Wednesday 20 November 2019

Does The Truth Matter?

Well we've had the first 'head-to-head' of the election campaign and what a dismal, deeply unsatisfactory and irritating affair it proved to be. Lets face it, both party leaders are not statesman by any stretch of the imagination, but our current prime minister and the party he represents are surely in a league of their own in terms of odiousness. 

The approach is quite straightforward and deeply troubling for our democracy, he answers no questions, lies about everything and makes stuff up as he goes along. What makes all this even worse is that he gets away with it because there seems to be an establishment media belief that if we were to believe a prime minister lies on a regular basis our trust in politics would be undermined! Things are descending so fast even the Conservative Central Office Twitter account was cynically renamed 'factcheckUK' during the so-called debate. 

It would appear that increasingly 'truth' counts for nothing and the Tories are banking on 'emotion' instead to win this election, indeed just as Trump won his. 'Do what ever it takes to win'. Just think about that sentiment for one moment and where it's taking us. I make no apology for being 'old school' and believe passionately that the 'truth' does matter and must  count for something and it seems Peter Oborne, former Telegraph chief political commentator writing in the Guardian agrees:-
   
It’s not just Boris Johnson’s lying. It’s that the media let him get away with it

It’s Friday lunchtime and Boris Johnson is in Oldham. He’s live on Sky News, speaking to supporters in front of his Tory battle bus. During a speech lasting no more than 10 minutes, viewers learn that he is building 40 new hospitals. Sounds good. But it’s a lie that has already been exposed by fact-checkers, including the website Full Fact.

The prime minister tells Sky viewers that “20,000 more police are operating on our streets to fight crime and bring crime down”. This assertion is misleading in a number of ways. Recruitment will take place over three years and do no more than replace the drop in officer numbers seen since the Conservatives came to power in 2010.

Sky viewers are then informed by Johnson that Jeremy Corbyn “plans to wreck the economy with a £1.2 trillion spending plan”. Labour’s manifesto hasn’t been published, let alone fully costed. Johnson’s £1.2tn is a palpable fabrication. As Full Fact concluded: “Many of the figures behind this estimate are uncertain or based on flawed assumptions.”

Johnson then goes on to say that the Labour leader “thinks home ownership is a bad idea and is opposed to it”. I have been unable to find any evidence of Corbyn expressing this view. Perhaps Johnson is referring to the floated Labour policy that would give “right to buy” to private tenants. The policy, which was only ever supposed to target the wealthiest landlords, has since been dropped and, according to the Financial Times, will not appear in the party’s manifesto.

Johnson then told his TV audience that Corbyn “wouldn’t even stick up for this country when it came to the Salisbury poisonings” and that he sided with Russia. Another obvious lie. In the aftermath of the poisonings, Corbyn wrote in the Guardian: “Either this was a crime authored by the Russian state; or that state has allowed these deadly toxins to slip out of the control it has an obligation to exercise.” The Labour leader also stated that the Russian authorities must be held to account.

Meanwhile, Johnson’s own government is refusing to publish a report into Russian interference in British politics amid reports that a number of wealthy business people with links to Vladimir Putin have donated generously to the Tory party. At the end of his speech, the Sky News presenter, Samantha Washington, strikingly made no attempt to challenge or correct any of Johnson’s false statements. This was just the latest example among many of the British media letting Johnson get away unchallenged with lies, falsehoods and fabrication.

Welcome to the Conservative party election campaign. I have been a political reporter for almost three decades and have never encountered a senior British politician who lies and fabricates so regularly, so shamelessly and so systematically as Boris Johnson. Or gets away with his deceit with such ease.

Some of the lies are tiny. During a visit to a hospital he tells doctors that he’s given up drink, when only the previous day he’d been filmed sipping whisky on a visit to a distillery. And sips beer on film the day after in a pub. But many are big. Johnson repeatedly claims that Britain’s continued membership of the EU costs an extra £1bn a month. False. He told activists that the Tories were building a new hospital in the marginal seat of Canterbury. False – and shockingly cynical. He told Michael Crick that during the EU referendum campaign, “I didn’t make remarks about Turkey, mate.” He did.

On his potential conflict of interest over his friend Jennifer Arcuri, who received £11,500 from an organisation he was responsible for as London mayor, Johnson said: “Everything was done with complete propriety and in the normal way.” We now know he failed to declare this friendship, and is being investigated by the Independent Office of Police Conduct.

These lies point to a systemic dishonesty within Johnson’s campaigning machine. His party deliberately doctored footage of the shadow Brexit secretary, Keir Starmer, to make it look as if he was at a loss for words when asked about Labour’s Brexit position. In fact, Starmer had answered confidently and fluently. The video was a deliberate attempt to mislead voters. And when Piers Morgan tackled the Tory chairman, James Cleverly, on the issue, he refused to accept he’d done anything wrong, let alone apologise.

Beyond Johnson and his cabinet, there are unscrupulous Tory briefers working behind the scenes. One of them told journalists last week that Johnson was going to accuse Corbyn of political “onanism” the following day. It was gleefully reported in some papers, but Johnson did not use the phrase in his speech. Political correspondents are being taken for a ride by the Downing Street machine, which is as contemptuous of newspaper readers as it is of the truth.

As someone who has voted Conservative pretty well all my life, this upsets me. As the philosopher Sissela Bok has explained, political lying is a form of theft. It means that voters make democratic judgments on the basis of falsehoods. Their rights are stripped away. This matters more than ever because this election is the most important in modern British history. If Johnson wins, Britain will leave the EU within a matter of weeks and Johnson himself will serve a five-year term as prime minister.

In theory Johnson should not be able to get away with this scale of lying and deceit. In a properly functioning democracy, liars should be exposed and held to account. But that isn’t happening. As with Donald Trump, for Johnson there seems to be no political price to pay for deceit and falsehood. The mainstream media, as Washington’s response to Johnson’s speech shows, prefers to go along with his lies rather than expose them.

Recently the hugely experienced broadcaster Andrew Marr allowed Johnson to go unchallenged in saying the Tories “don’t do deals with other political parties”. What about the coalition government with the Liberal Democrats in 2010? Or the £1bn “confidence and supply” deal struck with the Democratic Unionist party just two years ago? Marr let Johnson get away with it. So do many others.

A big reason for Johnson’s easy ride is partisanship from the parts of the media determined to get him elected. I have talked to senior BBC executives, and they tell me they personally think it’s wrong to expose lies told by a British prime minister because it undermines trust in British politics. Is that a reason for giving Johnson free rein to make any false claim he wants?

Others take the view that all politicians lie, and just shrug their shoulders. But it’s not true that all politicians lie. Treating all politicians as liars gives a licence for the total collapse of integrity of British politics, a collapse that habitual liars such as Johnson are delighted to exploit. The British media is not holding him to account for his repeated falsehoods. It’s time we journalists did our job, and started to regain our self-respect.

Peter Oborne is a journalist, commentator and author. His website about the lies, falsehoods and misrepresentations of Boris Johnson is at https://boris-johnson-lies.com

6 comments:

  1. Emily Maitlis speaking to James Cleverley on Newsnight yesterday moved the narrative away from political spin to Government propaganda. She's right.
    To my mind, altering televised interviews to make them look like something completely different and presenting a "factcheck" from government HQ made to appear as independent, is no different then altering the text in books to suit your political ideology.
    It's shameful, but frightening too.
    Johnson can't tell the truth about anything, literally anything, and he should shoulder much of the blame for the divisions in our society because of all the rubbish he spouted during the referendum, and the tone he's adopted since becoming PM.
    What will he do if he gets another 5years in office? I dread to think.
    Now he rubs his hands at the thought of a deal with Trump. Apart from the prospect of impeachment, there's an Election in the USA next year. There may be no Trump to do a deal with!
    The Good Friday Agreement? He's actually managed to piss the Loyalists off now just as much as the Republicans. Troubles in NI are looming large and very real.
    Everything is broken, and Johnson couldn't give a jot. It's a game to him. Catch him out telling a lie, he'll tell another one to cover it up.
    This election is branded the Brexit election, but it's also about another 5years of Johnsons lies and deception.
    And just on Brexit, Chris Grayling thinks its a good idea, that's enough to put me off.

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete
  2. No, the truth doesn't matter; at least, not if you're in a position to reshape the truth.

    "Prince Andrew stepping back from royal duties - The duke says his association with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein has “become a major disruption to my family's work”."

    And so a publicly funded institution closes ranks & protects its own. The *truth* is whatever they decide it becomes at & for their convenience.

    Meantime Johnson & his self-designated 'elite' are playing games in plain sight, dismissing concerns with such gracious phrases as "no-one gives a toss".

    The Trump impeachment hearings are pure entertainment in a similar vein. The vicious exchanges wrapped in very expensive suits, accompanied by the highest quality dental work, offer a fleeting glimpse into the murky depths that lie beneath. There are some very, very, very unpleasant people sitting on those committees.

    Nietzsche, who believed the press and mass culture led to conformity and brought about mediocrity, distills the notion of truth as a social contract in language:

    "What then is truth? A movable host of metaphors, metonymies, and anthropomorphisms: in short, a sum of human relations which have been poetically and rhetorically intensified, transferred, and embellished, and which, after long usage, seem to a people to be fixed, canonical, and binding. Truths are illusions which we have forgotten are illusions — they are metaphors that have become worn out and have been drained of sensuous force, coins which have lost their embossing and are now considered as metal and no longer as coins."

    Ironically, after his death his sister Elisabeth became the curator and editor of Nietzsche's manuscripts, reworking his unpublished writings to fit her own German nationalist ideology while often contradicting or obfuscating Nietzsche's stated opinions; thus it was his sister who re-defined Nietzsche's work & associated it with Nazism.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Japanese ronin warriors lived by a code which included:

    Integrity; Honesty; Loyalty; Compassion; Courage; Honour; Respect.

    There aint much of it about these days. Seems we aspire to be:

    Liars; Cheats; Selfish; Spiteful; Cowardly; Weasly; Contemptuous

    At least, that's what our "leaders" seem to think we want. Why else would they model such traits themselves?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sajid Javid on BBCR4 Today - proof positive that the truth is irrelevant.

    ReplyDelete
  5. From Labour's manifesto:

    The crisis in our criminal justice system has left communities less safe, victims less supported and people less able to defend their rights. Labour will defend the rule of law.

    Cutting thousands of prison officers has driven record levels of prison violence. A Labour government will restore total prison officer numbers to 2010 levels, and phase out dangerous lone working. We will bring PFI prisons back in-house and there will be no new private prisons. We will tackle the prison maintenance backlog and develop a long-term estate strategy.

    The Ministry of Justice’s own evidence shows tens of thousands of crimes could be prevented if robust community sentences replace short prison sentences. We will set new standards for community sentences and introduce a presumption against prison sentences of six months or less for non-violent and non-sexual offences.

    We will invest in proven alternatives to custody, including women’s centres, expand problem-solving courts and plug the funding gap in the female offender strategy. We will further consider the evidence for effective alternatives and rehabilitation of prolific offenders.

    A Labour government will reunify probation and guarantee a publicly run, locally accountable probation service. Under Labour, probation staff and professional standards will once again be properly valued.

    ReplyDelete
  6. According to Priti Patel, the government bares no responsibility for people who find themselves in poverty.
    It's an astounding claim to make, another mistruth.
    But she's prompted this article in the Independent in response regarding lies and deciet.

    https://www-independent-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.independent.co.uk/voices/priti-patel-tory-manifesto-boris-johnson-corbyn-general-election-labour-a9212466.html?amp_js_v=a2&amp_gsa=1&amp&usqp=mq331AQCKAE%3D#aoh=15743544119455&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com&amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&ampshare=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.independent.co.uk%2Fvoices%2Fpriti-patel-tory-manifesto-boris-johnson-corbyn-general-election-labour-a9212466.html

    'Getafix

    ReplyDelete