Leaving aside that Owen Paterson is an Alan Partridge-like Walter Mitty of whom almost no one in rural England has ever heard and whose departure is being mourned only by the county set, George Monbiot , for all his faults, writes:
Beware the self-pity of the governing classes.
Ministers
of the crown might look powerful and oppressive to us; often they see
themselves as lonely heroes confronting a sea of troubles.
That has been Tony
Blair’s schtick from the month he took office. We now see him dripping with
other people’s blood but he appears to perceive only the scars on his own back.
The whingeing begins as soon as
they are free to speak.
Michael Gove, demoted as education secretary but still
in government, has said little, but his emissaries are wailing loudly on his behalf.
Owen Paterson, the former environment secretary, can speak directly, and he now lambasts the “green blob”, against which
he nobly fought and lost.
As one of those he blamed for
bringing him down in his wild, minatory article on Sunday,
I’m happy to join Blob Pride.
But I also see something new emerging in his
position and that of other disaffected rightwingers. It looks like the development
of a Tea Party faction within the Conservatives.
Tea Party politics can be defined
as the interests of the ultra-elite cleverly repackaged as the interests of the common
people. Here are its essential elements.
The first is a sense of
victimhood. Never mind that those who make such claims are the least likely
victims.
They must find common cause with people who feel passed over or pushed
out or ignored: the motivating themes of the radical right.
In Paterson’s case,
he made it up, stating: “I was burnt in effigy by Greenpeace as I was
recovering from an operation to save my eyesight.” Greenpeace did no such thing.
The second requirement is an
out-group, an enemy responsible for this victimhood.
As the writer and campaigner George
Marshall points out, it’s not enough that the out-group causes harm;
the harm must be intentional.
In this case, green movements oppressed
Paterson and the hard-working, country-loving people of this nation in order to
“keep each other well supplied with lavish
funds”, he claimed.
They know nothing about the natural world, he
says; their leaders “could not tell a snakeshead fritillary from a silver-washed fritillary”. All
they want is “to enhance their own income streams”.
This comes from a man who
insisted on a mass cull of badgers against scientific
advice, who stripped away the last regulations
protecting the soil from erosion, who believed that “the purpose of waterways is to get rid of
water” and sought to turn our rivers into featureless
gutters,and who championed the pesticides that appear to
be destroying bees and other animals.
Anyway, enough opinion. Let’s test his proposition.
I
challenge Mr Paterson to a kind of duel: to walk through the countryside
together, with independent experts, and see who can correctly identify the greatest
number of species across all classes: birds, insects, spiders, plants, fungi
and the rest.
Will he take up my challenge?
The third element is a reframing
of where power lies.
People working on behalf of billionaires and corporations
project themselves as horny-handed sons of toil while casting their enemies as an aloof
intellectual elite.
Paterson lists his opponents as “rich pop
stars”, “rich landowners”, “a dress designer” and “a public school journalist”
(me), who “don’t represent the real countryside of farmers and workers”.
So who is this voice of the
workers?
Paterson is a millionaire, educated at Radley College and Cambridge,
who owns a large country estate on which he lets
buildings and agricultural land.
While in office, he doubled the public subsidy for grouse
moors. He also defeated an attempt to limit the amount of
public money rich landowners can receive. As a result, the dukes and
sheikhs and oligarchs who own England’s biggest estates each receive millions
of pounds in subsidies.
He appointed as chair of Natural England – which is
supposed to defend wildlife – a multimillionaire house-builder, Andrew
Sells.
And he ignored his civil servants to take advice instead from his
brother-in-law, Viscount Ridley, described by ConservativeHome as “Paterson’s personal thinktank”.
That’s another thing this
putative movement has in common with the US radical right: discredited figures
(think of Oliver North and G Gordon Liddy) are feted by powerful
industrial interests and able to develop a new career as commentators.
Matt
Ridley inherited (along with his estate, his opencast coal mines and his vast
wealth) the chairmanship of Northern Rock, whose collapse under his reckless and
incompetent oversight was
the catalyst for the British financial crisis, which impoverished so many.
Yet,
while the misdemeanours of Fred Goodwin – the son of an electrician who became
head of RBS – were rightly condemned, Viscount Ridley’s have been
comprehensively airbrushed.
Rupert Murdoch used his first tweet to praise him,
and he has worked as a columnist for The Times ever since.
Unlike Goodwin, he
is of use to the elite, as he has helped to formulate its talking points,
arguing for deregulation and denying environmental problems.
The fourth element consists of
shifting the spectrum of political thought by planting your flag on the outer
fringes of lunacy.
It’s a tactic often used in the US by people such as Sarah
Palin, Ted Cruz and Michele Bachmann.
Paterson’s contribution is to identify
the Australian prime minister, Tony Abbott, and the Canadian
premier, Stephen Harper, who have
arguably done more harm to the living planet than anyone else alive, as champions of environmental protection.
In other words, Paterson has
positioned himself as a spokesman for a new strand of conservatism that is
likely to consolidate as David Cameron seeks to distance himself, before the
election, from his party’s whackier fringes on the radical right.
In a furious
row with Cameron after he was told he had been sacked, Paterson is reported to have shouted:
“I can out-Ukip Ukip … You are making a big mistake.”
Now, choked with resentment and self-pity, apparently
convinced that despite a life of wealth and power he represents the whipped and
wounded, he has spelt out the essential components of something that might soon
become familiar to us.
Tea Party politics were bound to reach these shores
eventually, and they will be lavishly financed by the very rich.
It won’t be
pretty, but we should be ready for it.
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