Damp Summer…

Remember the year when Summer never really started? Instead all we experienced was a series of damp days with the occasional sunny day scattered randomly amongst them. No? well perhaps I’m a bit older than you. Or perhaps it is just a trick of an ever more decrepit mind giving up the ghost…Perhaps, perhaps, perhaps.

Whatever the case it has certainly been a disappointing summer so far. Of course the truth is that there are millions of people around the world who might enjoy a cool damp day or two – perhaps help save their subsistence crop that is dying in the strong remorseless sun. Sometimes when moaning about one’s lot it helps to realise that many more people would love to have such problems.

This is true but just one day of summer? Maybe?

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General Election Reflection No. 1 – Loveless Landslide

So here it is the first attack on the incredible Labour victory – attack the percentage of the vote. Now I don’t remember the Daily Mail complaining about the size of the percentage of the vote cast over the previous 4 general elections.

As can be seen from the table above over the 14 years of the last Conservative governing period the Tories have gained 288 more MPs than they were entitled to if we go by the vote share. But we do not use a Proportional Representation System to select our MPs. We use first past the post method and so it doesn’t really matter what the overall percentage is. What really matters is the efficiency of the vote distribution between constituencies . What this means is to win a seat a candidate needs one more vote than the candidate with the second highest number of votes – every other vote above that is wasted. However, if a political party were to be able to spread the voters out more evenly over more constituencies then they are likely to win more seats. This is what Labour achieved at this election.

To illustrate this point further just compare the number of seats that Labour won in 2019 to 2024. In 2019 Labour won 32% of the vote, just under 3 % less 2024 yet they crashed to one of their worst defeats with only 209 seats compared to 412 seats in 2024. It doesn’t matter how much Jeremy Corbyn might claim that he got almost the same size of the vote as Sir Keir Starmer. His record was disastrous when it comes to converting the number of votes cast for Labour into seats won. This lesson was well learnt by Sir Keir Starmer and today he sits in No. 10 and Jeremy Corbyn sits in his allotment shed. (I know he was re-elected but as an independent.)

Now I am not defending our voting system it is just that Labour really really played system to its own advantage. I might have more sympathy with those gnashing their teeth over Labour’s percentage of the vote if they had been complaining over the last 4 elections when the Liberal Democrats should have received an extra 236 MPs to the number they got. They did not.

Another attack on Labour is that their small percentage of the vote means they are vulnerable at the 2029 General Election. This is just nonsense. Back in 2019, after the General Election, Boris Johnson was master of all her surveyed and there was talk of him winning another two General Elections. How did that work out for him?

We live in a volatile world and now it would seem that that volatility is matched by the British electors behaviour when they vote. I have no idea what will happen between now and 2029 but I doubt the percentage of the vote Labour received in 2024 will have much influence at the next general Election.

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When you get to where you want to go…

So it is election day, you’ve cast your vote, what do you do then? The answer to that is as varied as the number of people who bothered to vote. For me it was a steady trundle up the M1 to the Yorkshire Sculpture Park (YSP) and the new Bharti Kher exhibition. Well what can I say other than I was underwhelmed. Far more cogent reviewers of art than me would be able to dissect why was that might be. Having sort of slept on in it for a couple of days (not sure what might also have been on my mind?) all I can come up with is a deep breath followed by a large sigh. It was not one of the most memorable exhibitions I have experienced at the YSP

Of all the pieces the full body casts of the sex workers, see above, had the most impact.

Your mileage may well vary but for me it just didn’t work.

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Wildflowers…

The new wildflower garden is starting show some signs of promise.

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The Morning After…

There are many takeaways from the election and I no doubt may get around to some of them in due course. Today I think it is a day of renewed hope which will undoubtedly be dashed as the weeks and months pass. That is for tomorrow…for just one day enjoy the moment.

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Election Day

If you are eligible to vote today then…

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Six Days to Go…

The time has come. With 6 days to go before the General Election, this will be for c 80% of the vote cast as c 20% has already been cast via postal voting, what do I think is going to happen? Before answering this I think the one overriding impression I have got is that voter apathy towards the political process will have a major impact on this election. Having said that I suspect that it will not reduce the turn out as a whole but rather constituencies that have a large Labour majority may well see the turn out reduced, it won’t affect the winner but they will win with a reduced majority whilst keeping their percentage lead. In contrast I suspect that constituencies where the sitting Tory candidate could lose will have an increased turn out as voters try to get rid of the Tory candidate. So I guess this is my first prediction:

1) The drive to give the Conservative Party a real good kicking will be a major driving force of the election.

Beyond this I think elections are unknown until all the votes are counted and so my following predictions are based around what my sense of the percentage chance they have of happening.

2) The chance that Labour has an overall majority of 1 – 99%

No great prediction here. The polls have been saying this for almost 2 years but it will still be one of the greatest electoral achievements by any incoming Labour government to get a majority of 1 given where they were in 2019.

3) The chance that the Labour government will have a majority over 100 – 80%

This is probably the craziest thing about the probable election result: if Labour gets a majority less than 100 it will be seen as a failure. I doubt it will happen but I give it a 20% chance.

4) The chance that Rishi Sunak loses his seat – 40%

There has never been a Labour MP in area that Sunak has his constituency yet there is a possibility he could lose. Even if Sunak wins I doubt he will stay around for much longer as he will be the hate figure for every defeated candidate, and there will be many big beasts of the former government who will want to blame him as well as the Tory backing press who now find that they have no access to the government of the day. Let’s face it he doesn’t need the hassle so why the hell would he put up with this when the sunny skies of California will seem so much more sunnier as the English summer heads towards the dark clouds of autumn.

5) The chance that the Conservatives is the third largest party in the next House of Commons – 10%

This, in many respects, is the real question to be answered – just how low can the Tories go? I don’t think they will finish third but they could finish so far behind the Labour party that they may as well be third. But, and I can’t underline this enough, for this even being considered is astonishing. Yet here I am agreeing with a number of opinion polls so we just don’t know.

6) The chance that the Liberal Democrats will form the official opposition – 10%

This is the yang to the ying of the previous point. The great advocates of proportional representation benefiting from the peculiarities of the first past the post system. They are likely to outperform all of the opinion poll predictions and maybe, just maybe have more MPs than the Conservative Party. Again, just suggesting this as a reasonable possibility is nuts. Welcome to the Nutty Election.

7) The chance Nigel Farage is elected an MP – 45%

Nigel Farage doesn’t really want to be an MP for Clacton but this time he may well succeed and he will hate every minute because, if Labour have a huge majority then no one will be listening to him. His power base has always been drawn from his ability to cause trouble for the Conservative government. No Conservative government, No power. So it may well be Nigel, be careful for what you wish. (Side note – it is far from clear at the time of writing what, if any, affect the racist et al comments of a Reform worker in Clacton might have – it’s probably not going to help.)

8) The chance that most of what I have predicted above is incorrect – 100%

The only prediction I am certain of is that Labour will form the next government. I suspect they will have a very large majority and this will allow Sir Keir Starmer the space to do things that will upset many people but it is what the Country needs to start the process of healing after 14 years of what we have just experienced. I have no idea what type of Prime Minister he will be nor how successful but if some of the wild predictions outlined above come true the implications will be seismic. I’ll give you one example:

For the last 14 years the leading right wing papers have dominated the political debate. Their editors have had a direct hotline to whomever was the Prime Minister. Come the 5th of July this will surely end and this could cause an explosion of hatred towards the Conservative Party – initially aimed at Rishi Sunak. In the more long term it may lead to the collapse such august media groups such as the Telegraph Group and upstarts such as GB News. What might replace them is unclear but it certainly will change the outlook.

So there we have it. I may review my predictions after the elections – especially if they are anything like correct. Only time will tell…which is the same for the results of the General Election

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Declining Power…

I could have called this post Continuity and Change but I didn’t. Instead, having slowly baked in the warm Suffolk sun, I’m really not a sun person, I went with this title. It is also apt for the election as well. Both images capture impressive edifices created by very powerful and wealthy individuals or institutions that today no longer have the power nor wealth they once had. In this case the Marquis of Bristol, the former owners of Ickworth House.

The second was the Church, either Catholic or Anglican. Bury St. Edmunds was built around the abbey which itself was built upon the wealth generated by pilgrims visiting the shrine of St Edmund, who died at the hands of the ‘Heathen Hordes’ in the 9th century. Then came the original Brexit, Henry the eighth’s break with the church in Roman which in turn lead to the destruction of the Abbey. The subsequent Church of England that took its place was also very powerful in its time, the cathedral was most rebuilt in the 19th century. However, nowadays the church is a pale show of its former glory with fewer and fewer regular worshipers. In the next few months they may well lose their last claim to secular power, if you don’t count the Monarch who is both Head of States and head of the Church, as the bishops are removed from the House of Lords – assuming a) Labour wins and b) they reform the House of Lords – you decide the odds of each.

Yet the world keeps turning and Bury St. Edmunds is still a pleasant enough town to visit, which strangely gives me hope for the future.

One final thing. In the grounds of the cathedral is a memorial to the Protestant martyrs burnt by Queen Mary, Bloody Mary. She was, of course, very much a remainer, that is remaining with the Catholic church, and had people burnt to death who didn’t agree with her. Apparently, God is Love and what better way of showing that your version of Love is the correct version of Love than burning people to death who disagreed. Thankfully, we have come a long way since then otherwise Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage might have something to worry about with the much more euro friendly Starmer as Prime Minister, probably with a very large majority.

P.S. The Labour candidate caught up in the betting scandal was standing in the Suffolk constituency but a neighbour – isn’t life strange.

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On this day…

Back to the balmy days of 2022. If my memory serves me well I believe that COVID was still a real big thing – my brush with it, that I know of, didn’t happen for another few months. However, we were entering the death spiral days of the Johnson premiership. Anyway, we must have been let out as I visited the Yorkshire Sculpture Park to see an exhibition of Robert Indiana’s work.

A lot has changed in the time that has passed and hopefully many more things will change for the better in the future under Sir Keir Starmer – we don’t know but we have to live in hope otherwise what is the point! A perhaps a more relevant change is the use of AI. Back in 2022 it was still some strange thing of the future – now it is becoming harder and harder not have one’s life brushed by AI. The second image, for example, has used AI to remove an unwanted detail. I could have spent ages cloning it out of the image but instead I used Generative Fill and within a minute the process was completed.

Is this an honest photography? No if your view is that photographs are a truthful record of events. However, anyone who has the most rudimentary grasp of the history of photography will know that will know that photographs have always been edited and improved. Perhaps if you claim that the work is a genuine record then that is different. I have never made such claims. My photographic images are created by me using the latest photo editing software and my accumulated skills. The full RAW image is shown below:

You can decide.

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In Memory of William Reeve…

The one fact I know about William Reeve is that there is a grave remembering him in a beautiful little churchyard set on a valley side deep in the east Leicestershire countryside. The church itself is some distance from the current village of Loddington but as its origin is somewhere in the 12th century it is reasonable to assume that at that time Loddington may have been closer to church. I have no idea whether William was aware of this. I don’t know whether he knew of the plans to build a railway just behind the church and if he did what he thought about that. I don’t know whether he was a good man or not. I just know that sometime in 1849 he was laid to rest and that the gravestone has stood vigil ever since.

Once I press send then William Reeve will have another memorial that he once existed. Perhaps he is still remembered amongst his now distant descendants – may be not. None of this matters as the gravestone is still standing some 175 years later. But what of the next 175 years or 825 years. Will the gravestone still be in the churchyard? Will it still be legible and will the person who finds the gravestone be able to read it? Will all the collected nonsense we recorded on line everyday still be accessible to that person in the distant future? If it is will that mythical person be able read this, my small memorial to William Reeve?

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