Buzzer
Languidly Clinical
- Oct 1, 2006
- 26,121
Whilst I dislike UKIP what they have proven is that a UK based party can be formed and go from 0 to a few seats in 10 years. And in other countries new parties have been formed and got some power quite quickly. If there is genuine desire for change it can be done and done relativelly quickly.
The trouble is, and I think I've mentioned it here before that any new party needs to be made up of people who were previously outside the current system. UKIP may be a new party but it's leadership is made up of the same malcontented faces that lurked in the shadows of the more established parties. George Galloway's Respect Party is the same type of beast. The same piggies wanting their snouts in the trough. I guarantee that if the SDP were to form today that within 6 months its leadership would consist entirely of people that made up the old status quo.
It's the system that needs to change (as someone else has said). We need politicians that have had a career outside of politics, union rabble-rousing, parliamentary consultancy and the like. Where are the scientists in government? It's all lawyers, bankers and career politicians - or even worse children of career politicians. In Iceland they have a comedian as mayor of Reykjavik, in Italy another comedian lead a grassroots movement that has the government worried. These people stood as REAL alternatives and the support is there. And here in the UK, we need more Martin Bells, more Richard Taylors (a doctor who ran and won as an independent).
Just watch out for Bez from the Happy Mondays - I fancy he will win the seat he's contesting in Manchester.