On Tuesday 18
April Theresa May made her biggest U-turn to date. After months of rejecting
the idea of an early election, May stood outside Number 10 and announced that
she had changed her mind and would be holding a General Election on 08 June
2017.
Whatever May’s
reasons for doing so; be it the Conservative’s lead in the polls, the divide
between Corbyn and his PLP or – most likely – the fact that the Crown
Prosecution Service is currently investigating more than 30 people, including a
large number of Conservative MP’s and their agents, over election expenses from
2015 - I wouldn't like to say.
Reasoning aside,
the future is looking pretty bleak for any Labour supporters. The Tories have a
good chance of winning this election, possibly with even more seats than they
have already, after which they will run riot with Brexit negotiations and
continue to slash our NHS and public services, implement policies that reduce
equality and increase child poverty, cut funding for schools, social care,
decrease wages and workers rights, increase homelessness and the need for food
banks, introduce Grammar Schools, cut benefits to the disabled and sell off
council houses, all while cutting corporation tax, capital gains tax and
inheritance tax. To anyone who thinks this is an overreaction – all of this has
been happening for seven years. This is very real.
As for Labour, if
they were to lose this, I’m sure Corbyn would be forced into resignation –
something that many of the PLP have been desperate for since he became leader
(twice). The chances of re-electing anyone remotely left wing will be
slim-to-none (unless the McDonnell amendment is passed), Labour would then
probably lose a majority of the hundreds of thousands of members that joined
the party under Corbyn. This means that the biggest fear since the announcement
of the snap election is not just the idea of another five years under a Tory
Government, making it a total of 12 if you include the coalition, but the end
of the Labour party. The party that, among other things, created the NHS and
welfare state, and introduced pensions and the minimum wage.
One thing that I
have been trying to get my head around is why people vote Conservative –
something that seems so alien to me but is obviously a popular opinion. We now have a party that is speaking about renationalising rail and energy,
creating a million good quality jobs, scrapping zero hours contracts and the
bedroom tax, building new homes and introducing rent controls and secure tenancies,
offering stronger employment rights, ending the privitisation of our NHS and
social care, implementing universal childcare, ensuring quality apprenticeships
and adult skills training, transitioning to a low-carbon economy, increasing
the use of renewable energy, shrinking the gap between the highest and lowest
paid, taking action to tackle violence against women and girls, racism and
discrimination on the basis of faith, securing equality for all LGBTQ groups
and people with disabilities, ending support for aggressive wars and
alleviating the refugee crisis. Who is voting for Tory policies that have
caused the effects listed in paragraph three, over these policies and why?
I guess what
really matters is that we all wake up on 08 June and feel proud of the way we
voted. Being able to look yourself in the mirror is one thing, but what about
looking into the eyes of your fellow citizens, your fellow humans?
If you are
considering voting Conservative, or even using your vote as a protest against
Brexit and therefore voting Lib Dem, who hold much of the responsibility for
the Conservative’s rule of tyranny, please ask yourself if, when everything is
said and done, you would be able to look into the eyes of those effected and
feel justified with your decision.
Will you be able
to look into the eyes of someone who has a work-limiting disability, who has
had their benefits consistently slashed, making it nearly impossible to live
independently, who faces physical and verbal abuse on almost a daily basis as a
result as being labeled a scrounger, who has to go through tiresome checks and
assessments to prove to the DWP that they cannot work, who, even if they are
able to work, would be 30% less likely to be employed simply because they have
a disability, who has literally had their human rights violated by the current
government, and tell them that your vote was justified?
What about an
asylum seeker who has fled political oppression in their own country and
managed to make it to the UK, who then, after six months, gets their asylum
claim rejected and is left homeless, hungry and living in constant fear of
being deported, who is demonised for being here without paying back into the
system but is unable to work because of not being granted asylum. Could you
look into their eyes and tell them that your vote was justified?
What about a
single mother who is trying her best to put food on the table for her three
children after losing a job and her partner, who is unable to work due to
extortionate childcare costs, who has been accused of “breeding” in order to
receive more benefits and is now having those benefits cut because she has one
too many children, who is having to choose between feeding herself or feeding
her children, who is having to face the humiliation of relying on food banks
just to stay alive. Could you look into her eyes and tell her that your vote
was justified?
What about a child
who has fled from Syria after seeing their home, school and neighborhood
destroyed, losing their parents in the process, who then went on to face the
horrendous conditions of the refugee camps, maybe she is a girl and is not even
able to get hold of sanitary products so has to face the humiliation of stained
clothing from her period, who, after that, was subject to police brutality and
sexual exploitation, maybe even sex trafficked, due to our governments
insistence of only taking the minimum amount of refugees possible, who longs
for nothing more than to be back with their family and to be able to go back to
school and continue with her previous life, who is scared and alone without
anyone to protect her. Could you look into her eyes and tell her that your
vote was justified?
What about a
mother who has had the same upbringing as you or I, who had a child that grew up
and developed mental health needs but despite suffering from severe anxiety and
depression - making most social situations terrifying to manage - was forced to
find work or face having their benefits cut. Who couldn’t cope with this
ultimatum and believed that the only way out was to end their life, making them
one in 590 “additional suicides” brought on by ‘fit-to-work’ tests. Could you
look into that bereaved mothers eyes and tell her that your vote was justified?
Everyone’s votes
are based on different reasoning, some think about wider society, and some
think only of their own situation. This election, many people are voting solely
on Brexit and forgetting the many other issues that will be affected. If you
are voting Lib Dem purely on the basis that they are opposing the referendum, while disregarding their track record in government from 2010-2015, then you
might as well be voting Tory. Brexit will go ahead no matter what, there is
basically nothing we can do to change this, even if we wanted to. We can,
however, put our society into the hands of a government that cares and that
will help all of the people listed above and more.
My plea to you is
to vote Labour on 08 June 2017. They are the only party that can offer this
country the social progress it so desperately needs. If you decide not to, then
I really hope you are able to justify your decision because we are all
responsible for the lives of others within our society.
If you still need to register to vote, you can do it here now: https://www.gov.uk/register-to-vote
If you still need to register to vote, you can do it here now: https://www.gov.uk/register-to-vote