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    Sunday, December 30, 2018

    Political soccer

    World Cup: Are politicians trying too hard?

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    Media captionBelgian PM gives UK PM his team's shirt ahead of World Cup clash on Thursday evening

    England are through to the knock-out stages of the World Cup despite losing 1-0 to Belgium, and politicians are keen to get in on the action, with variable results.

    Ahead of Thursday's clash between England and Belgium in Kaliningrad, Prime Minister Theresa May was ambushed by Belgian PM Charles Michel who handed her a red Belgium football shirt which ominously had the word "Hazard" written on it.

    Chelsea's Eden Hazard is one of 12 players in the Belgian squad to ply their trade in the Premier League, alongside Manchester City's Vincent Kompany, and Manchester United's Romelu Lukaku.

    Mrs May says she wants a positive trading relationship with the EU after Brexit, and to keep the door open to highly skilled EU migrants. Perhaps that will include Belgian footballers.

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    A few hours later, just as the teams were kicking off, Theresa May gave an England shirt to the Belgian PM.

    Image copyright Getty Images

    May has never shown much of an interest in football but she certainly knows her cricket, as she showed in an interview with BBC Test Match special last year.

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    There is nothing new about politicians trying to capitalise on sporting success - but Brexit may have given things an extra edge.

    Irish PM Leo Varadkar, whose country failed to qualify for Russia after losing to Denmark in a play-off, told the BBC he wanted the Red Devils to win, not the Three Lions, on Thursday.

    Image Copyright @adamfleming @adamfleming Report
    Twitter post by @adamfleming: Here’s when @campaignforleo told us that he’s supporting Belgium in #ENGBEL tonight. Image Copyright @adamfleming @adamfleming Report

    Nigel Farage never misses an opportunity to fly the flag, or visit the pub, so it was no surprise to see pictures of him watching the England game at a Brussels bar.

    But when he draped himself in an England flag, handed to him by a friend, the Beer Factory bar, next door to the European Parliament, erupted in boos, according to The Daily Mirror. and European Parliament staff on a nearby table whipped out an EU flag.

    Image copyright Getty Images
    Image copyright Getty Images

    Then there is the generic "come on England" tweet, which seems straightforward enough, unless individual players are co-opted into the message.

    The Conservative Party's official Twitter account posted this just before the Belgium game:

    Image Copyright @Conservatives @Conservatives Report
    Twitter post by @Conservatives: Come on you #ThreeLions Let's make it 3 wins out of 3! 🦁🦁🦁🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 #ENGBEL #ENG #WorldCup Image Copyright @Conservatives @Conservatives Report

    The two men pictured are Manchester United's Jesse Lingard, who scored against Panama, and Manchester City's Raheem Sterling.

    Jesse Lingard's political views are unknown. But three years ago, Raheem Sterling recorded a video pledging his support to Labour's Dawn Butler.

    Skip Youtube post by Dawn Butler Warning: Third party content may contain adverts Report

    End of Youtube post by Dawn Butler

    Youtube post by Dawn Butler: Raheem Sterling Backs Labour Candidate Dawn Butler for Brent Central - General Election 2015Image Copyright Dawn Butler Dawn Butler Report

    Butler, a close ally of Jeremy Corbyn, was running to be re-elected as an MP in the part of North West London where Sterling grew up.

    The Labour leader is a football fan - he even presented EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier with an Arsenal shirt last year.

    But he was accused of making his own World Cup gaffe, sharing a quote by former Liverpool manager Bill Shankly ahead of England's game against Tunisia.

    Image Copyright @jeremycorbyn @jeremycorbyn Report
    Twitter post by @jeremycorbyn: As we prepare for England's first match in the #WorldCup, here's an inspirational message from one of our country's finest ever football managers.I wish our fans a safe tournament and the players the best of luck. Let's get a win.#ENGTUN Image Copyright @jeremycorbyn @jeremycorbyn Report

    As many on Twitter were quick to point out, Shankly was perhaps not the ideal person to provide pre-match inspiration for the England football team.

    The Scottish legend once said about playing for his country: "It's fantastic. You look down at your dark blue shirt, and the wee lion looks up at you and says 'Get out after the English...!'"

    Some political World Cup slip-ups are a little more subtle. While the basic rules of football are familiar to just about everyone, using the wrong footballing phrase can give the game away.

    Conservative MP Nick Boles threw his support behind a campaign by the Sun newspaper to fly the St George's flag above government departments during England matches.

    Image Copyright @NickBoles @NickBoles Report
    Twitter post by @NickBoles: Great coverage in The Sun for my campaign to get public buildings to fly the St George's Cross while England is competing in the World Cup play-offs Image Copyright @NickBoles @NickBoles Report

    But as any football fan will know, the World Cup "play-offs" are a series of matches to determine which teams qualify for the World Cup in the first place - not part of the actual tournament.

    The knockout phase in Russia - a series of matches between teams who came first or second in their groups, culminating in the World Cup final in Moscow on 15 July - is never referred to as the "play-offs".

    To be fair to Boles, he said his campaign was about reclaiming the flag and building a modern English identity rather than being about what's happening on on the pitch.

    Football is not his specialism, as he freely admitted in a 2014 tweet:

    Image Copyright @NickBoles @NickBoles Report
    Twitter post by @NickBoles: I know nowt about football but is it too much to ask that we now learn from Germany and invest in structures that produce future success?Image Copyright @NickBoles @NickBoles Report

    The Sun's campaign was successful, and departments agreed to fly the St George's flag during matches.

    The Department for International Trade was so keen to draw attention to this that not only did they tweet about this, but they also emailed journalists to say that they had tweeted about this.

    Image Copyright @tradegovuk @tradegovuk Report
    Twitter post by @tradegovuk: The England flag has just gone up at DIT before the #ENGBEL #WorldCup match this evening. #threelions Image Copyright @tradegovuk @tradegovuk Report

    The Labour Party also made a subtle linguistic slip-up in the run-up to the Belgium game.

    Jumping on the World Cup bandwagon to criticise Theresa May and her ministers, Labour tweeted that May's "squad" should be "benched".

    Image Copyright @UKLabour @UKLabour Report
    Twitter post by @UKLabour: Theresa May can’t even manage her team at home, never mind away.It’s time this so-called ‘strong and stable’ squad was benched. 👇 Image Copyright @UKLabour @UKLabour Report

    That might be something people would say in American sports commentary, but is not a phrase commonly heard in discussions about English football.

    But even if politicians' 2018 World Cup tweets are sometimes a bit clunky, they don't quite reach the heights of David Cameron's 2015 gaffe.

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    In a speech during the election campaign the former prime minister mistakenly said he was a West Ham fan rather than an Aston Villa fan.

    He said he had gone "off script" with the remark and blamed it on a "brain fade", insisting "I've been an Aston Villa fan all my life".

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