Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Broken Britain

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Broken Britain is a term which has been used in The Sun newspaper, and by the Conservative Party to describe a perceived widespread state of social decay in the United Kingdom. The Sun has run frequent stories under the "Broken Britain" theme since 2007. Whilst the phrase is essentially a political one, the frequency of these stories has decreased since the Conservatives came to power in 2010 with the root causes coming under more scrutiny by the electorate.

Contents

Associated social issues

The term has included coverage of several supposedly interlinked issues:

  • Child neglect to include the inadequacy of Child Protection within Social Services, particularly in the wake of the Baby P case and the kidnapping of Shannon Matthews
  • Binge and underage drinking
  • Violent gang crime
  • Teenage pregnancy
  • Corrupt politicians, namely the expenses scandal
  • VIP pedophilia scandals which included high ranking politicians
  • Vote rigging
  • Mass immigration combined with a rise in Islamic extremism
  • Unfair Taxation system
  • that it would back the Conservatives in the 2010 election, having supported the Labour Party in 1997, 2001 and 2005, stating that Labour had "failed on law and order". Iain Duncan Smith published two reports, "Breakdown Britain" and "Breakthrough Britain", dealing with similar themes, through the Centre for Social Justice.

    By contrast, The Guardian ran a series of articles in 2010 questioning this theme, under the title "Is Britain Broken?". The Conservatives also came under criticism after publishing an inaccurate figure in a report on teenage pregnancy and crime rates.

    After the 2011 England riots, David Cameron alluded to many of these themes while speaking on the UK's "moral collapse". Under the banner of "Broken Society", he listed: "irresponsibility, selfishness, behaving as if your choices have no consequences, children without fathers, schools without discipline, reward without effort, crime without punishment, rights without responsibilities".

    A number of films released from 2006 onwards have been identified as dealing with the fears stirred up by the idea of Broken Britain. They include Ill Manors, Harry Brown, Eden Lake, The Disappeared, Summer Scars, Outlaw, The Great Ecstasy of Robert Carmichael and Heartless. The 2000 AD story Cradlegrave also played with similar "hoodie horror" themes.

    References

    Broken Britain Wikipedia