The decline in public confidence is a statistical freefall, quantifiably demonstrating that citizens doubt their leaders’ intent and competence. This decline represents a collapse of both transactional trust (belief in the government’s ability to deliver services) and, more dangerously, generalized trust (belief in the inherent honesty and integrity of the political class itself).
The crippling of the unions had an immediate and devastating effect on the Labour Party, the supposed voice of the common man. Losing its traditional funding stream and core identity, the party undertook a fundamental transformation designed not to reclaim its socialist roots, but to court the very corporate interests that had bankrolled its rival’s success.


