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Related: About this forumFrankie Boyle's election countdown: 'You'll be praying they prorogue the next parliament'
From a Dickensian Tory cabinet to the ghosts of Brexit promises past, the comedian brings you his take on the election
As the body politic convulses, as the abyss avoids our gaze, we near the end of another election at the behest of a political class that has paid as much attention to David Camerons fixed terms as he did to people with emphysema slowly dying over a wood lathe. Christmas seems a strange time for a Tory government to call an election; possibly they guessed that it would be hard for Labour to sell hope in winter; possibly they judged that goodwill to all men would be at its lowest after people had endured a December of accidentally answering the door to a canvasser because they thought it was an Amazon package. Then again, Conservatives would say that the story of Christmas chimes with their values, as it involves a pregnant refugee being treated quite badly.
Brexit supporters are surely among the most likely to get out and vote, especially now Jeremy Kyle isnt on in the daytime any more. It was impossible to predict that the whole country would be thrown into crisis by middle-aged men outraged about Europe making decisions for them (these are people whose wives buy their socks), but I can understand their subsequent disillusionment. If 434 MPs vote for a general election, we instantly get one; if 0.14% of the populace vote for Boris Johnson, we instantly get him; but if 52% of the electorate vote for Brexit, they get three years of what feels like trying to shit out a pool table. Essentially, Brexit has proved impossible to deliver: turns out its tricky for English voters to take back control of their borders when one of them is in someone elses country. Many people wish David Cameron had never called the referendum in the first place. It says a lot about how badly the last couple of years have gone, that theres a guy who destroyed Libya, presided over needless austerity and fucked a pig, and we wish that hed just used his own judgment.
Lets begin with the Tories. The cabinet is Dickensian in the purest sense: the sort of people who would need more than two ghosts to change their behaviour. After an uncertain start, Jacob Rees-Mogg has had a pretty good campaign, onboard an Arctic clipper ship, nailed into a coffin of earth from his constituency. Its interesting that someone who thinks ordinary people lack common sense is so heavily invested in upholding the result of a referendum, but like so many lesser ironies in this election, we simply dont have the time. When people say The mask has slipped! after various cabinet gaffes, there must be a moment when the minister wonders whether they have accidentally come out wearing one of the actual masks they wear to the various Eyes Wide Shut-style parties that dot their social calendar at this time of year; their fingers moving reflexively towards their face to see if theyve worn the head of a golden ibis to talk to Phillip Schofield.
The Conservatives seem to have focused on the phrase Get Brexit Done, which has all the conviction of your dad hitting the arms of his chair and saying, Right We also seem to be hearing a lot about Unleashing Britains potential, despite most of our potential being for food riots, and perhaps some kind of race war. The Conservative manifesto contains elements of both Thatcherism and Reaganism, in that it seems to have been written by someone with dementia. There was probably a discussion about whether to release a manifesto at all or simply airdrop scratchcards over key marginals.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/dec/07/frankie-boyle-election-countdown-praying-prorogue-next-parliament
As the body politic convulses, as the abyss avoids our gaze, we near the end of another election at the behest of a political class that has paid as much attention to David Camerons fixed terms as he did to people with emphysema slowly dying over a wood lathe. Christmas seems a strange time for a Tory government to call an election; possibly they guessed that it would be hard for Labour to sell hope in winter; possibly they judged that goodwill to all men would be at its lowest after people had endured a December of accidentally answering the door to a canvasser because they thought it was an Amazon package. Then again, Conservatives would say that the story of Christmas chimes with their values, as it involves a pregnant refugee being treated quite badly.
Brexit supporters are surely among the most likely to get out and vote, especially now Jeremy Kyle isnt on in the daytime any more. It was impossible to predict that the whole country would be thrown into crisis by middle-aged men outraged about Europe making decisions for them (these are people whose wives buy their socks), but I can understand their subsequent disillusionment. If 434 MPs vote for a general election, we instantly get one; if 0.14% of the populace vote for Boris Johnson, we instantly get him; but if 52% of the electorate vote for Brexit, they get three years of what feels like trying to shit out a pool table. Essentially, Brexit has proved impossible to deliver: turns out its tricky for English voters to take back control of their borders when one of them is in someone elses country. Many people wish David Cameron had never called the referendum in the first place. It says a lot about how badly the last couple of years have gone, that theres a guy who destroyed Libya, presided over needless austerity and fucked a pig, and we wish that hed just used his own judgment.
Lets begin with the Tories. The cabinet is Dickensian in the purest sense: the sort of people who would need more than two ghosts to change their behaviour. After an uncertain start, Jacob Rees-Mogg has had a pretty good campaign, onboard an Arctic clipper ship, nailed into a coffin of earth from his constituency. Its interesting that someone who thinks ordinary people lack common sense is so heavily invested in upholding the result of a referendum, but like so many lesser ironies in this election, we simply dont have the time. When people say The mask has slipped! after various cabinet gaffes, there must be a moment when the minister wonders whether they have accidentally come out wearing one of the actual masks they wear to the various Eyes Wide Shut-style parties that dot their social calendar at this time of year; their fingers moving reflexively towards their face to see if theyve worn the head of a golden ibis to talk to Phillip Schofield.
The Conservatives seem to have focused on the phrase Get Brexit Done, which has all the conviction of your dad hitting the arms of his chair and saying, Right We also seem to be hearing a lot about Unleashing Britains potential, despite most of our potential being for food riots, and perhaps some kind of race war. The Conservative manifesto contains elements of both Thatcherism and Reaganism, in that it seems to have been written by someone with dementia. There was probably a discussion about whether to release a manifesto at all or simply airdrop scratchcards over key marginals.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/dec/07/frankie-boyle-election-countdown-praying-prorogue-next-parliament
The usual mix of Boyle's savagery and underlying intelligence, possibly NSFW in places, but highlights include:
Of Rees-Mogg: "Its interesting that someone who thinks ordinary people lack common sense is so heavily invested in upholding the result of a referendum ..."
Of Johnson: "... who looks like something youd keep your pyjamas in, and who no reasonable person would choose to lead them into a chorus, has a strangely hunched demeanour; perhaps from all the time he spends crammed inside married womens wardrobes, like a randy jack-in-the-box." and "... a face that looks as if its been kneaded by a baker going through a particularly bitter divorce ..."
Of Dominic Cummings: "... has the air of a startled testicle ..."
Of Gove: "... looking like someone took all the flesh out of a serial killers drains and forced it into some brogues; like Davros fell out of his Dalek; like a rushed cartoon of a horny snail ..."
Of Swinson: "... the gravitas of a re-education camp supply teacher ..."
Of Corbyn: "... perhaps weighing up whether he could have more influence by simply dying and haunting his successor ..."
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Frankie Boyle's election countdown: 'You'll be praying they prorogue the next parliament' (Original Post)
Denzil_DC
Dec 2019
OP
flying rabbit
(4,770 posts)1. Funny stuff!