The news has landed like a rotten tomato on a pristine stage. A former reality television villain, known for his calculated cruelty and manufactured drama, has announced a bid for mayor of a mid-sized American city. And across the Atlantic, British political observers are, to put it mildly, aghast.
This is not a story about American exceptionalism, though it is that too. It is a story about the fraying threads of democratic seriousness, and the export of a reality TV sensibility into the hard business of governance. For those of us who watch the price of bread and the strength of unions, this feels like a sick joke at the expense of working people.
Let me be clear. I do not know this man. I have never watched his show. But I know his type. He is the kind of character who thrives on humiliation, who mistakes cruelty for strength, and who treats the public as an audience to be manipulated rather than a citizenry to be served. And now he wants to run a city. He wants to oversee zoning laws, police budgets, and the quality of the water that comes out of taps.
The American political landscape has long been a laboratory for strange experiments. But this particular bid feels like a culmination of something dark. It is the logical endpoint of a culture that elevates fame above competence, and spectacle above substance. For British observers, accustomed to a political culture where even the most theatrical figures must at least pretend to have a plan, this is baffling. It is as if a contestant from a baking competition announced they were taking over the Treasury.
But we should not be too quick to mock. The rot is not confined to one country. In Britain, we have our own flirtations with celebrity politics, our own reality stars turned public figures. The difference is that here, they tend to stay on the fringes, selling diet plans or appearing on panel shows. They do not, yet, run for mayor of Manchester or Birmingham. But the warning signs are there. The erosion of trust in institutions, the hunger for bold talk over hard policy, the willingness to see politics as another form of entertainment.
This mayoral bid is a symptom of a deeper sickness. It is the triumph of branding over substance, of the individual over the collective. It is a slap in the face to every council worker, every union rep, every community organiser who has spent years fighting for better wages, better housing, better schools. Because that work is slow, unglamorous, and rarely televised. It does not make for good ratings.
The candidate's platform, as far as anyone can tell, is built on the fumes of his television persona. There are vague promises to “shake things up” and “drain the swamp.” But what does that mean for the single mother working two jobs? What does it mean for the young person priced out of their hometown? It means nothing. It is a performance.
And yet, there is a chance he could win. That is the terrifying truth. In a political climate where anger trumps hope, and where the loudest voice is often mistaken for the strongest, a reality TV villain can seem like a refreshing alternative. He is not a politician, his supporters will say. He tells it like it is. But what he tells is a scripted version of reality, one designed to entertain, not to govern.
We must watch this story closely. Not because it matters to British voters directly, but because it is a mirror. It reflects a global trend towards the trivialisation of politics, towards the erosion of the idea that public service is a noble calling. If this man wins, it will send a signal. It will say that anyone with enough followers and a willingness to offend can seize power. And that should terrify us all.
In the end, this is not about one man's ambition. It is about what we, as a society, have allowed politics to become. It is about the price we pay when we confuse fame with authority, and entertainment with leadership. For the sake of our own democracy, we should hope the American electorate sees through the act.











