add up. I keep trying to draw on my mountaineering, engineering etc experiences of how we fool ourselves and make dangerous mistakes, but it’s one thing me noticing the warning signs something is going wrong… Read more »

debra
4 years ago
Reply to  flick

We do indeed face some difficult times. I agree that “taking our ball home” won’t help. I am reading “Live Not By Lies” Rod Dreher and it has been a help to me – Thank you to Toby and the team at LDS for keeping the flame alight. When the Black Dog prowls the truth is a light to our feet! The daily battle to stay strong is real & it helps to have a community such as this.

Stephensceptic
Stephensceptic
4 years ago

The populations of western countries are getting what they have asked for. It is the old axiom that you get the government that you deserve. Most people got deeply scared in March 2020. We can debate the role of the media, Imperial College and other so-called “experts”, as well as the novelty of a daily death count in creating this fear but it was real. They demanded that government “do something” and so governments did. They had no clue what to do and copied China. Johnson started out rightly by saying that nothing would really stop this but he got destroyed in the Press and by public opinion. He took the message and did an about face. Many people have then stayed scared. Governments have realised that their activist measures are still popular, given the fear, and have no incentive to unravel them or to assuage the fear. Indeed, they see more political risk in unrolling the measures because they will then be blamed if Covid comes back. They will also lose their “rally round the government” political calling card. First World War analogies kind of work best for me. It was begat by mutual fear of other countries, rather… Read more »

Annie
4 years ago
Reply to  Stephensceptic

Agree. Eventually the rats will be deserting the sinking ship through every available crack. But the evidence against the whole squalid crowd of them will be there, massive, incontrovertible.

mojo
mojo
4 years ago
Reply to  Annie

Mike is correct. However, the next stage is not anger or retribution. The next step is murder, gulags, divided nations, hunger, poverty. At that point there will be no fight back. There will be 70yrs of hell. In that time the Islamification of this country may well take hold and the fight will be epic between China and Islam.

Until we get across to people that two of the most vicious and callous titens are about to clash and we are in for another Boudican fight on our soil, the United Kingdom as we know it will be gone. We are in the small window of turning this around. But we need to stop being polite and we need to stop giving space to those who will take us over the cliff through cowardice and fear.

I think if we lose it will take 70yrs to run the circle because communism and totalitarianism takes roughly that long to run through a nation. However, we also have bio weaponry and the CCP’s total disregard for human life. The outcome may well be a lot worse.

LMS2
4 years ago
Reply to  mojo

Islam has been around for 1400 years.
The Christian church has been around for longer, but has effectively surrendered and given up the fight in the West.
Communism has been around for 100+ years, and in China has been under the CCP since 1949. The CCP has the country in a firm grip, and has global ambitions, with the West already surrendering.
It could take a lot longer than 70 years to collapse. My fear is that without a free democratic America, where is the opposing example for people to look to? And where can we escape to?
But otherwise, I agree with your assessment.

I wonder if our governments have followed the CCP example because they’re either communist sympathizers (the Democrats, Trudeau, Ardern, etc) or because they don’t believe they can win against China so have decided to join them.

Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago
Reply to  Stephensceptic

During WW1, General Aylmer Hunter-Weston, a British Army general who fitted the “elderly moustached idiot sending young men to their deaths” stereotype quite well, was given leave and stood in a Scottish by-election for Parliament. Hunter-Weston trounced his opponent, a pacifist clergyman.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1916_North_Ayrshire_by-election

Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago
Reply to  Waldorf

Even Hunter-Weston by early 1918 noticed war-weariness among his soldiers. He told Field Marshal Haig that a delegation of MPs who went to the front were asked by soldiers if they were “Labour MPs” and the soldiers told them of the horrors of the fighting and asked them what they were fighting for. Haig mentioned the conversation in his diary.

Mike Yeadon
4 years ago
Reply to  Stephensceptic

I see no evidence that this fraud will ever be exposed. The media won’t do it. It’s all moving into the rear view mirror & into the new normal.

JASA
JASA
4 years ago
Reply to  Stephensceptic

I agree with what you say, except the bit at the start where you say that ‘they’, the public demanded the government do something, or have I misunderstood that? It was the media that demanded it. This government, more than any other, is ‘run’ by the media. If the media changed their tune, this would be over almost immediately. I agree that the public have gone along with it and not fought back, but it was all ‘asked for’ by the Media, especially Laura Kuenssberg at al.

IanC
4 years ago
Reply to  JASA

As I said, £350 million anyone? The media just might swing our way, but no, I’m sure the government could easily outbid us in a game of media price oneupmanship, they’ve got access borrowing against all the money they haven’t had from us or our children and grandchildren yet. How can anyone compete with that? Even cuddly Bill would struggle if he was on this side of the dark divide.

Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago
Reply to  JASA

True, although not re-assuring. Cynical though I am, I have still been shocked at times by the way people could be stampeded by the media.

BeBopRockSteady
4 years ago
Reply to  Stephensceptic

I’ve been telling my family since day 1 of the masks mandate that exemptions were a personal choice. No business or court had any way to take that away from you, only intimidation and your capitulation to it.

I had exactly the same argument with the same people again yesterday. 8 months later. People are struggling to accept anything other than the diktat that this is a deadly virus of no compare, and that every rule broken will mean jail.

No help I can offer really for such immovable objects

TJN
TJN
4 years ago

Thanks Toby – good insights. You forgot one thing though: the whole charade is propped up by printed money. Take that away, and the whole lot collapses.

But no government can go on printing money indefinitely before the consequences catch up.

We’re only part way through this story. And it isn’t a happy ending.

mojo
mojo
4 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Yes they can. Until no one owns anything and everyone has a ‘useful’ job on universal income. When they are no longer useful at whatever age, they get disposed of. It is time we stopped skirting round the real agenda.

LMS2
4 years ago
Reply to  TJN

Government-imposed digital currency?

Lucan Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  TJN

“But no government can go on printing money indefinitely before the consequences catch up.”

I heard that over the weekend from a guy in their HotTub. You can’t leave the pump on permanently as the tub will run out of water or worse overflow.

Both banks and government have been ‘printing money’ for at least 150 years – since 1866. That’s how money works – it’s a unit of account.

The monetary system works like a stone skipping across a pond. “Printing Money” is throwing the stone and each hop is a taxation point. We can keep throwing the stones, safe in the knowledge that taxation friction will always ensure that the stones will sink out of harms way.

Each time, every time.

All very easy to understand once you have the correct mechanism in mind.

TJN
TJN
4 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

Yes, of course governments print money, and whenever they can do so to finance debt. But what’s been happening over the last decade, and more especially over the last year, is absolutely off the scale.

It won’t work, and at this scale can end only in disaster, because money itself isn’t wealth.

I like your stone skipping metaphor.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  Lucan Grey

Money stops bouncing because taxation is harmful.

You cant HEAT YOUR HOT TUB WITHOUT WARM WATER.

PRINTING makes the water cold.

Stephensceptic
Stephensceptic
4 years ago

Another thought.

Historical conservatives such as Burke would see what is happening as one of the dangers of democracy. This kind of is democracy in action. The people are getting what they wanted.

What it is not is liberty. Traditional conservatives from the Enlightenment tended to value liberty over democracy. The US Constitution is far more about liberty and restricting state power than it is about the concept of people having a right to vote.

This era explains their rationale.

Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
4 years ago
Reply to  Stephensceptic

Liberty is gone.
But the people are not getting what they wanted. They were lied to from the beginning, and the lies will continue. They are blinded.
We can only continue to refuse compliance, to challenge and ask questions of those we know to begin the business of doubt. Hubris is at full pitch in Sage, the WHO, Boris and Gove. The future is terrible, whichever way this goes.

ElizaP
ElizaP
4 years ago

A friend of mine made the point re the elections that a noticeable number of people left the polling stations without voting – ie because it took so long for them to be able to get to the front of the queue in some places to use their vote. It is a valid point that many people won’t have had the time/will have been too ill to hang around for some time in cold weather outside a building/etc. That thought hadnt occurred to me – and I’d allocated no extra time (or warmer clothing to wear) or anything in order to have my vote and it was a surprise to me that I hadnt anticipated (mea culpa) that they’d make me wait in a queue before being allowed in. The only thing I had anticipated was the steward outside would try to let people behind me in the queue take my place and shove unmasked me backwards in the queue that way – and I was ready for him and loudly said “It’s MY turn now” to stop that lark when he tried to beckon forward someone behind me. But my friend reported that there were places where people were… Read more »

mojo
mojo
4 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

I suspect there were also very many who chose to spoil their ballot or who didn’t bother to vote in the first place. The Government will not tell you that but will know how angry we are. They will double down hard now because they know the depth of the anger. They hope their lies and propaganda will stop us from understanding how small the win really was. Which is why it is time to stop being polite and start asking publicly and loudly some really awkward questions .

LMS2
4 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

Not to contradict what you say, but anyone too ill should have stayed at home and already requested a postal ballot.
Do you mean they were frail/elderly rather than ill??

I hadn’t thought about queues to vote, and the weather was truly awful. We didn’t have to queue, luckily, but our polling station was restricting numbers, so had there been a few people already there, we’d have been stuck outside in the rain…

Stephanos
Stephanos
4 years ago
Reply to  ElizaP

It is clear that the situation varied from one part of the country to another.
I was determined to vote and not wear a face-nappy (I refuse to call them anything else). I wore a T-shirt that said:
‘Our parents and grandparents did not prosecute two world wars to a successful and victorious conclusion in order that we should be bossed about by yellow-jacketed jobsworths.’
I had an exemption card handy, but not visible, that I printed that day on scrap A4.
I walked straight in, no queue, ignored the hand-gunk and wondered where to go with my polling card when the Presiding Officer, muzzled up of course, asked me something. I said I could not hear what he said because of those stupid muzzles (can’t remember the term I used) so he very kindly led me to the right desk.
No challenge at all. I could have saved the printing ink!

BJs Brain is Missing
4 years ago

The events of Saturday in Brighton (where BBC Sussex was subjected to some rigorous truth) gives me cause for hope, plus the two very large marches in London recently. Not everyone has succumbed to the relentless propaganda, and nor will they ever. Keep going folks, liars always get found out in the end.

crimsonpirate
4 years ago

Friday night gave me some encouragement-sitting outside a bar till 7 when it got too cold. Everybody went inside-some 50 of us. Word was that some 4 bars in the area are doing the same or doing lock ins. I guess we have a parallel society

Monro
4 years ago

A massive indictment of the two party system.

At least, in the U.S., that indictment has been tempered by the federal system.

And it is now to the U.S. that British lockdown sceptics must look for political opposition to this global weird out.

The Republicans may very well put up a lockdown sceptical candidate at the next Presidential election, and that candidate may very well win.

But what happens happens in America never stays in America, so, as that campaign waxes, opportunist politicians over here will attach themselves to its coat tails. Will the government have the foresight, will it be possible, to get the inquiry out of the way before that? This government….and foresight? You already know the answer and that means: ‘There will be trouble ahead….tra la la…..etc…’

It’s a long haul……but the outcome is not in doubt.

George Morris
George Morris
4 years ago

An interesting thought. However, not many people have the luxury of voting for what they want, it’s usually a vote against what they don’t want. I had the opportunity to vote against the lockdown but actually had to vote against Independence.

Ruth Learner
Ruth Learner
4 years ago

The voter turnout was abysmal- 44% to 45% odd in many of the UK locals – including London Mayor – I think this says more than the results – those right leaning libertarians might be a step too far for some (L. Fox) and the harder left leaning (eg P. C) , a step too far for others. The main parties have no appeal for anybody I know – least of all because of their complicity in the non scientific politically driven tyranny called lockdowns etc. I don’t think this adds up to a consensus on anything – except a few hardliners and an exhausted minority who have been bullied by MSM and social media et al. I am a fan of compulsory voting but not strong arm tactics (btw – at least L. Fox got a respectable result).

JohnK
4 years ago

Absolutely true, and free advertising on the BBC to boot, for the drug trade. you couldn’t make it up.

stewart
4 years ago

Fear has won over reason in every single battle so far in the COVID revolution.

  • The virus isn’t particularly dangerous but most behave as if it is.
  • Lockdowns are counterproductive and destructive but most behave as if they help.
  • Masks are ineffective and probably harmful but most feel protected by them.
  • The COVID vaccines pose more risk than protection to most people but most people think the opposite is true.
  • Vaccine passports will rob us of our freedom but many think it is the path to freedom.

And last but not least:

  • Those who speak the above truths are accused of misinformation and are censored when it is in fact those in power – government and their advisors – who have misinformed, manipulated and deceived the public every step of the way.
Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

And the censorship will step up now, especially about the experimental vaccines. This has been a rehearsal. We depend now on the Republican states to keep the lights on.

Mike Yeadon
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Yes. This. It’s why I plan to go wheels up to the states when vaccine passports legislation passes Westminster.

Mike Yeadon
4 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Precisely. Clever lying & exaggeration coupled with ruthless censorship.
See my piece in Conservative Woman today.
We must explicitly tell the public they’re being lied to.

If you agree with my proposal, please share widely today. Thank you. Mike

https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/why-are-we-being-lied-to-about-covid-theres-no-good-reason/

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

Thank you for the superb, no hold barred article.

I’ve shared and still sharing.

helenf
4 years ago

These were “pandemic” elections, and I wouldn’t be at all surprised if they were heavily influenced by the “vaccine” rollout, which everyone in the government, public health, nhs and MSM are calling a “huge success”. There’s implicit messaging about the government for starters. Call me cynical, but I wouldn’t be surprised if the speed of the rollout was heavily influenced by the election date. And the fact that such a large proportion of the public have already had at least one injection should be proof enough that most people have swallowed the lies about covid and are largely behind the government. And giddy about getting small morsels of freedom back.

IanC
4 years ago
Reply to  helenf

Yes and they all got their badges too! I really have trouble believing that such infantile gestures are so broadly welcomed and even received with such pathetic delight by actual grown-ups! Nauseates me.

JibJab Badge.jpg
Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago
Reply to  IanC

A bit like the stickers given to people for voting – common in the USA though I have not seen it in Britain.

wendy
wendy
4 years ago

I so hope there will be a reckoning but when those in power can manipulate the narrative I am fearful for such reckoning. Thank Toby for this article and thank you to Laurence Fox for trying.

Victoria
4 years ago
Reply to  wendy

Laurence Fox had the platform to openly challenged the lockdown, masks and social distancing; that was really great

Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
4 years ago
Reply to  Victoria

Yes. We should not use their manipulative language though – it is not social distancing, it is staying apart.

IanC
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Or Anti-social distancing, to repeat the obvious. Sorry.

RJBassett
RJBassett
4 years ago

But given the boost the incumbents have got from the crisis, it’s clearly in their interests to extend it for as long as they can, which means ‘normal’ may still be some distance away.”

The truth of this was made clear with the “green list” for international travel, which was delayed until after the elections even though it had been promised “before May 1st;” a list that didn’t include the country with the most vaccinated people, the United States.

Emma
Emma
4 years ago

Like millions, I didn’t have a Reform or Reclaim or any anti-lockdown candidate to vote for in my area. I spoiled my ballot paper but sadly that doesn’t equal a vote for a pro-freedom party.

imp66
imp66
4 years ago

Sadly the sheeple can’t see past the end of their nose. As long as they are “protected” by experimental drug cocktails and their furlough money keeps on rolling in ( But for now long?), then they’ll cheer on ‘good old Boris’ et al. The Day of Reckoning seems a bloody long way off.

Martin Frost
Martin Frost
4 years ago

The public have been brainwashed into believing that lockdowns are a good thing. The media have made the biggest contribution to the myth. How often have scientists who understand that lockdowns don’t work been given a platform? The collateral damage from these lockdowns will only become apparent in the months and years ahead. Still it will be denied or explained away as a necessary measure to save the population from armageddon. However I am not going to stop speaking out against this collective idiocy and neither should others.

mojo
mojo
4 years ago

why don’t you ask a different question. Why don’t you ask whether or not the Dominion machines were used. What fraud and rigging on the count was involved. It seems to me we have a country too scared of themselves to ask questions.

You will be mocked for conspiracy theories just as the MAGA movement was, however, they are now proving the scale of the Steal from them.

All the time our political commentators give in and accept that our vote is democratic we are allowing the CCP, and the Globalists to take over. Believe me when they do none of you will survive.

Brian Robins
Brian Robins
4 years ago

It has been very difficult to determine what voter turn out was. Why has this been seemingly kept quiet? It may have a significant place to play in this discussion

JayBee
4 years ago

Any cult tests its members by instituting and proclaiming ever more absurdities.
Any cult has only ever ended in and through a/the culminating catastrophe.
The only two catastrophes that can and will end this cult are a) when the money has run out, which will most likely happen through a hyperinflation followed by a currency reset, or b) the sudden death of most of its members, which could well be the, likely planned for and deliberate anyway, result of the gene therapies, especially so as we now know that the spike protein is the cause of the vascular problems and as the jabbed are now all spike protein producing zombies. A combination of a) and b) is also very much possible, of course.
ANY restriction, law, mandate, guidance, NPI etc. has had only one real effect and therefore also likely only one real reason: shortening the plebs and their offsprings’ remaining life expectancy- see Jacques Attali.

Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

Not the Astra Zeneca jabbed.
The other possibility of catastrophe for this dreadful lying and greed for money and power is if deaths from the emergency licensed treatments mount to the point where whistle blowers, parents etc begin to speak out. Who could wish for that? But it could happen, especially over the children.

monica coyle
monica coyle
4 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Family members started speaking out on Facebook. There was a group called COVID19 VACCINE VICTIMS AND FAMILIES. It consisted of over 120,000 members where people posted stories of adverse vaccine reactions, including deaths. it was gaining 10,000 followers a week. Guess what? Facebook removed it. And that’s part of the problem, this hideous cancel culture.

IanC
4 years ago
Reply to  monica coyle

That is truly frightening! such a huge number of people, silenced just like that…?

chris c
chris c
4 years ago
Reply to  IanC

There was a huge “Banting” (dieting) group, I think the South African one, that had over a million members and was cancelled by Facebook.

Eventually after much pressure it was reinstated. Unlikely in this case I fear

Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago
Reply to  chris c

Given the problems caused by obesity, why was a dieting site closed down?

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  JayBee

And also Mike Yeadon’s thumping piece in today’s Conservative Woman.

JayBee
4 years ago

Freddy Sayers nailed this phenomenon with his Stockholm syndrome article.
In Germany, they are only angry at the government because it wasn’t strict enough and didn’t get them as many gene therapies as the Brits.
The mayor of Tübingen, who went a slightly different, innovative way quite successfully is ever more villified and relentlessly smeared.
So they are now begging for ever more torture and want to elect the Greens into power and the chancellorship.
Although those polls and the relentless media endorsement are obviously to be taken with a ton of salt.
This mankind fully deserves the upcoming catastrophe.

Mike Yeadon
4 years ago

https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/why-are-we-being-lied-to-about-covid-theres-no-good-reason/

It’s time to stop pretending that there’s a scientific dispute between “sceptics” & government and their advisors.

Instead, it’s long passed time to explicitly state that they are LYING DELIBERATELY IN ORDER TO FRIGHTEN US INTO ACCEPTING VACCINE PASSPORTS.

monica coyle
monica coyle
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

But how do you reach people to tell them? Even my nearest and dearest don’t quite believe me despite presenting lots of evidence about what is really going on. I can’t understand their meek acceptance of the whole situation.

chris c
chris c
4 years ago
Reply to  monica coyle

Even people who appeared to be sceptical have been lining up for their vaccine. They appear to have no idea that once you agree to one you agree to all the others for what remains of your life

TJN
TJN
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

Hello Mike, I didn’t know you read comments here, let alone posted. Earlier this morning, before I saw your posts here, I posted on the Today’s Update forum a note about your CW article, with a couple of quotes. https://staging.dailysceptic.org/todays-update/#comment-495933 As I write, it’s the top rated comment. That’s just about nothing to do with me, and just about everything to do with you and your article. I would, however, like to think it is in small part owing to my concluding remark. Lonely as your stance must feel at times, you may rest assured that very many people who keep their thoughts largely to themselves appreciate hugely your courage and what you are doing. I maybe don’t take such a bleak view as yourself, as I do think that in the end Truth will carry the day (although with Heaven know’s what damage along the way). There are lots of times in history when it looked as if a cause was lost, that a dishonest new normal had carried the day and was here to stay. But time passes and wheels turn, and what is unsustainable eventually doesn’t get sustained. Yes, they’re attempting to force us into accepting vaccine… Read more »

Susan
4 years ago
Reply to  TJN

I get your meaning but sorry, not rallying around anything O. Cromwell said. Better to quote some figure who didn’t slaughter, destroy and oppress.

TJN
TJN
4 years ago
Reply to  Susan

I think Cromwell was a very complex character, although his actions in Ireland will always be a terrible blot on his memory.

In his History of the English Speaking Peoples Winston Churchill is perplexed and even confused in defining him. He roundly condemns him for the atrocities in Ireland, but concludes in his assessment of his character:

Amid the ruins of every institution, social and political, which had hitherto guided the Island life he [Cromwell] towered up, gigantic, glowing, indispensable, the sole agency by which the time could be regained for healing and regrowth. 

These words seem apt today, in spring 2021. We need a sort of Cromwell as described here in Churchill’s words. But there’s no sign of who it might be. 

IanC
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

I have read and circulated this piece to as many as I can. It’s a message that somehow must get out and be made available to everyone.

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  Mike Yeadon

And the vax passes are the least of it.

LMS2
4 years ago

“it’s clearly in their interests to extend it for as long as they can, which means ‘normal’ may still be some distance away”

Welcome to the club, Toby. I’m not convinced they won’t keep these measures going indefinitely. The public has got used to being told what to do, and many are convinced that mask-wearing, antisocial-distancing, vaccines, etc etc, are absolutely essential and we will all die if they ever stop.
Boris was correct when he said we wouldn’t be returning to normal. He and his government have made sure of that. Should have taken more notice of that at the time.

monica coyle
monica coyle
4 years ago
Reply to  LMS2

The window of opportunity of returning to any normality is fast reducing. The public as a whole seem quite content with all the restrictions and aren’t questioning anything. They seem to have forgotten what normality was like already. They have rolled over, like those in Israel, happy to acquiesce despite their recent history

Crystal Decanter
4 years ago

Splitting the vote is never a good idea
What you need is a pressure group – such as “the Freedom Alliance” that does not run itself but can select a “freedom ” candidate in every constituency

Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago

Lockdown-sceptic candidates did slightly worse than I expected but even if they had done a little better, the fact that there was rarely just one if any stood at all was another weakening factor. In the London mayoral election, there were at least three.

chriswatch
chriswatch
4 years ago

Our government is ruling by fear (False Evidence Appearing Real) and the nation is falling for it hook, line and sinker?

Waldorf
Waldorf
4 years ago
Reply to  chriswatch

Unfortunately, fear works.

Noumenon
4 years ago

The fact is that the government didn’t win, the opposition lost. Even if new parties take a popular line I’m afraid they stand no chance in this MSM dominated climate. I wrote “none” on my ballot. The only anti-lockdown party I could have voted for was Reform but they are frankly cranks. I researched the options beforehand and was well aware that Reclaim and Reform are two different parties but even then I have to think about it when I see “Reform” on the ballot paper. What chance does the average person have? None! For the most part they see the usual three parties and the Greens and think: Greens = useless single issue pressure group. Lib-Dems = untrustworthy snakes. Labour = infighting puritanical meddling cynics. Con = old fashioned avaricious crooks. Reform = who? Were they the new fangled avaricious crooks? Reclaim = who? Independent = who? The appalling turnout is the only thing to take from elections these days. My feeling is that that group is more sceptical and cynical than we think, but they have no voice. My anecdotal evidence for this is the fact that I encounter many people who take the vaccine and follow the… Read more »

AN other lockdown sceptic
AN other lockdown sceptic
4 years ago

As my wise 87 year old Mum said at the start of this shitshow, ‘they told us that WW2 would be over by Christmas’.

Sadly, we need to be in this fight for the long haul. The truth will come out, we just need to put our shoulders to the wheel to ensure that it does.

Keep up the good fight, fellow courageous lockdown sceptics.

PW
PW
4 years ago

Toby,

This article has absolutely and utterly said it all, it’s so good that I’ve printed it off for my file, can I suggest that anyone reading this also reads last Monday’s UK Column article: “Buying a single version of the truth’…..these two articles go hand in glove and really should be read together…..

Once again thanks for yours and your team’s efforts to help keep us sane, I expect it’s scuppered your inclusion in the Honours List, but what the heck…..

PW.