Recently Chris Dillow wrote about how stupid Westminster politics (which is most of UK politics) has become. I’m always wary when oldies like Chris and myself say things are much worse than they used to be, but he is hardly alone in making this complaint. I have read many people bemoaning the fact that politicians seem unable nowadays to present bad news to voters (e.g. Trump’s Iran war will make us worse off whatever the government does) or to discuss policy trade-offs (e.g. cutting immigration will require higher taxes). Discussion of policy has been replaced by a seemingly endless game of musical chairs in and around Downing Street.
However what really convinced me he was right was that he referenced a paper I wrote some time ago. It was about what I call the knowledge transmission mechanism between academics and policymakers, and how it had failed when the world outside China turned to fiscal austerity in 2010. It convinced me because I would never write that kind of paper today. The idea that we should presume politicians might be interested in, or still less follow, an academic consensus seems very old fashioned and rather naive today.
Perhaps we were spoiled by the Brown era (I think it was mainly Brown, not Blair). I note in my paper that my own example of the knowledge transition mechanism working really well was the Treasury analysis behind the five tests for deciding on whether the UK should adopt the Euro in 2003, for which David Ramsden should take a lot of the credit. After these years when evidence-based policy making was the ideal, it was a genuine puzzle as to why the Western world had collectively decided to ignore basic macroeconomics and cut government spending in the middle of the worst recession since WWII when interest rates were stuck at their lower bound. Yet from today’s perspective, where everything from harvesting policy-based evidence to simple lying is so endemic, it all seems much less of a puzzle.
The Brexit referendum was decisive in this respect. The winning side didn’t talk about a trade-off between sovereignty and the economy, but instead argued that Brexit would have overall economic benefits. Around 2010 there had been some serious and high profile economists arguing for quick deficit reduction, although still a minority that became pretty small in size as time went on. In contrast in 2016 there was as much a consensus among economists as you will ever get that Brexit would significantly harm the economy. Yet the Leave side got away with Project Fear because the media let them.
The press was overwhelmingly pro-Brexit, and being the propaganda outlets they are, the truth didn’t bother them. The broadcast media, led by the BBC, decided that ‘balance’ was more important than the truth, and didn’t even attempt to explain why Brexit would be bad for UK growth. Now that these negative economic effects are plain for pretty well everyone to see, including most voters, those who should be hanging their heads in shame alongside the Brexiters are those in the broadcast media who failed to fulfil their mandate of informing viewers. But they are not, of course, because things have only become worse since 2016.
Brexit marked the first triumph of populism in the UK. It was immediately after Brexit that we had newspaper headlines condemning judges upholding the very reasonable law that the executive couldn’t just close down parliament when convenient. The judges were going against the ‘will of the people’ the papers claimed in typical populist fashion. This makes it obvious, to me at least, that one reason, perhaps the reason, that politics in the UK and elsewhere has become significantly more dumb is the ascendancy of right wing populism.
One of the features of the austerity period was the absence of balance in political reporting. The broadcast media quickly decided that the rising budget deficit was the major economic problem, and it was really quite hard for opposing voices to get a look in. The media made it hard for opposition Labour voices to argue that the government was going too fast, too hard on cuts, so Labour eventually gave up. In part my paper was an attempt to explain why most journalists in the broadcast media thought it was so obvious that austerity was necessary.
Politics in the broadcast media is dominated by political journalists, and they should be seen as part rather than being apart from the political club made up of the executive, MPs and those who work for them. Balance for the broadcast media invariably means reflecting the balance among Westminster politicians, with outsiders treated badly. [1] The main exception to this rule is the influence of the right wing press (particularly if those running the BBC have been appointed by the populist right, as is the case today), and I argue in my paper a more minor exception are institutions like central banks. What doesn’t count nearly so much for the media, beyond any direct influence on politicians, is expertise in academia and elsewhere. Hence the media consensus that austerity was necessary, and ignoring the reality that Brexit was bound to hit the UK economy.
So one possible contributor to the state of UK politics today apart from politicians themselves is the right wing media, and therefore its owners. The right wing media is hardly a source of informed and balanced commentary. To some extent that has always been true, but it does seem to have got worse over the last few decades: just look at the Daily Telegraph, or GB news. The transformation of social media, to the extent that it influences political debate and discourse, has been more dramatic, and is now clearly a source of simplistic views that tend to match those of its owners.
However I’m not sure these developments in the media should be seen as independent of the rise in right wing populism. According to the thesis I outlined here, there has always been a significant source of voters who would be attracted by right wing populist rhetoric. However after the defeat of fascism in WWII there was a social taboo among the mainstream political elite, including to some extent newspaper owners, against appealing to voters in this way. Fascism, after all, is just a more extreme version of right wing populism, and they both share a focus on blaming social and economic problems on racial or religious minorities. The reaction of Prime Minister Heath to Enoch Powell’s speech was a polar example of this taboo in action. The thesis is that what has changed over the last few decades, and led to rise in right wing populism in national politics, is the weakening of this elite taboo, allowing key mainstream parties or politicians to appeal to xenophobic and racist views and not be ostracised by other politicians or the media.
What caused this taboo to break down is open to debate. It could simply be the passage of time, with memories of 1930s fascism fading away. In the case of the UK it could involve a view among those wanting to further neoliberal policies that the EU stood in their way. It could be a realisation among proponents of neoliberalism (both politicians and media barons) that their ideas could no longer win elections, and that therefore neoliberal parties needed to switch to fighting culture wars. It was the Conservative party that pivoted to focusing on immigration under the previous Labour government, and whose leader now openly courts the Islamophobic vote. [2]
Why does the rise in right wing populism lead to a deterioration in the level of political debate, such that it can seem dumb or stupid, and certainly dishonest? We have clear evidence that right wing populists lie all the time, and far more than mainstream politicians. Their appeal lies not in their honesty, but their connection to xenophobia, racism and just fear of the new among some voters. But their policies to pander to this social conservatism have real economic costs, and they prefer to lie about these because it makes their emotional appeal more comfortable (and even authentic) to those it is designed for.
More generally, right wing populists don’t want power to make their section of the electorate (‘the people’) better off. Instead, they sell an emotional connection so they can gain power for its own sake, and/or to enact the policies that benefit themselves and those who fund them. Among the voters they want to attract, lying ‘for the cause’ can be seen as a virtue rather than a problem.
When right wing populists become significant political players, that can (and in the UK does) intimidate all other political actors. When Reform and the Tories argue that problems accessing public services is down to high levels of immigration, Labour feel compelled to do the same. (That is not to justify them doing so, of course. See footnote 2.) When key political actors are constantly lying and getting away with it, it becomes harder for the rest to tell difficult truths, or indeed to hold any kind of serious political conversation. When one side is telling voters they can always eat cake, it becomes hard to say that cake is off the menu.
[1] This is not to say that the broadcast media fails to hold individual politicians to account. It clearly does, and without it Boris Johnson might still be Prime Minister. What the broadcast media in the UK is unlikely to do is challenge the political consensus among most MPs, or between major parties.
[2] Austerity didn’t help, for two reasons. First, there is growing evidence that austerity makes many voters more receptive to right wing populist messages. For that reason holding the Brexit referendum at the end of a long period of austerity was playing into the hands of the Brexiters. Second and more specifically, the Labour party’s gradual acceptance of austerity from 2010 onwards, and particularly after losing the 2015 election, led to a rebellion among party members and the election of Corbyn. When Corbyn was defeated in 2019 the Labour right, strongly influenced by Blue Labour, took over. This then produced in 2024 a government that repeated right wing populist lies on immigration and asylum.


