CELEBRITY POLITICS?
If there is one resilient politician in British government then it has to be Tony Blair. The amount of criticism and disparagement from public and media that has come his way is astonishing, and in late weeks he has even had to contend with a police inquiry.
Any other politician would have given in by now and left the podium. Not Blair. Despite assurances that he would be gone by May 2007, a date he has now changed to September 2007, he is still hanging around, holding on to power with his bare hands.
Why? Is there a possibility that Blair, despite the Iraq war, the dismal situation of health and education, and the quagmire of scandal through which his party is wading, is still popular with the public?
I would argue, no. What it comes down to is just apathy. Pure voter apathy. The British public no longer cares about its politicians. The only way a politician can really arouse interest today is when he (it is still mostly a ‘he’) lets down his trousers and becomes intimate with his secretary. Only then will magazines like Hello or OK acknowledge their existence.
And therein lies the key to the question, why the British public no longer care about politicians. Politics have been replaced by a celebrity craze. Look at the amount of righteous feeling awakened by Jade Goody’s racist outburst on Celebrity Big Brother.
Basically, the British can no longer be mobilised by politicians, so they can not be incensed by them. Instead, celebrities are now impacting emotionally on public opinion.
And as long as British politics continue in this state, this situation seems unlikely to change.
