MPs Get Their Glow On
Normally Westminster is snooze city. Tax codes, pensions, boring bills. Yet last spring, the place actually glowed — because they debated neon signs. Bolton’s Yasmin Qureshi went all-in defending glass-and-gas craft. She blasted the plastic pretenders. Her line? LED strips for £30 don’t count. Clear argument. Neon is culture, not a gimmick. Chris McDonald piled in sharing his own commission. Cross-party vibes were glowing. Then came the killer numbers: just 27 neon benders left in Britain.
No new blood. The glow goes out. Qureshi pushed a Neon Protection Act. Defend the glow. Even Strangford had its say. He dropped stats. Big bucks in glow. His point: it’s not nostalgia, it’s business. Last word came from Chris Bryant. He cracked neon puns. He got roasted for dad jokes. But behind the jokes, the case was strong. He nodded to cultural landmarks: God’s Own Junkyard. He said glass and gas beat plastic.
Where’s the beef? Simple: consumers are being conned. Heritage vanishes. Think Cornish pasties. If names mean something, why not neon?. This wasn’t just politics. Do we erase 100 years of glow for LED strips? We’ll keep it blunt: real neon rules. The Commons got its glow-up. Nothing signed, the fight’s begun. If it belongs in Parliament, it belongs in your bar. Bin the fakes. Choose neon.
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