By Natalie Bennett
The parliamentary press gallery in Westminster is often accused of treating their subject as though it were a football game: points are “scored” off ministers by their shadows, attacks are “lobbed back”, you’re a member of the “team”. In Whipping It Up, which premiered last week at The Bush Theatre, writer Steve Thompson has gone further: this is politics as Machiavellian ping-pong played for laughs.
The scenario is a complicated but just believable one. It is late December, 2008. The Tories are in power, with a majority of just three. The setting is the hyper-realistically staged Whips’ Office, which has reverted to what Maggie (Fiona Glascott), the formidable Labour Chief Whip who used to call this home, calls a “a public school dorm”.
Traditional Tory voters were to be granted an early present – a bill to tax tents unashamedly aimed at the traveller community. It is designed to show them that the softie, “leftie” PM — no prizes for guessing who that is — is really one of them. But the scouts are upset, because they’ll be hit by the tax too, and then, on the morning before the vote, a farmer shoots for no reason a couple of traveller children. Suddenly, it seems, the political mood has changed, and the government is in trouble on a bill it saw as a shoo-in.
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