The
rioting in Sunderland last night has been shocking, but not surprising. At the
General Election a month ago, our First Past the Post (FPTP) system delivered a
big majority for a centrist, left-leaning party. The neo-fascists took 16% of
the vote; and won 5 out of 650 seats. They are angry; and have been looking for
an excuse to riot since then. The tragic events in Southport were that excuse,
but it is only an excuse. The people of Southport responded as a community
should, coming together in peaceful vigil to tenderly hold one another in their
grief. Nationally organised neo-fascists bringing agitators into communities
that feel left behind and disenfranchised to stir up grievance does not honour
those three little girls or their families—and does not care about the people
of Hartlepool or Sunderland either. But there are many people in these places
who are vulnerable to such exploitation due to complex, systemic and endemic
issues. There are no easy answers (though I do believe replacing FPTP would
help; and some form of PR would not have delivered 16% of the seats to the neo-fascists)
but it will take deep community organising, in a way that slowly undermines
forty years of extreme individualism that has made us believe that so long as
we are doing alright, we don’t need to care about other people.
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