2022 Policy & Politics Annual Lecture with Jess Phillips MP on “Everything You Really Need to Know About Politics”

Oscar Berglund, co-editor Policy & Politics

Last night, Policy & Politics was delighted to host Jess Phillips MP to speak to a large audience in Bristol about ‘Everything You Really Need to Know About Politics’.

Jess has been MP for Birmingham Yeardley since 2015 and is arguably one of Britain’s most prominent feminist politicians.

The aim of Phillips’ talk, based on her recent book of the same title, was to demystify British politics in an effort to strengthen the relationship between citizens and their elected representatives. The general scorn for politicians that is so common across the UK serves the Conservatives, she says. When people say ‘What’s the point in voting? You’re all the same’, people think that they are soldiers, that they are taking a stance. But on the contrary, to Phillips, it sounds like surrender.

What has always motivated Phillips to engage in politics has been to end violence against women and girls. ‘Whilst change is slow and hard, everything good in my life, the right to vote, the right to abortion, was delivered to me through politics’. Politics is everything, she says, ‘from the clothes we wear to what’s in my womb’.

Phillips has some key messages in order to demystify and detoxify politics.

People have good intentions. 95% of MPs want to change the world for the better, Phillips states. We also have remarkably similar ideas of what is good, such as people not going hungry and having housing and education. Although people do obviously have different views of how to get there. Painting people as though they are gruesome or evil does not help Phillips in her work to make women and girls safer, she says.

Another important lesson for Phillips has been that most people don’t care about almost anything that you care about. It is futile to lecture people on the basis that they do or should care about something as much as you do. The vast majority of people are not deeply wounded by whatever issue. Apart from the rights of Palestine, Phillips’ constituents don’t care about any of the hot issues on Twitter. People, she says, care more about bins. Aggression and righteousness will never be enough to win people over. Instead, there has to be hopeful vision.

Don’t assume bad faith. For Phillips, bad faith is stifling political activism. We too often assume that people are in politics for the wrong reasons and that stops us from meeting people where they are to achieve our goals. Unfortunately, the small percentage of politicians who are out for themselves often rise to the top. David Cameron and Boris Johnson are in that category, she says.

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