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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Meet the peopleBush and Blair style
By Chris Marsden
22 November 2003
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One million pounds spent and 1,300 police officers invading
a village of 5,000 residentsall so that US President George
W. Bush and his host, Prime Minister Tony Blair, could fake a
meet the people photo opportunity.
Bushs helicopter visit to Blairs Sedgefield constituency
in northeast England was billed as an occasion for the president
to wind down and enjoy a pub lunch at the local Dun and Cow Inn,
followed by a soccer match at the local sports academy.
In the event, the modest lunch of fish, chips and mushy peas
turned out to be one of the most expensive meals in history, and
the 70 or so carefully vetted guests were about the only commoners
Bush met during his state visit to Britain.
Bush left Buckingham Palace on Friday morning for Sedgefield
under the protection of two gunship helicopters. The evening before
his arrival a virtual ring of steel was placed around the village
and nearby Trimdon, where Blair has his constituency homea
four-bedroom Victorian house named Myrobella.
The unfortunate people of Sedgefield were placed under restrictions
akin to a siege. The Times newspaper described surreal
scenes the night before the visit, as hundreds of police
officers and secret service agents arrived to close roads, impose
a ban on parking in the village and insist that shopkeepers remove
net curtains and blinds to help with surveillance.
Many local people were angry when they were threatened with
their cars being towed away if they were not moved by 8 p.m.,
complaining that there was nowhere else to park. A spokeswoman
for Durham Constabulary said in reply, A lot of people are
going to be put out by this but, unfortunately, there is nothing
that we can do.
The centre of the village was closed off behind metal barriers,
but around 500 antiwar protesters had already gathered on the
village green opposite the Dun and Cow. Banners were held aloft
reading, Bin Blair and Bush: Worlds No.
1 terrorist.
The air of unreality surrounding Bushs visit was given
the unwitting assistance of the First Lady, Laura Bush, in her
only reported comment to the media. She told reporters that she
and her husband were nonplussed by the tens of thousands of London
protesters who demonstrated on Thursday against the war, adding,
I dont think the protests are near as large as everyone
was predicting before we got there. Weve seen plenty of
American flags, weve seen plenty of people who were waving
to usmany, many more people, in fact, than weve seen
protesters.
This may, in fact be true, since the 150,000-200,000 protesters
were not allowed anywhere near the first couple, who were holed
up alternately in Buckingham Palace and Ten Downing Street and
walled off from the teaming humanity around them by thousands
of police and Secret Service agents. Police have now admitted
to 110,000 in attendance at the antiwar and anti-Bush/Blair demonstration,
but organisers claim 200,000. The Guardian newspaper, a
loyal friend of Blair, admitted that it was difficult to
argue that they [the protest organizers] were wrong.
The fact that the next day a ratio of one police officer for
every resident was considered necessary so that Bush could venture
out onto the streets is due not so much to fear of terrorist reprisals
as to the widely and deeply-felt popular hostility to the US president.
His relationship to the general population has begun to resemble
that of an absolutist despot to his vassals. There is no possibility
any longer of unpoliced contact between the rulers and the ruledfor
fear that the illusion of support for their policies so carefully
cultivated by the media will be exposed as a lie.
See Also:
Britain: Massive turnout at demonstration
against Bush and Iraq war
[21 November 2003]
Bushs London visit highlights mass
opposition to US and British governments
[20 November 2003]
Bushs London speech: A defense
of aggression and lawlessness
[20 November 2003]
An international socialist strategy to
oppose militarism and war
[19 November 2003]
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