Elections and Questionable People

I don’t usually write topical posts simply because I’m a rather slow and measured writer. Some might even call me lazy. I write a blog post then I re-write it. I add things and take away things. I leave post drafts to simmer and mature and then I fine tune them and the process usually takes quite a few weeks so writing something topical is generally out of the question. This post which I actually thought was pretty topical is therefore only reasonably topical, at least it was when I wrote it, so round about now, when you the reader finally gets to see it, it’s probably not that topical after all.  Now we’ve got that clear, here we go.

I’ve always been interested in politics and the recent election in the UK was really fascinating. It was clear the public were ready for change although I personally thought that the Conservative party would win again but with a much reduced majority. That of course shows just how much I know because the Conservatives were actually crushed with the Labour party winning a huge majority putting Sir Keir Starmer into number 10 Downing Street potentially for the next five years. Rishi Sunak apologised to the nation saying that he and his party hadn’t delivered on their promises and promptly resigned as head of the party. Why leaders seem to be so quick to resign these days after an election defeat, I really don’t know but a new leader has yet to be appointed and as I write this Rish Sunak is the new leader of the opposition. Who will be the new Conservative leader, well I wonder if Liz Truss will run again? Sorry but she lost her seat in the election. Penny Mordant perhaps? Nah, she lost her seat too.

It was interesting to watch the first Prime Minister’s questions with both Mr Starmer and Mr Sunak in their new roles. At one point Starmer referred to Sunak as Prime Minister before checking himself. Old habits die hard of course. PM’s question time was very reserved and polite with MPs and Ministers congratulating each other on their appointments and so on. Eventually though, those questions and debates must invariably get tougher.

After the election there was the usual round of what went wrong from the Conservatives. Various explanations were put forward but not one, certainly to my way of thinking, were the actual reasons the Government had been kicked out. My feelings were that perhaps the public were fed up with all the various changes of Prime Minister, all of which were not voted on by the public. Of course, that’s not the way our system works, we don’t vote in the Prime Minister, just the party that takes office. Maybe also, the public were just a little cheesed off with the way the Government acted during the Covid pandemic as the Government made various rules for us; we couldn’t go out, we couldn’t meet with family and friends and had to self-isolate but that didn’t stop various Government officials flaunting the rules as well as parties going on at 10 Downing St which meant that Boris Johnson was ultimately forced to resign. Surely that was the main reason people did not vote Conservative this time round.

An election is also coming up soon in the USA. President Biden has been criticised after a debate with Donald Trump during which he was clearly stumbling over words and phrases and looked at one point as though he was going to nod off. The guy is 81 though, perhaps he was ready for his evening nap. Since then, the big news is that he has decided to withdraw as a candidate in the election and is endorsing his Vice President to stand in his place, Kamila Harris.

Other news in the US election was the attempted assassination of Donald Trump. The assassin’s bullet grazed his ear and Trump survived, much to the delight of his fans. Since then, the head of the Secret Service has resigned after criticism of her agency’s protection of the former President.

The very last time a sitting president decided not to run again was when Lyndon Johnson decided not to run in 1968. Johnson wanted to create a great society for the American people but his administration was completely caught up in the Vietnam war. In one of 1968’s first primaries, anti-war candidate Eugene McCarthy featured well against Johnson, prompting LBJ’s arch enemy Robert Kennedy to enter the contest. Johnson withdrew and Kennedy was assassinated by Sirhan Sirhan. The democratic candidate eventually turned out to be LBJ’s Vice President, Hubert Humphrey. I don’t think Humphrey even entered any primaries so how he eventually won the nomination I really don’t know. Either way he ran but was ultimately soundly defeated by Richard Nixon.

If you follow the US election on television news like me, you might tend to think that there are only two candidates in this election, Harris and Trump but there are other candidates too, very few of which are ever mentioned by the TV networks. I mentioned above that Robert Kennedy was assassinated in 1968 but in 2024, his son, Robert Kennedy Junior, is also a candidate. He is running as an Independent as well as other candidates put forward by minor political parties. Do Kennedy and the other Independents have any sort of a chance in the election? For most the answer is no but for Kennedy, a member of America’s most famous political family, I reckon he must have at least an outside shot at the big prize especially for those disenchanted with the two big contenders.

One of the things that led me to writing about politics was that I’ve just finished a book by John Simpson called Strange Places, Questionable People. It’s a sort of autobiography although very little of his personal life seeps through into the pages as it’s more about his life with the BBC than about his personal life. He began working for the BBC in the 1960s at BBC radio and one of his first political encounters was with Harold Wilson. Simpson cornered the PM on a railway station, pushed his microphone forward only for Wilson to punch him in the stomach. He goes on to talk about many other encounters, happily non-violent encounters with other Prime Ministers like John Major and Margaret Thatcher.

Some of his reporting from various war-torn places like Bosnia, Kabul and Iraq are pretty hair raising. He was in South Africa to cover the election of Nelson Mandela and was in Moscow to see the coup that overpowered Gorbachev and the rise of Boris Yeltsin.

My favourite story in the book was about Boris Yeltsin during the arrest of Mikhail Gorbachev. There were many in the communist party who did not like the new reforms and decided to take action. Gorbachev was at his dacha when the coup occurred. Back in Moscow, Boris Yeltsin stood on a tank to defend the new freedoms of Russia and Simpson interviewed Eduard Shevardnadze, Gorbachev’s foreign minister. Shevardnadze went in to Moscow’s White House to see Yeltsin and when he came out Simpson asked him for a comment. Shevardnadze responded by saying Yeltsin had told him he would ‘stay here to the end. Until the last drop of blood in my body.’.

Later when the Soviet Union had disintegrated and Shevardnadze had become the President of Georgia, Simpson once again interviewed him and mentioned that moment in Moscow. Shevardnadze thought for a moment and then revealed that Yeltsin was actually unconscious with an empty bottle of vodka lying beside him. But what about that stuff you said Yeltsin had told you asked Simpson?

‘What could I have done,’ said Shevardnadze, ‘what would have happened if I had said Yeltsin’s too drunk to talk?’

Interestingly, back then one of Yeltsin’s lieutenants was a young former KGB man called Putin. Wonder what happened to him?


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Locked Down Blogger Part 2

It finally happened last week. It had been rumoured and expected. It had been predicted many months ago and so here it is. I’m talking of course about the second wave of the Coronavirus epidemic and the resulting second lockdown. There was some advance notice and as a result Liz and I were able to book a table and enjoy a last meal out. We even thought what the heck and went for a second bottle of wine just like the other couple in the next table sitting a socially distanced two metres to our left.

So that’s a month coming up with no nights out at the pub, no meals out and no quiz nights. The big problem with this second lockdown is the weather. In the first one I was quite happy sitting out in the sunshine reading a book. Now we have entered November here in the north of England it seems as though it has been constantly raining. What can we find of interest then? Well the big interest for me just lately is the American election. Like many people, I thought the election was a foregone conclusion, that Trump would be out and whoever the democrats chose would be in. It just so happened that the democratic candidate was Joe Biden. Joe is getting on a little bit for the top job and wouldn’t necessarily have been my choice but then again, neither would Donald Trump. As I write this the election is still ongoing, they are still counting the votes in a few remaining states. Both candidates are claiming victory and one is claiming huge voter fraud. Biden has so far been pretty much acclaimed as the winner, having received congratulations from previous presidents Obama and George W Bush. No congratulations have been forthcoming from Donald Trump and his legal team has already initiated legal action. I’m not sure who exactly they are planning to take to court but either way, that has not stopped Joe Biden getting his transition team together and making plans for when he takes office.

I wrote something back in 2016 about the smooth transition of power in the great democracies and even wondered what would happen if ever the outgoing president refused to budge. That was just wild blogging speculation but now some commentators are saying it could actually happen. This is almost as interesting for me as Watergate.

There was a time when I thought I understood the US election, now I’m not so sure. Hillary Clinton and Al Gore both won the popular vote in previous elections but failed to get enough electoral college votes to take them to the White House. I’m even confused about the primaries, I mean I was convinced Bernie Sanders would be the democratic candidate, but he stepped down earlier in the year and then Biden seemed to become the candidate virtually unchallenged and his projected walkover victory over Trump has just not happened. Many people actually support Trump. Some give their support because they are dyed in the wool Republicans, some presumably admire him but either way, 48% of the votes were for him.

I was watching TV the other day and a female black voter was being interviewed and surprisingly, she was voting for Trump. She wouldn’t vote for Biden she said because he was a socialist, which in the USA is one step from being a communist. Maybe that explains why Trump has such a following; in many places he must be seen as the anti-socialist. Trump did well in Florida where many Cubans found home after leaving communist Cuba.

When Nixon won the election in 1968 he spotted a supporter in a crowd with a banner proclaiming Bring us together and made that a campaign slogan. Bringing Americans together is a big ask for whoever wins in 2020 but I wish him luck in doing just that.

Theoretically this should be a great time for writers. What could be a better time to write than the lockdown, after all there isn’t much else to do. A few months back I shelled out a hundred or so dollars to list my screenplay on a web site called InkTip. InkTip is a way of bringing producers and writers together. They produce a newsletter for producers listing scripts and also provide subscribers with weekly lists of producers who want scripts. My screenplay has seen a lot of action lately with various producers reading either the synopsis or the script itself but that million-dollar deal has yet to surface. I live in hope.

My screenplay was one I wrote quite a few years back and I read through it recently and had an idea for a new ending. I added the new ending, tidied everything up and that final version was the one I added to InkTip. As I reviewed it again the other day – I don’t know about you but I’m always reviewing my old stuff- I realised that it was written before today’s mobile phone, Twitter and Instagram age. Not one of the characters has a phone. I might have to spend the lockdown adding mobile phones to my screenplay and bringing it into the 21st century.

Another project I’ve been working on during the lockdown is a video covering my recent trip to the Scottish Highlands. It’s mostly GoPro video from a camera stuck to my motorhome window. I’ve added some stills and some bits where I talk straight to the camera. I had a lot of technical problems putting it together, particularly recording the voice over. The voice over is pretty important because the actual visual stuff isn’t that exciting. When I recorded it, my laptop clearly couldn’t keep up with playing video and recording sound at the same time, so I had to record my voice separately and then add it to the video. That makes it difficult because normally as I’m reading the narration I tend to react to what is on screen so I can slow down or speed up if required or just add lib if I need to.

I was feeling pretty pleased with myself when I finished it and quickly got it uploaded to YouTube. I added the video to a video creators page that I follow and got some pretty reasonable feedback. What was really annoying was when I decided to tinker with it and spotted a couple of things I hadn’t noticed. One was in the credits at the end where I credited the music as Soul Grove instead of Soul Groove. Oh, and there was one more. In one of the stills of the motorhome I hadn’t picked up that Liz was rather cheekily giving me the V sign through the window! The thing is, the video had already garnered 72 views so do I delete and add the updated version or just leave things as they are? Decisions, decisions.

I’ve has a couple of nights on my own this week, as usual keeping my mothers house ship shape and lived in. One night I thought I’d make one of my favourite dishes, bruschetta. It just so happened I had some ciabatta in the freezer as well as onions and tomatoes. So here we go, I sliced the bread and popped it in the toaster for a light toasting. While that was going on I chopped the tomatoes and onions, mixed them up with a little garlic and olive oil. I Popped the bread out, slapped on the tomato and onion mixture and settled down to eat. It was wonderful.

It was so good I decided on another Italian favourite for the second course. aglio olio peperoncino. It’s basically spaghetti with olive oil, garlic and chilli. What could go wrong with that?

The quick answer is everything, overdone spaghetti, burnt garlic and those chillies I used last week on a curry that weren’t very hot: this week they were hot!

When is my favourite Italian restaurant opening again?


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