featured-image

PRIME MINISTER RISHI SUNAK took some clever advice from his spin doctors when in 2023 he decided to rename certain gullible folk who sit behind the wheel of a vehicle “motorists.” Using this rather old-fashioned word he triggered one of the most blatant uses of propaganda in recent years in Britain, clearly spun for one purpose only — to win votes. Sunak went on to portray “motorists” as some sort of persecuted group, a minority who are discriminated against, when in fact many of us travel in cars from time to time without feeling we are treated unfairly and would not want to include ourselves in his gang.

This irritating trope hasn’t yet faded away; it has grown into an anti-ULEZ monster that is set to be perhaps the only populist Conservative policy that is garnering support for the forthcoming general election. The policy idea of rolling back anything that impinges on drivers pops up again and again whenever some mild change that affects car driving could be deemed an injustice. This week the Welsh parliament had to re-jig a few of its 20 mph speed limits even though they have been mostly successful.



“We told you it wouldn’t work” chanted a chorus of indignant, red-faced and angry self-styled “motorists” on X who would rather see a few more accidents than have to put their foot on the brake. The term “motorist” was well chosen. It is used by Sunak to conjure up a dreamworld of motoring’s golden age — the 1930s, perhaps, a world of winding rura.

Back to Fashion Page