We are living in an era of vibes. That is the key defining element of social and political discourse and influence. This is not a take I can claim for myself. I heard Simon Clarke, former MP, former chief secretary to the Treasury, at a time the second-tallest MP, come up with it. He was on Matt Chorley’s very listenable show on BBC Radio 5 Live.
Clarke’s vibe assessment went something like this. There is no great benefit for those in power attempting to tackle really thorny insolubles. These take time, money and patience. That is a trio that is almost impossible to score as wins.
Instead, those without power, either challenging for it or trying to land a few glancing blows, can get a sense of what is itching people, where the generalised moods are blowing – essentially, getting a vibe. Then, they can respond in broad terms, which brings magnification online and results in growth for them. There is some merit to this reasoning. It can help explain why Reform and the Greens have found escape velocity.
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When you break it down, both parties have charismatic leaders who draw people to them – the Greens’ Zack Polanski has clearly had less time than Farage – but who have no substantial policies, nor have they any policy wins or failures to be judged against. So, they can say anything by standing in the rain and claiming they’re a forecaster.
The Greens are said to have more than 140,000 members – the numbers have doubled since Polanski took over. According to Reform’s live membership growth tracker, they now have a lick over 265,000 members. They’re gunning to beat Labour’s 309,000 membership total.









