Chapter 23 In which the man with no name rides into the Conservative Club

Down at the Conservative Club in Eastphalia very few people had turned up for the Halloween fancy dress party, and many of the regulars hadn't bothered to dress up. In one of the armchairs near the fire a copy of the Westphalia Express began to shake. It was being held by Bernard Fotherington-Smythe, and the reason for the shaking was his slowly building laughter. As his humour increased his jowly face began to move up and down, and he produced a laugh-come-cough which suggest the movement in his upper body had dislodged a certain amount of phlegm in his throat. 'Ha ha ha! That'll bloody show 'em! Agree with every word. Work shy buggers - take 'em out and flog 'em, I say.'
'What's that you're reading?' enquired the young councillor sitting at the bar. He was wearing a pin-stripe suit and some plastic devil's horns, and had come as a merchant banker. (In some parts of London that would have been Cockney rhyming slang, but as they were in Eastphalia it wasn't.)
'This letter of Charlie Windsor's about all these layabouts who won't work. He says we should refuse to pay their benefits when there are vacant jobs available - hit the bloody nail on the head, I say.'
'Oh, absolutely, replied the young councillor. We obviously have a lot in common. Let me introduce myself - Bob Hunt.'
'Pleased to meet you.'

'How would that work exactly?' asked a quiet, rather gravelly voice. Both men looked up. The man who had spoken was unknown to them. He was wearing a cowboy hat and poncho, had dark stubble on his chin and a cheroot in his mouth.
'Can't you read? shouted the barman, pointing to the no smoking sign.
'It's not lit, replied the stranger, without raising his voice.
'How would what work?' asked Bernard.
'I mean how would the 'not paying benefits system' work. replied the stranger. Presumably you'd stop housing benefit and any other handouts at the same time?'
Bob Hunt walked across the room, putting himself between the stranger and Bernard, saying: 'Let me handle this, old man.'
'Before we debate this point, how did you get in here? It's members only, and any guests have to be signed in. The club steward is very particular about that.'
The stranger placed an old-fashioned gold watch on the table next to him. When he opened it, it began playing a tune. 'Steward? Is that like a sheriff?' he asked.
'Well, yes, I suppose so.'
'Well, maybe you need a new steward,' said the stranger, still maintained his quiet tone of voice.
'Look, you can't just march in here and disagree with us. Who the ruddy hell are you?'
The stranger smiled. 'Let's just say I'm mid-forties, a graduate, local football fan, politics left of centre but not a member of any political party.'
'Oh, I see, said Hunt. Well, I happen to agree with Charlie Windsor. All benefits should be stopped.'
'Hmm, very easy to say, but not very practical - in fact I'd say impossible to implement. Just a headline grabber really. You'd create lots of homeless hungry people, wouldn't you? I mean what would you do, build workhouses and transport everyone back to the Victorian Age?'
'Well, maybe Charlie hasn't thought through the practicalities of the whole policy, but we've got this brilliant minimum wage now ...'
'Ah, yes, is that the minimum wage that the Tories were against? Didn't they say paying people a decent wage would bring down the economy?'
The barman was nervously polishing glasses. 'Look mister, he shouted over, we don't want no trouble here. We just want to discuss politics in our own particular fashion, if you get my meaning. We ain't doing no-one no harm. It ain't none of your business.'
'Well, friend, when people keep writing letters full o' horseshit to the local paper, I kinda think it is my business.'
'Look, you have absolutely no right ...,' began Hunt.
'Let me ask you this, said the stranger. If you have a benefits system which has created this situation, isn't it the system which is the problem?'
'Well, yes.'
'So why demonise the people? They're at the bottom of the food chain of your capitalist system. In that system there will always be losers. Your man Windsor is just scoring cheap political points. And why is it that some jobs pay so much more than others? Maybe he'd be better focusing on the obscene wealth at the other end of the system. If your binmen went on strike, there'd be chaos after a week. But what if estate agents went on strike? Or mayors? Or consultants? Do you think anyone would miss them if they stopped pitching in for work? No, this 'layabout rant' is fine for getting old Tories frothing at the mouth, but when you think about it sensibly it's just the same old horseshit.'
At that point the music stopped, and in a flash the stranger moved his hand towards his pocket. He pulled out a business card and handed it to Hunt. If you ever need a new steward, or if your town ever gets taken over by bandits, just give me a call.'
'Bandits? said Hunt staring at the small print on the card. That's highly unlikely. And we already have a mayor, thank you very much, so I don't think you'll be needed ... '
As he looked up from the card his voice trailed off. Both the stranger and the watch were gone.
'Well, spluttered Bernard Fotherington-Smythe, the damned impudence of the fellow. I'd like to horsewhip the blackguard. I'm going to see to it that his membership is cancelled.'
'He's not a member, you silly old sod,' said Hunt.
'Well who is he? What does it say on the card?'
'It doesn't have a name, it's just a sentence - in French.'
'French! French!' exploded Bernard. He speaks French? Good God! Isn't that an offence?'
'Not at the moment. Anyway, it says 'On ne peut pas tuer l'idee a coups de canon ni lui mettre les poucettes.'
'Well what does it mean?'
'How should I know? - My world stops at Dover as well. I'm just as bigoted and narrow-minded as you.'

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Apparently, just before the Council meeting last Tuesday, the Westphalia Conservative Group of Councillors were having drinks in the Conservative Club gloating over how many council staff they were going to sack. Interestingly, they were joined by the supposedly Independent Councillor Jasper Carrot.

Anonymous said...

Shouldn’t Charlie Windsor practice what he preaches? (polls on this site suggest he should)

After all Charlie is a migrant candidate, he only moved to Devon to be a Tory parliamentary candidate. With all these native Devonian Tory NIMETs (Not In Meaningful Employment or Training) and ASS’s (Appointed as Service to Society) like elected Mayors, consultants, deputy editors etc. If we stopped paying Pangloss, he might go for being MP for Westphalia-on-sea.

Brian Localbloke is highly regarded across the political spectrum because he is a hardworking conscientious MP with deep roots in the community; he was born in Eastphalia, but it wouldn’t have matter if he was born in France.

Anonymous said...

Acording to google the french bit means "You can not kill the idea a cannon shots neither he put thumbcuffs." which makes it all much clearer.

Anonymous said...

The Westpahlia Express are obviously behind Dr Pangloss's brilliant idea to privatise the Council. After all, it will save the rate payers millions of pounds, even if the big large companies such as Capital(ist) and WS3 centralise many of the jobs and move them all to another county (or country). After all he did promise to get rid of the low wages in the area. What better way than to move the common people to another area. That way standards can really go up.

Anonymous said...

Pissed off worker tells of a time when a fellow employee died. Pangloss turns up at the funeral saying what a 'excellent job you fellows do' then went back to the town hall to plan flogging of the workforce to the highest bidder.
Nemisis

Anonymous said...

It's brilliant if the council of westphalia-on-sea don't provide anything to the area (they pay some else too)how can they be blamed when things go belly-up.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous (the first one): that's completely old hat now. Even the yawn-making Rotter managed to do 'who does Jasper the independent drink with' to death - around four months ago!

Anyway, I understand that BEFORE the meeting (as you claim) only tea was drunk, and it was actually in the Oldway tea rooms, and Jasper was not the only independent.

Typical Libdem, eh? Takes a true story, then changes the facts to make it 'more interesting'.

Anonymous said...

Cllr Jasper Carrott - scrutinising the Tory council, but voted into the position by Tory councillors. Marvelleous !

Jasper Carrott no ward surgeries from him unlike his Lib Dem foes - the great unwashed have to come to his launderette for 'advice'.

Doesn't even deign it worth his while to attend ward partnerships to listen to voters concerns.

He's as 'independent' as Pangloss once proclaimed and Oliver Hardy, self-styled tourism guru claimed to be, before losing to the evil Pangloss in the Mayoral contest.

Lets watch his voting record with interest. He's good as being in Westphalia Express

Anonymous said...

The original anonymous is spot on. The Westphalia Conservatives and Condependent Councillor Jasper Carrott were at Prestphalia Conservative Club, not Oldway.

It's funny seeing the Conservatives trying to portray this blog as a Lib Dem blog, when it isn't. There is a sizeable portion of the Westphalia community who aren't happy with the way Pangloss and his Conservative friends are running the Council, and the Westphalia Express are not reflecting that.

Anonymous said...

Turnip: Ward surgeries? Don't make me laugh. So if you've got a problem, you've got to hang about and wait for a couple of hours on one Saturday a month (if you're lucky). That's hardly being 'available', now is it? You Libdems are barely in the 20th century, let alone the 21st. And 'the great unwashed'? That's nice. Are you so very special?

As for ward partnerships, oh please. The only one worth a light in the whole of Torbay is the Preston one.