Tom Peck, The Independent
All day and night, the phone lines and the websites of very nearly every major energy provider crashed, unable to cope with half the country desperate to give them — let’s face it — dodgy meter readings, just to eke out maybe two more weeks of already outrageously expensive gas and electricity before the prices doubled overnight.
I type these words out and am struck with an almost wistful longing. This is the sort of thing I used to write in my little diary, almost two decades ago, while backpacking through various entirely corrupted, and semi-bankrupt countries on various continents throughout the world. It hardly needs to be stated that the above events are happening in the United Kingdom, which with every passing day bears more and more resemblance to a place in very rapid decline.
This, to be frank, is a show in two acts: the first part s*** show, the second part horror show. And it has a decent MacGuffin too. The government brought in the most draconian laws the country has ever seen, stripping people’s lives down to little more than a base existence for a very long time. It’s been found to have been breaking those laws itself, but we, the little people, aren’t allowed to know the names of anyone involved. And the Prime Minister Boris Johnson is refusing to admit that any of it ever actually happened, even though he’s already apologised for it.
A large number of Tories are still happily exploiting the suffering of the people of Ukraine as a way to get their leader off the hook for the no longer “alleged” law breaking that happened in Downing Street during the pandemic. One particularly stupid one even told the Guardian that the “mood in the party is pretty great” now that a brutal war had come along to spare them.
Breaking the law and lying about it obviously isn’t the “fluff” Jacob Rees-Mogg would like it to be, but there can be no way of playing down the scale of the massive crisis that is about to begin in this country. On 2 April, the price that people pay for a kilowatt of electricity is going to rise from roughly 20p to roughly 30p. The price of a kilowatt of gas will go up from about just under 4p to just over 7p. Those numbers are terrifying. For context, if you are part of a family in which both adults work, and both adults earn £36,000, you have, in comparative terms, so much income that you fall off the rich end of the UK income distribution graph produced by the Institute for Fiscal Studies. They only cover the first, poorest paid, 92 per cent of the population.
You can be so rich you don’t get to be in the IFS’s graph because it will make it look bad, and still be absolutely terrified about how you’re going to pay your gas and electricity bill. If things are frightening at the chart-busting, money pit end of the spectrum, where your average teacher or PA lives, the scene at the bottom end is a total horror show that starts in two days’ time.
The news bulletins are already full of horrific stories of terrifyingly hungry gas and electricity meters eating children’s dinners, and the worst of it has not even started. Overnight, for millions and millions of people, the numbers will simply cease to add up.