An Examination Of The Logic of Multiculturalism
The outcome of the 2019 general election is a thumping Tory majority. Tory defectors failed to survive the election – whether they fought as independents or as a Liberal Democrat. Both the Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats have been trounced.
This is presented a victory for Brexit. Since the Tory policy is Brino, then that presentation is untrue. The ultimate outcome for Brexit will now be determined by the Boris Johnson Tory Government, who will decide how much to concede to the EU.
The referendum of 2016 was in large part determined by the issue of mass immigration. It is telling that the recent general election made little mention of this issue. Indeed, the Tories played down the significance of immigration, illegal immigrants have been crossing the English Channel at will, and Boris Johnson has been keen to introduce an illegal immigrant amnesty for years.
The Tories have shattered the so-called Labour red wall across the north of England. This is presented as a fundamental political change. That is simplistic.
For some time, there has been an unease within the English community. On several occasions across the north of England nationalist political parties have won elections – including both local council elections and elections to the European parliament. The unrest has been there for those who chose to see.
The outcome of both this English unrest, and of Brexit itself, has resulted in a vote for the Tories. The nationalist parties have totally failed, and scarcely even still exist.
The failure of fringe parties is often blamed on a number of factors, including the first-past-the-post electoral system, the power of the media, political correctness, and the failure of the voters to see sense. These citations are delusional and are simply feeble excuses.
The by-election in the northern English constituency following the murder of Jo Cox, witnessed a number of nationalist/right-wing parties stepping forward to take advantage of the absence of the Tories (who decided not to contest the seat). Yet those nationalist/right-wing parties failed badly. None of them saved their deposits, and if their votes were totalled together, that total was still insufficient to save the deposit. They were unable to get even 5 per cent of the vote in the absence of the main right-of-centre party.
In London, another parliamentary by-election witnessed a similar result with UKIP and a UKIP splinter party. Even were their votes combined, they were still unable to be in a position to save their deposit. UKIP bombed in the recent EU elections and fared little better in the general election, being badly affected by The Brexit Party. During the general election, UKIP were trying to pass off their immigration policy as being an end to mass immigration. That was a con.
The 2019 general election has been fought without the case against the policies of mass immigration and multiculturalism being put. Political correctness has remained the dominant ideology.
The collapse of any nationalist vote represents a total failure of the nationalist cause. The reason for that is the failure of the various parties themselves and not the voting system etc. If the tide is to be turned against the ideology of political correctness and the policy of mass immigration, then there needs to be a fundamental rethink.