This week I
had a short lesson in the power of spin, albeit on a very minor level. I enjoy watching the occasional politics show
on the television, but I am beginning to suspect that what I enjoy the most about it is objecting
to everything that is said by everyone who is saying it. I can only sustain interest in any one
show for a limited period of time. After
a few months the presenters' smug certainty that they don’t just report on
politics, they determine it, begins to grates on my nerves. It is very possible that they have a point, however could they rub our noses in it a little less? I therefore frequently give up on politics shows for months at a time before returning to the fold. The weather affects me too, I am a foul weather
political spectator, it is a sport far better suited to winter.
Over recent
weeks I have been in the habit of watching Question Time whilst reading the Extra Guest's comments about it on Twitter, and exchanging banter with a couple of friends. These ‘friends’ are actual friends, people I know and like, not virtual acquaintances. We are coming to the conclusion that you can’t
watch Question Time, read Twitter and write tweets all at the same time. In that we are all of reasonable
intelligence, it could be said that we should have reached this conclusion the very first time we indulged in the activity.
However, when you live alone, virtual chat about what is on telly is
almost sociable. Twitter is playing too much of a role in my social activity, and I seriously need to cut down, some days I am up to 40 a day, I definitely need to try and quit.
Last
Thursday the intention was to focus on Question Time and not on Question Twitter. Unfortunately, I gave in and started reading
Twitter whilst I watched. One of my
Question Time tweeting friends insists that the BBC rarely choose an Extra
Guest from the right, so he texted me triumphantly that a blue moon event was
occurring. I thought I might as well read what the Extra
Guest said.
All went well until the debate
turned to the question of politics as a safe career for women. This was on the agenda because of allegations against a Liberal Democrat peer. The Labour MP, Angela Eagle, addressed the question first and
commented, very sensibly, that such behaviour should not be tolerated in any
workplace. She also noted that women
were referred to in derogatory or patronising terms. Ms Eagle said that a change of culture is
required, with which I agree, yet she then entreated women to ‘get to work’ and
change the culture. I would have thought
that everyone should ‘get to work’ for any changes to be effective and accepted.
A follow up
question asked how she would go about this.
David Dimbleby invited the Conservative MP, Claire Perry, to
answer this. As an aside to her main answer on the point,
Ms Perry started with a comment that it was interesting to note that if the
peer were a woman, there would be endless media speculation and comment on her
age, weight and appearance, being a man he wasn’t subject to this, even though he “is not a looker”. Angela Eagle had made
also made the point that media focus on women was often not for their
politics. Claire Perry had a valid point, but I suspect that, had she not followed
up with the personal comment, her argument would have been the better for
it. But it is true that women are too often judged on their appearance as well as and sometimes instead of, being judged on their ability to do their job.
A few
minutes later, Ken Loach, the socialist film director, spoke about the same
subject, quite rightly saying it was an abuse of power, which it is. He then said that the peer’s appearance has
nothing to do with the issue, telling Perry that her comment of ‘no looker’ was a cheap
shot. Perry’s aside was about media
treatment of women, not about the allegations.
To me, Loach’s aside was a cheap shot at Perry, but better aimed than her comment,
and it went down very well with the BBC’s carefully selected audience.
I wouldn’t have
paid this point much heed, had it not been for the BBC Extra Guest, who then
tweeted (interestingly after Loach’s point, not after Perry’s) that it was “Utterly insulting” for Perry to “suggest
that this case would be any less serious if he was a “looker””. I am not sure he could even have heard what was said, to have put this interpretation on it. I challenged
him on it, accusing him of spinning to discredit Perry. Why I bother with such things is beyond me. I don’t personally know Perry, she seems very
capable of defending herself. But no, being me, I had to jump in and say he
was wrong and was guilty of spin. The Extra Guest claimed that it couldn’t be
spin, because it was his opinion, and anyway, he is in the same party as Perry. This makes me feel very sorry for women in
politics, when even your own party are
spinning and plotting against you, you have to fight just to stand still, let
alone move forward. To my mind, by my
definition of spin, it was spin. I even
looked up ‘spin’ in the Oxford English Dictionary. My version didn’t have a definition which matched
mine, so very remiss of them. I then
looked it up on Wikipedia, the font of all knowledge. Much to my relief, they aligned with my
thinking. Spin was defined as manipulative
and a ‘form of propaganda’ resulting from an interpretation designed to persuade
public opinion for or against something or someone, e.g. public figures.
Mr Extra Guest either didn’t hear what Perry had said, but somehow thought he had better jump on
Loach’s bandwagon, egging the mixture along the way, or did hear what Perry had
said and was quite happy to twist her words and stab her in the back. He was very certain that she did suggest it would be less serious, even tweeting afterwards from his own twitter account, so I do believe he genuinely thought she had said what he accused her of. I can't help but suspect that Loach's comments carried more weight with the Extra Guest's processing of Perry's comments, than had her actual words. It was a very cleverly aimed jibe, a minute or so later, when the actual comments would have left spectators' echoic memory, placing an entirely different interpretation of Perry's comments in people's minds.
In the meantime
by daring to defend a right wing politician, I had made myself fair game for
the left to come after me – and they did.
I was informed, by women, that Perry’s comments were ‘outrageous’, ‘insulting
and sexist’ and the most pretentious comment tweeted to me, that Perry had used
the words ‘no looker’ to “desensitise the allegation”. This last, most vociferous tweeter is a
proclaimed socialist, proud to be part of a feminist movement. I looked with interest at some of her other tweets – she called Perry a ‘bitch’ several times and expressed her desire to smack Perry in the face and 'lamp' her. Good thing she is so feminist and
anti-fascist, because she was sounding very much like a boot boy advocating
violence against a woman. I was quite relieved that such ire was saved
for Perry and not directed at me. I was also taken aback that the interpretation of her comments was so different from what I had actually heard. Loach put one spin on it, the Extra Guest followed that with another and that was becoming the accepted version. Spin is part of our culture and is endemic throughout politics from all parties, but I always thought of it as large campaigns, not small comments carefully placed to undermine people at every level.
Does any of
this really matter? No. I only blog
about it because they were all so insistent that the Extra Guest interpretation was
right and I was wrong, that I actually began to doubt myself and ended up
watching the whole thing again on iPlayer to check I had heard correctly. Does it change my view of women in politics? Yes. If this is the kind of misleading
crap they have to put up with, even from those allegedly on 'their side' I have even more respect for all of them,
whatever their party. Does it change my
view of Perry? I admire her for her
thick skin. I also suspect if I were to
enter politics, I would be scarily similar, i.e. quite loud, quite bossy and
far too prone to say what comes into my head without editing it to appeal to a
very left-wing, ‘everything the Tories say is wrong’ BBC audience. Perry’s
main point, which her detractors chose to ignore, was that more
women should get involved in politics.
The way to make your voice heard is to speak up. I think she is right, I am just not sure I personally
would have the courage to do it. Neither could I toe a party line well, nor be so thick-skinned against such propaganda. However,
going forward I will pay far more attention to the way I perceive all politicians and to what they actually do say and far less to what the media and other detractors like to tell us has been said and done.
Claire
Perry’s actual words, transcribed from BBC iPlayer “ I think the fascinating thing in all this coverage is if this had
been a female of any note, there would have been lots of commentary about her appearance,
her age, whether she’d lost weight, but this chap is not a looker, let’s be
clear and nobody has mentioned that”.
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