Sunday, April 5, 2015

Election Diary - Day 7: Best of Week One

No "official" campaigning on Easter Sunday, and so the BoV will take the break with the politicians. Later, it's hot cross buns with Dave, chocolate eggs with Ed, and cold comfort with Nick.1


6.00am
“One can’t believe one has to get up for this shit”, said Her Majesty, as the D of E inspected the gin supplies ahead of lunchtime.
“You have an audience with the Prime Minister this morning,” said Sir Christopher Geidt, her private secretary.
“But why? Doesn’t he remember passing that Fixed Terms Parliament Act?”, Liz inquired. “It was quite the read, one can tell you. “This Act does not affect Her Majesty’s power to prorogue Parliament.” How generous of them to leave one with something to do.”
Sir Christopher suggested “I believe that Mr Cameron sees it as a courtesy”.
“I believe that Mr Cameron sees it as a jolly,” said Philip. “Bloody loves the trappings of the job – wants to eke out every last bit of fun – like a fucking tourist. It’s ridiculous: someone using their power for their own personal gratification.”
“Oh, that reminds one Philip. Did you see that Charles sent you a letter this morning?”

6.23am
“It’s today! It’s today! Hell yeah!” screamed Ed Miliband, as he ran downstairs to look for the special election advent-calendar he’d made.
“Damn. Wrong kitchen.”
He ran back upstairs, to find Ed Balls there, and day 1 of his calendar already opened.

11.59am
“Your Majesty, Parliament has been dissolved.”
“I know, Mr Cameron. One has a television you know. One never misses Bill Turnbull in the morning. He is such a charming man.”
“An Old Etonian, no less.”
“Well, one shan’t hold that against him. Philip! Put that blunderbuss down!”
“But Liz,” replied the Duke, “Nicholas Witchell is well within range!”

12.32pm
Safely back in Downing Street, smelling the curtains and packing the towels into suitcases, David Cameron meets with his campaign staff.
“Right, Dave – it’s 37 days to go.”
“We’re not campaigning on all of them though, are we?”
“Well, yes.”
“What? Even on Sundays?”
“Yes.”
“Even this Sunday?”
“Why should this Sunday be any different?”
“Because it’s Easter Sunday. I was going to have an Easter Egg hunt with my children. I always find the most eggs.”
“Sorry Dave.”
The PM, all blushed cheeks and exasperate breath, could not understand any of this.
“How is a guy meant to chillax?” he bellowed, before heading for lunch.

8.32am
“And who the hell is Joey Essex?”, asked Nick.
He had been up early to give a speech. The venue said they could only squeeze him in at 8 o’clock, and he had to be gone by 8.45 as they needed to set up for bingo.
Now he was told that Joey, of The Only Way is Essex (a constructed reality show, and not an autobiographical work), felt that it was very important to get the youth interested in politics.
“Mate, you’re sick”, said Joey to Nick.
“If only he knew,” thought Nick to himself, but it soon became apparent that Joey knew very little at all.
“Yeah mate. You and the Liberal Democats.”
“Demo-crats,” Nick corrected him, but he wished he was leading the Liberal Democats. Or any other kind of left-of-centre animal collective. Maybe he could have the otter from yesterday in his team. Arnie was his name, and Nick had fallen in love with him at first sight. He wanted to be back there. Anywhere but here.
“Well,” said Nick, “it’s nice to meet you. We may not win this election, but we will fight for the most vulnerable in society.” (By which he meant the otters.)
“I like you mate,” said Joey. “You’re honest.”
Even Nick had to supress a laugh.

6.33am
Ed Miliband is on the battle bus, and it really does look like a battle bus. Think if National Express did Imperial Star Destroyers.
It’s a big day for Ed as Labour have a problem. 103 business leaders have signed a letter to The Daily Telegraph which (surprise, surprise) backs the Tory-led government’s policies and urges against a change of course.
“But I wooed them,” says Ed. “Two days ago, I wooed them, by using their words without their permission and telling them that I would really like them to like me.”
If there’s one thing Ed doesn’t like, it’s betrayal.
Beneath the geekish, adenoidal exterior beats the heart of a cold-hearted killer. So it is that he welcomes Bill Turnbull onto the Stagecoach Enterprise determined to show everyone just how tough he is by taking a stand against zero hours contracts.
Ed is confident, assertive, and not going to be pushed around by this Etonian, and he makes his displeasure known, listing all of the policies that will hit higher-earners, including the treacherous business leaders: 50% income tax above £150,000, a mansion tax above £2 million. “The broadest shoulders should bear the greatest burden,” he said threateningly.
“That’ll show them,” mutters Ed afterwards. “No-one messes with tough Ed.”
He nudges a passing senior aide and asks a “favour” of them.

7.08am
“Yes,” said Ed as he read it, cracking his knuckles, before starting to do pull-ups and wondering whether he should get a tattoo.
"Ed," asks an advisor. "Have you seen this April Fools' tweet that The Sun have put up?"
"It is no joke," replies Ed, cold and steely, tapping into his inner-Lady Macbeth.
"Ed, what do you mean?" replies the nervous adviser, unnerved by Ed's freezing glare.
“I may not have business, but now they know I mean business.”

5.00pm
The build-up continues to the Rumble in Salford. We can expect a lot of blather, half-truths, downright “statistics”. However, we must applaud Nick Clegg for being an honest politician today, no doubt inspired by his new admirer, Joey Essex.
When asked if he can revive 2010’s Clegg-mania tonight he replied “I doubt it”, before retiring for some final debate prep with his key-advisers, Eeyore and Marvin the Paranoid Android.

The Royal Family had been up all night playing The Debate Bingo Drinking Game. The Duke of Edinburgh was in the whisky cellar with Harry because he'd struck out, having had topics such as The Corn Laws and The Ship Tax on his card. Harry, meanwhile, was in the whisky cellar because… it was the whisky cellar.
Prince Edward had had to retire early. He thought he was safe with his card, which had simply had the acronym AIDS plastered all over it. "Surely no-one will mention that," he thought. As such, he had had to down a bottle of tequila, and was being nursed to sleep by the Countess of Wessex whilst he was singing “Torremolinos”.
This left a happy band, led by Her Majesty who had given into her rampant socialist sympathies. “My favourite was Mr Wilson. We agreed on so much. I told him “As its chief recipient, I am all in favour of the Welfare State.” But this man Miliband is a shower. I like Nicola Sturgeon. When Scotland eventually gets independence, I’m going to move my official residence to Balmoral and hold the Prime Ministerial audience by telegram.”
“But you’ll be dead by then,” said Charles.
Liz smiled at him and lit up another cigarette.

0.01am
“Is everything alright Dave?”
“It’s fine Samantha,” said the Prime Minister staring moodily out of the window into the Salford night.
“Dave, what is it?”
“I just didn’t know he could hurt me like that.”
“Who darling?”
“Nick. How could he say all those things? Doesn’t he remember the good times? The Rose Garden. The Cabinet meetings. The night we drank champagne after Chris Huhne got sent to the slammer.”
“Oh, darling. You really loved him didn’t you?”
“I thought he was a fag to me. But he wasn’t. He was more than a fag. He was like… a butler.”

0.10am
“You did swoosh around to the camera a lot.”
“Really, Justine?”
“Yeah. You’d suddenly turn on it as if you had a cape behind you.”
“I was just turning to the audience.”
“Yes, but then you sort of stared at us and it was a little like you were trying really, really hard to seduce us.”
“Those were my come-hither eyes.”
“I know, Ed. It was like our first date all over again, just on a national scale.”
“Well, that worked didn’t it?”
“Eventually, darling.”

There is, in some quarters, a light-hearted atmosphere on this Easter Saturday morning, not least in this morning’s Guardian, where they have done a political blind date between leader of the Greens, Natalie Bennett, and MP for the 19th century and opposer of the 1832 Great Reform Act, Jacob Rees-Mogg.
Even here, though, there is a bit of tension. Though the two profess to having got on quite well, Rees-Mogg gave his date 10/10, whilst Bennett gave him 5/10. Well, we’ve all been there, Jacob.
The romance would have be star-crossed at best. Natalie Bennett is a radically left-wing, modern woman, whereas Rees-Mogg is a man who has to be restrained from making his campaign slogan “Vox populi, vox dei”. In The Guardian write-up of their date, he was asked “What do you think she made of you?” He replied: “No idea. To see oneself as others see one is a great gift, but not one I necessarily have.”
No Jacob. I think that "one" does not necessarily have that gift.

1 Events depicted may differ from actual events. In fact, this is a work of fiction, with some facts. But mostly, it's nonsense.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Election Diary - Day 6: Of Gauls and Galloway

Saturday 4th April
A quirk of our electoral calendar is that election campaigns frequently coincide with Easter, which in this instance leads to sedateness, blind dates, and the French.1

05.00am
“Excusez-moi, Monsieur Consul-General.”
“What time is this, Albert?” replied the Consul General, stirring from his slumber and instinctively lighting a Gauloises.
It was five in the morning, and in the master bedroom of the French Consulate in Edinburgh, all was not well. The Consul-General never likes to be disturbed early after his Friday night function, but something must be up.
“What has ‘appened?”
“The phone is ringing off the ‘ook.”
“Parce que?”
“Is it possible that you or one of your ambassadors had a conversation with Nicola Sturgeon?”
“We’re French! We talk with loads of women!”
“I mean, in a professional capacity.”
“Ah. Well, that is less likely, but c’est possible.”
“Well, did she ever mention that she would prefer Monsieur Cameron as Le Premier Ministre, and that Monsieur… I forget his name. The other one? The sort of dark-haired Tintin?”
“Ah. Glenn Miller Band.”
“Vraiment. Well, did she also say that he was not up to the job?”
“I can’t remember. If she was talking about British politics, I was probably too bored to listen.”
Albert informs the Consul-General that The Daily Telegraph has a report on an official memo detailing this alleged conversation. The Consul-General is adamant that no such conversation happened, and therefore has to spring to action. He takes his morning Cointreau and hurries downstairs.
“Vite, Albert, vite! We must head to Madame Sturgeon to apologise in the classic French style. You bring the scooter round. I’ll get the croissants.”

9.30am
There is, in some quarters, a light-hearted atmosphere on this Easter Saturday morning, not least in this morning’s Guardian, where they have done a political blind date between leader of the Greens, Natalie Bennett, and MP for the 19th century and opposer of the 1832 Great Reform Act, Jacob Rees-Mogg.
Even here, though, there is a bit of tension. Though the two profess to having got on quite well, Rees-Mogg gave his date 10/10, whilst Bennett gave him 5/10. Well, we’ve all been there, Jacob.
The romance would have be star-crossed at best. Natalie Bennett is a radically left-wing, modern woman, whereas Rees-Mogg is a man who has to be restrained from making his campaign slogan “Vox populi, vox dei”. In The Guardian write-up of their date, he was asked “What do you think she made of you?” He replied: “No idea. To see oneself as others see one is a great gift, but not one I necessarily have.”
No Jacob. I think that "one" does not necessarily have that gift.

1.29pm
You don’t have to feel sorry for Nick Clegg, but it’s getting harder not to. Here’s a picture of the campaign office in his newly marginal constituency of Sheffield Hallam.

By comparison, here is a picture of David Cameron’s in Witney:


3.08pm
Star of the debates and new Batman nemesis, The Heckler, has been explaining her motivations. In a Guardian article. Her first line is surprising: “When I spoke up and heckled David Cameron during last night’s party leaders’ debate, I didn’t expect my face to be all over the internet within 24 hours.”
Really? Really? You interrupted the Prime Minister live on national television, and whilst wearing that gilet. You must at least have expected BuzzFeed to pick up on it.

3.16pm
And now the main event of the day. Labour’s star-studded rally in glitzy Warrington. This afternoon we have Eddie Izzard (who has been a frequent campaigner for Labour since the last election), Ben Elton (who is presumably writing a terrible musical about the campaign), and Bilbo Baggins, who is attending via Palantir.
Meanwhile, in the audience it’s everyone’s favourite electoral innocent, Joey Essex. Joey said something really sweet the other night on Andrew Neil’s political discussion and low-budget cabaret show This Week. He said “I think these people are just trying to do the right thing.”
Aww, bless.

5.00pm
To be frank, dear reader, it has been a drab day, which is fair enough for a Saturday but nevertheless frustrating. As a writer, you are often waiting for inspiration: for someone or something to emerge that genuinely fires the neurons and gets the passion flowing.
Enter George Galloway, who is running for his Respect party in Bradford West, and was today the subject of a small joke from the Bradford Brewery. “Are you still a thing @georgegalloway?”they tweeted.
In his lair, Galloway saw this and thought to himself “How could I overreact to this best?”
He lurched to the keyboard and fired back: “What does that mean? And should you as a licensed premises in my constituency really be writing that?”
“That’ll have them quaking in their barrels,” he thought to himself, but much to his chagrin they did not have the good-manners to bow down to his inflamed threats.
“You're the only candidate not to come and say hi. Was just wondering,” they reasoned, before following up with “You're a candidate. It's not your constituency.”
Enraged by their reasoned and constitutionally-informed impudence, Galloway decided to give them the full “Kim Jong-Il” (I’m thinking less of the historical figure here, and more of the Team America: World Police puppet).
“Well then, I shall return to this matter after the election. You have been most unwise.” He reiterated this threat again a little later, before moving from twitter to You Tube to watch the old video of him impersonating a cat whilst on Celebrity Big Brother, to remind himself of a time when he was universally respected.
He sits dreaming of May 8th and how he is going to shut the insolent pub down, and then everyone will know that he is, indeed, still a thing. He attempts to twirl his moustache and practices his evil laugh.

1 Events depicted may differ from actual events. In fact, this is a work of fiction, with some facts. But mostly, it's nonsense.

Friday, April 3, 2015

Election Diary - Day 5: The Quiet After the Shower

Friday 3rd April
The aftermath started early, and the shocks from Salford were not heard in every lulled and dumbfound town, but they may well have been heard in Windsor.1

0.00am
The Royal Family had been up all night playing The Debate Bingo Drinking Game. The Duke of Edinburgh was in the whisky cellar with Harry because he'd struck out, having had topics such as The Corn Laws and The Ship Tax on his card. Harry, meanwhile, was in the whisky cellar because… it was the whisky cellar.
Prince Edward had had to retire early. He thought he was safe with his card, which had simply had the acronym AIDS plastered all over it. "Surely no-one will mention that," he thought. As such, he had had to down a bottle of tequila, and was being nursed to sleep by the Countess of Wessex whilst he was singing “Torremolinos”.
This left a happy band, led by Her Majesty who had given into her rampant socialist sympathies. “My favourite was Mr Wilson. We agreed on so much. I told him “As its chief recipient, I am all in favour of the Welfare State.” But this man Miliband is a shower. I like Nicola Sturgeon. When Scotland eventually gets independence, I’m going to move my official residence to Balmoral and hold the Prime Ministerial audience by telegram.”
“But you’ll be dead by then,” said Charles.
Liz smiled at him and lit up another cigarette.

0.01am
“Is everything alright Dave?”
“It’s fine Samantha,” said the Prime Minister staring moodily out of the window into the Salford night.
“Dave, what is it?”
“I just didn’t know he could hurt me like that.”
“Who darling?”
“Nick. How could he say all those things? Doesn’t he remember the good times? The Rose Garden. The Cabinet meetings. The night we drank champagne after Chris Huhne got sent to the slammer.”
“Oh, darling. You really loved him didn’t you?”
“I thought he was a fag to me. But he wasn’t. He was more than a fag. He was like… a butler.”

0.10am
“You did swoosh around to the camera a lot.”
“Really, Justine?”
“Yeah. You’d suddenly turn on it as if you had a cape behind you.”
“I was just turning to the audience.”
“Yes, but then you sort of stared at us and it was a little like you were trying really, really hard to seduce us.”
“Those were my come-hither eyes.”
“I know, Ed. It was like our first date all over again, just on a national scale.”
“Well, that worked didn’t it?”
“Eventually, darling.”

1.00am
Back at Media City, things are finally winding down in the Zanussi Spin Room.
George Osborne, Douglas Alexander and Paddy Ashdown have just finished their umpteenth post-match interview, which is a bit like Match of the Day holding interviews with the kit men of Chelsea, Manchester United and Arsenal, rather than with Mourinho, Van Gaal and Wenger.
“That was a load of nonsense,” says Paddy after it’s all finished. “Prepared lines. Claim and counter-claim. It was little more than football chanting. Why do we do this?”
“Simple: if you guys are going to be there vacuously backing your guy, I’m damn sure I’m going to be there doing the same,” replied George. Or Douglas. It doesn’t really matter.

1.10am
In the bowels of a Manchester Police Station, Victoria Prosser, better known by her Batman-esque nickname, “The Heckler”, is sitting, awaiting interrogation.
“This is outrageous,” she thinks to herself. “I just wanted to speak my mind. They have no right to detain me. No right.”
Suddenly, the door opens and a tall, well-built man strides in. He looks at her intimidatingly, but she’s a brave girl and she stands up to him.
“I have a right to free speech. I have committed no crime. I want a lawyer.”
“Don’t worry, love,” replied the Chief Constable, in a surprisingly camp voice. “You’re not here because of that. You’re not in trouble.”
“Oh. Well, why am I here?”
“I just had to know where you got that gilet from. It’s fabulous.”
“Oh. River Island.”
“Fantastic,” said the copper. “Now, my uniform. Do you really think I’m pulling this hat off?”

8.00am
Very firmly in the morning after the night before, and the Nationalists have returned to their nations. The other leaders are staying put in Lancashire, and Lancashire has responded in the traditional manner, by which I mean to say that it’s pissing it down.
First, to the papers, and The Daily Telegraph has got the mess sorted. The headline: “Miliband flops as outsiders shine”. “Ed Miliband was left in a humiliating fourth position last night having only scored 15% in our post-debate poll, whereas Prime Minister and blue-tie model David Cameron roared into a commanding third place.”
The predominant sense is of a total mess, no clear winner, and the certainty of a Hung Parliament. Four polls were conducted last night, each one listing different winners and losers, and so the question turns to coalitions. Labour have ruled out all coalitions, whilst the Conservatives refuse to rule out a coalition with UKIP. It’s bad enough that the Tories are evading this valid question, but they’re getting Michael Gove to do it, which is unbearable because he is, to be frank, a terrible politician. At least when everyone else is asked a straight question, they have the decency to give you a straight lie.

11.53am
In Labour Party Headquarters, there is a huge commotion.
“Shit, shit, shit,” cries David Axelrod, Labour’s imported campaign strategist. “They’re wearing the same clothes. Cameron and Miliband. They look like Tweedle-Dum and Tweedle-Dumber.”
Everyone huddled around a screen, where, indeed, you could see the two men in different places but both wearing a dark jumper over a blue collared shirt.
“They look like brothers,” said Axelrod, unaware that this was a major faux pas in Labour HQ.

12.01pm
As the Prime Minister continued on his merry way, Nathaniel nudged Piers to show him a tweet.
“They’re wearing the same clothes, Piers.”
“I know, Nathaniel.”
“This is awkward, Piers.”
“I know, Nathaniel.”
“Should we do anything, Piers?”
“I don’t know, Nathaniel. After all, they are the ones who want to be alternative and we’re the ones who are saying stick the course. I say, stick to our long-term plan and let them be radical.”

12.02pm
“He needs to look alternative,” chimes Axelrod. “What can we do?”
“Maybe a Shoreditch vibe,” suggests an aide, “with collarless shirt, chinos, funky shoes, cool glasses and a modern, short-back-and-sides haircut.”
“Good, we’ll take it. He needs it straight away. Are there any good hairdressers in Blackpool?”
“I don’t know. Never been. I’m from Islington.”

5.00pm
Everyone’s a little tired today. Nick Clegg is having tea as he prepares to campaign in his newly marginal seat of Sheffield Hallam across Easter weekend. Once again, this comes from Lib Dem polling data suggesting that people liked the idea of a Clegg Roast.
As the politicians ease off the gas, the Royal Family are nursing their hangovers. Prince Edward is still abed, and the Queen is mulling over her options.
“If Farage ends up on the Privy Council, I’m abdicating,” she shouts.
Charles hears this and starts writing some letters.

1 Events depicted may differ from actual events. In fact, this is a work of fiction, with some facts. But mostly, it's nonsense.

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Election Diary - Day 4: Seven Swans A-Swimming

Thursday 2nd April
The Day of the Leaders' Debate1

7.00am, Athens, 400 B.C.
Socrates and Plato were meeting for a good old breakfast and bailout.
“Good morning, Socrates.”
“What is good, Plato? What is morning? And what makes a morning good?”
“Not this again.”
“Care for a bailout?”
“Thank you,” said Plato.
“And where are you going today, my pupil?”
“To the Ekklesia, good Socrates, for there is a debate that interests me.”
“And what is a debate?”
“Jesus, do you ever stop?”
“Who is Jesus?”
“No idea,” replied Plato. “A debate is a discussion of great ideas that affect us all. It is where we pursue truth, and not victory, and determine the best course for the populous. It is where we talk and where we listen, and where we dwell on the truths of science and metaphysics, and consider what the purpose is of these transient lives of ours.”
“Is that normally how it goes?”
“Of course not. It always turns into a slagging match.”
“And why is this?”
“Well, it is easier to attack the person than the idea.”
“Is not true debate achieved by someone deconstructing an idea by constantly asking questions?”
“Good heavens no. That sounds tedious. A true debate would be two people, stating their cases, attempting to persuade and to discover.”
“Only two?” asked Socrates. “Why two? Why not seven?”
“Because,” replied the student to the master, “that would be a load of nonsense.”
“Yes. I suppose you’re right. Fancy a quick bailout before you go?”

7.00am, London, 2015 A.D.
For the next 13 hours, it is a phoney war, and what it’s actually about is the media. Tonight’s debate is The ITV Leaders’ Debate, broadcast on the BBC News Channel, and the Sky News Channel. Somehow, ITV have also secured the rights to their own debate. Elections may divide the country, but they bring the media together in such a sweet way. Why fight for viewers when we can share them?
If Election Night is politics’ version of the last day of the Premier League, with results flooding in from across the country and loads of endless, inane, shouty analysis to follow, tonight is the F.A. Cup Final, with one straight shoot-out and loads of endless, inane, shouty analysis to follow.
But imagine a football match contested by 7 sides. That’s what we’re in for. With loads of endless, inane, shouty analysis to follow.

7.42am
So it is that the BBC’s Ross Hawkins – a sort of good-looking, adult-sized Jennings – is allowed to go and creep around the studio for tonight’s debate.
“This is so exciting,” he says. “ITV don’t know we’re here.” (They do, but to acknowledge that ruins the wheeze). “This is where David Cameron will stand. You can almost feel the anxiety already.”
Tell me about it, Ross. Tell me about it.

7.57am
Quietly, as the coffee drains in, Nigel Farage thinks: “There’s no getting round this: today is probably the biggest day of my life so far.”

7.58am
Quietly, as the free-trade, organic coffee and shot of Day Nurse drain in, Natalie Bennett thinks: “There’s no getting round this: today is probably the biggest day of my life so far.”

7.59am
Quietly, as the weak tea drains in, Nick Clegg thinks: “There’s no getting round this: today is probably going to be a bit like getting repeatedly kicked in the balls. A bit like school really. Or Coalition cabinet meetings.”

10.05am
There’s been a lot of comment on the positioning of the leaders for tonight’s debate. Ed Miliband is in the centre (about which Neil Kinnock is outraged), Nick Clegg is surrounded by people who don’t like him, and David Cameron is on the far-right. Initially, everyone thought this was a bad thing for Dave, but now people seem to think it may be an advantage.
It transpires that the studio being used for tonight is the same as the one used for BBC One’s The Voice, which presumably means that will.i.am is going to find a way of crowbarring his way into this as well.

11.35am
Labour have been holding a people’s question time this morning with an audience of “mostly swing voters”. It has become apparent that these are the sort of swing voters who are members of the Labour Party. To be fair, there are quite a few of those these days.

12.03pm
Nick Clegg says he’s going to go for a walk to prepare for tonight’s debate. This announcement came after the idea of Clegg “going for a walk” polled well with focus groups.

12.09pm
David Cameron is bringing some fighting talk. Talking to a school pupil who has ju jitsu as a hobby, he said "So I get Nigel Farage and get him on the floor?"
Well, we know from Heat magazine that the PM likes wrestling rats.

12.55pm
Farage, meanwhile, is sticking to his key campaign strategy, namely, to always have just under two drinks in him at any given moment. He tells the Telegraph’s Asa Bennett that he will be preparing for the debate by “having a couple of G&T’s”.
You see, I thought I was making this shit up.

2.24pm
Those broadcasters who don’t have news channels are scrapping for viewers tonight. Fortunately for them, a widely held perception of the debates is that they are “boring”.
So, the biggest question that will be answered tonight is this: “Which is more boring: the debate, or The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 (9pm, Channel 4)?

5.00pm
And so the build-up continues to the Rumble in Salford. We can expect a lot of blather, half-truths, downright “statistics”. However, we must applaud Nick Clegg for being an honest politician today, no doubt inspired by his new admirer, Joey Essex.
When asked if he can revive 2010’s Clegg-mania tonight he replied “I doubt it”, before retiring for some final debate prep with his key-advisers, Eeyore and Marvin the Paranoid Android.

5.00pm, Athens, 400 B.C.
“How was the debate, Plato?” asked Socrates.
“Disappointing. Depressing in fact. Much was said, but little was learnt. I felt condescended to as I listened to the cacophony, and in my mind I questioned the meaning of Democracy at all. Would it not be better to have a benevolent dictatorship? A rule of the friends of wisdom, perhaps? Philosopher-kings, if you will.”


“Ah, dear student. What is Democracy? What is debate? I know not. But, the evening is drawing in now. Fancy a pre-prandial bailout?” 

1 Events depicted may differ from actual events. In fact, this is a work of fiction, with some facts. But mostly, it's nonsense.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Election Diary - Day 3: Bruisers, Breweries and Buses

Wednesday 1st April
Happy April Fools’ Day. However, we’re dealing with an area where foolishness is a daily (if not hourly) occurrence, the politicians seem to have decided that today they are going to try really hard not to do anything silly. Boris is safely hidden somewhere out of sight.1

6.33am
Ed Miliband is on the battle bus, and it really does look like a battle bus. Think if National Express did Imperial Star Destroyers.
It’s a big day for Ed as Labour have a problem. 103 business leaders have signed a letter to The Daily Telegraph which (surprise, surprise) backs the Tory-led government’s policies and urges against a change of course.
“But I wooed them,” says Ed. “Two days ago, I wooed them, by using their words without their permission and telling them that I would really like them to like me.”
If there’s one thing Ed doesn’t like, it’s betrayal.
Beneath the geekish, adenoidal exterior beats the heart of a cold-hearted killer. So it is that he welcomes Bill Turnbull onto the Stagecoach Enterprise determined to show everyone just how tough he is by taking a stand against zero hours contracts.
Ed is confident, assertive, and not going to be pushed around by this Etonian, and he makes his displeasure known, listing all of the policies that will hit higher-earners, including the treacherous business leaders: 50% income tax above £150,000, a mansion tax above £2 million. “The broadest shoulders should bear the greatest burden,” he said threateningly.
“That’ll show them,” mutters Ed afterwards. “No-one messes with tough Ed.”
He nudges a passing senior aide and asks a “favour” of them.

7.08am
“Yes,” said Ed as he read it, cracking his knuckles, before starting to do pull-ups and wondering whether he should get a tattoo.
"Ed," asks an advisor. "Have you seen this April Fools' tweet that The Sun have put up?"
"It is no joke," replies Ed, cold and steely, tapping into his inner-Lady Macbeth.
"Ed, what do you mean?" replies the nervous adviser, unnerved by Ed's freezing glare.
“I may not have business, but now they know I mean business.”
Two minutes later, he had given up on pull-ups, and was eating his morning chocolate from the election advent calendar.

11.44am
A gentle and later start for the Prime Minister, no doubt relieved not to have a PMQs to face this Wednesday. To celebrate, he has gone to the Marstons brewery in Wolverhampton, presumably to prove that he can indeed organise a piss-up there.
We have it on authority from CCHQ that DC hasn’t organised a piss-up since his university days, where he threw quite the fancy dress party, we’re told.

11.59am
With one minute to go until April Fools expires, Boris is unleashed. He has told the Evening Standard of his vision for a moral politics. A passing knowledge of Boris’ morals should let you know what we’re in for.
“A bacchanal!” cries Boris. “Carpe noctem! Castigat ridendo mores!”
Why isn’t he running the campaign? Imagine the slogans.

12.20pm
“Nick, it’s bad news. The latest polls suggest that you won’t hold you seat.”
Nick breaks out into a medley of Nina Simone hits. He can almost taste the freedom.

1.13pm
Two Tory aides stand aghast. They cannot believe what they are looking at.
“He’s got a hammer, Piers.”
“I know, Nathaniel.”
“He’s got red leather gloves on, Piers.”
“I know, Nathaniel.”
“It’s a Have I Got News For You wet dream, Piers.”
“I know Nathaniel. Still, could be worse. There could have been an axe lying around here somewhere.”

1.57pm
A Tory campaign aide meets up with an old uni friend, who happens to be his opposite number at the Labour party, for a late lunch at a little Italiano near St James Park.
“I see you said that 1.8 million people are on Zero Hours Contracts this morning?”, said Tory to Lab.
“Yes, dear boy.”
“It’s nearer 700,000.”
“Yes, dear boy. But I see you said that we’d raise a household tax bill by £3,000 the other day.”
“Ah, that was different. We were guessing.”
They smile at each other and raise a glass of Chianti to their old Oxford PPE tutor.
“The politics of confusion,” they say. “Long may it reign.”

2.04pm
Meanwhile in Glasgow, Nick Clegg is lunching with reporters. The official party line on his worrying polling in his constituency of Sheffield Hallam is that it wasn’t a fair poll. Lord Ashcroft (the pollster) doesn’t name the candidates in his surveys, and Nick feels this is crucial. Once he is named in a poll, there will be an “uplift”.
There definitely won’t be further retribution. That won’t happen.

2.25pm
Piers and Nathaniel could do nothing to stop them. Now, Osborne had the hammer.
“This is bizarre. What are they like, Piers?”
“I know, Nathaniel.”
“George is even adopting a position that reminds David of school.”
“I know, Nathaniel.”

5.30pm
It all went a little quiet in the afternoon, perhaps because the party leaders needed to prepare for tomorrow’s debate. Piers and Nathaniel are now trying to get David to act Prime Ministerial. Nick Clegg is trying to find the spirit of 2010. Nigel Farage is at the bar. The Greens must think it’s Christmas Eve. The nationalists are prepping being parochial. Ed Miliband is watching WWE.
It promises to be the biggest clusterfuck since The Charge of the Light Brigade. 120 minutes between 7 leaders comes out as 17 minutes per candidate across four topics and opening and closing statements. This is the sort of challenge more suited to performance poets rather than national debaters.

Who will everyone agree with? Who will be the pantomime villain now that Paxman’s unavailable? What quotation will make for the best mug? All these questions and little else will be answered tomorrow. Until then, I’m off to grab a hammer and go to a brewery to find out what the hell that was even about. 

1 Events depicted may differ from actual events. In fact, this is a work of fiction, with some facts. But mostly, it's nonsense.