We are in America for the first time in 26 years and admire
the view from the 35th floor of our 1920’s built hotel. We’re in the
true home of the skyscaper; not New York but Chicago. It’s a surprisingly
pleasant city centre with the river artery opening up the foreground of the
architect’s creations, but it’s so clean and tidy that the imagination
struggles to make the romantic link back to bootleggers and gangsters with
violin cases.
Down the road in Ohio the Republican Party is forced to make
room for the cuckoo in its nest as Donald Trump gets the presidential
nomination and immediately goes into a prolonged sulk because the man he calls
‘Lying Ted’ fails to sufficiently enthuse over his elevation. If the petition supported
by both Donald and Ted to allow everyone attending the convention to carry guns
with them hadn’t failed, they could have settled their disagreement in an
honourable fashion and to the benefit of the rest of the world.
Politics has erupted in America and Europe spewing some
sparks but a lot more smoke over the populaces. In London we sat on the top
deck of a Boris, the new buses commissioned by the ex- mayor, and spoke
politics with an elderly couple who sat behind us. The reserved English manner
has been put on hold for Brexit, but strangers approach the subject with
extreme caution; it is too raw to get into an argument over and comments begin as
mild remarks and only escalate as common ground is found. When we got off I had
a proper view of our companions and realised that we’d been talking with the
multi-talented Jonathan Miller who used to regularly appear on UK television.
The Brexiteers and the Trumpeteers seem to have a lot in
common, which many people see as small minded ignorance and xenophobia. But
there is also an element of a stubborn refusal to be pushed around by the
establishment and listen to those in power who consider themselves to be their
betters. From Chicago we now drive down to Kentucky where a friend we met in
Kazakhstan helps us to properly get under the skin of small-town America. Lunching
at the truck stop we see that the news has moved on to the Democrats convention
but not all is well. The predominantly young supporters of grey-haired Bernie
Sanders boo their hero as he tells them that they must now switch their
allegiance to support Hilary Clinton against a far greater evil.
On a pub crawl of the tiny cathedral city of Wells, drinking
English beer in a suburban Bristol garden and sat around the table in a Devon farmhouse
kitchen we’d spent the previous week mulling over the rights and wrongs of
another left-wing grey haired old man who was elected leader by young
idealists, but who is now struggling to find enough support amongst his MP’s to
form a realistic shadow cabinet. The donkey is the symbol of the Democrats but
there are also plenty of asses in Britain and while the Tories are in disarray,
Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour party is just a total bloody mess.
Travelling north towards Minnesota we drive through an Amish village, these are people who generally keep themselves apart from mainstream politics and in the current situation can be envied for that.
But while the parties on both sides of the Atlantic are
polarised there is a common theme which makes the right and the left opposite
sides of the same coin; all their supporters are fed up with mainstream
politics and want something different, but the establishment is hell-bent on
denying it to them.
In Britain Theresa May was craftily manoeuvred into position
and it seems that Conservative party members are too polite to ask why they
never got to use their vote. The United States go to the polls in November but will
America settle for the equally dull but safe establishment figure of Hilary
Clinton, or will enough Republicans manage to hold their noses to tick Trump’s
name? Politics has never been so exciting- or so dangerous.
No comments:
Post a Comment