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Political communications in the age of austerity. Or: How St George Farage took on the party dragons Prof. Charlie Beckett Director, Polis, LSE Head, Dept of Media and Communications, LSE @CharlieBeckett

St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

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A presentation to the LSE Government dept on May 8th 2013 that looks at political communications implications of the political insurgency of Nigel Farage and Ukip and more generally in how the mainstream parties have failed to find a discourse to connect to the public during the economic crisis. You can read the text here: http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/polis/2013/05/08/st-george-farage-and-the-mainstream-party-dragons-political-communication-in-the-age-of-austerity/

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Page 1: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

Political communications in the age of austerity.

Or:How St George Farage took on the party

dragons

Prof. Charlie BeckettDirector, Polis, LSEHead, Dept of Media and Communications, LSE@CharlieBeckett

Page 2: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

The George and Dragon

Page 3: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

Why populist insurgency matters

• It shows that something is wrong with the system

• It has the potential to shift policy outcomes• It has the potential to exacerbate potentially

damaging structural trends towards democratic malfunctioning

Page 4: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

What’s happened to mainstream political communications?

• The internet• Professionalization of political PR,• Personalisation of political discourse both by

politicians and public.

Page 7: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

Andrew Mitchell on pleb-speak“I am afraid the Ukip leader has a style and a manner of speaking that connects with ordinary mortals much better than professional politicians.“He is unafraid to be filmed with a pint of beer and a cigarette in his hand when all of our media training tells us to eschew either image.“He also uses soundbites that appeal to Conservatives. I suspect many are unrehearsed – again something professionals are trained never to do.“You and George [Osborne], in particular, have been portrayed as public school toffs.“You have to work out how to be one of us without affectation or silly gimmicks and to speak the language of Joe Public.”Daily Telegraph May 8th

Page 8: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

(and he smokes)

Page 9: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

Re-connecting politics

Page 10: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

Perpetual Engagement

Page 11: St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity

Connecting not marketing