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Look Left

New Labour is dead. Long live New Labour.

Giving the party we love a future means rejecting the broken politics of the current leadership, says James Stafford

Tony-Blair-Arriving-At-10-001When did we lose the next election? There was a time when gloating commentators would seize upon each fresh collapse of political resolve as conclusive evidence that New Labour was ‘dead.’ Crewe and Nantwich was an early favourite, swiftly superseded by Glasgow East and, ultimately, the financial crisis itself.

Then came the ‘dead cat bounce,’ that favoured, gruesome metaphor of the hardened politico, which accurately postulated that no amount of international grandstanding and budgetary diarrhoea would be able to shore up the cracked conceptual foundations of the New Labour project. The past few months, they’ve not even bothered. Jacqui Smith’s pornos? Ed Balls bullying the teaching profession?

The systematized thuggery of an out-of-control police force? Damian McBride’s hateful little e-mail games? It is all of a piece. The failure of the current leadership goes beyond economics, beyond politics. It is cultural, and it is utterly complete.

That’s not to say that 12 years in government have been without achievement, even if the greater part of a positive Labour legacy is now unravelling. For a time it seemed like the political climate had fundamentally changed. After 2001, public servants began to be paid something approaching a reasonable wage, and we are close to repairing two generations of untold damage to the NHS. A liberal institutional consensus on race, disability, gender and sexuality has put down roots that no subsequent government will be able to destroy.

But these good intentions pale into insignificance when set against the avalanche of blind incompetence and corruption that has been gathering pace since before the last election. The doubling of unemployment and the likelihood of a ‘lost generation’ of dispossessed youth – the rotten product of a sickening infatuation with the City and a blatant disregard for the real productive capacity of our economy – leave supposed guarantees of steady, equitable growth in tatters.

The reprehensible behaviour of the police in recent weeks, not just in their handling of the G20 protests, but also in their heavily-criticised ‘pre-emptive strike’ on Climate Camp protestors in Nottingham and their overt collusion with energy firm E.on in the partisan policing of the Kingsnorth protest last year, is largely the fault of government. It marks the culmination of a long process of pointless engorgement of police powers at the expense of the vibrant, pluralist civil society that should sustain any true party of the centre-left, and signals worrying continuities with the draconian Tory tactics of the 1980s.

I could go on – the leadership’s collusion in torture and fatal addiction to the blinkered historical naivety of liberal interventionism abroad also deserve a mention – but here seems like a good place to change tack. It’s just those continuities with the 1980s which, like it or not, will dominate the historical assessment of 12 years of Labour government. I recently re-read Jonathan Coe’s marvellous, moving satire on Thatcherism, What a Carve Up!, a book which I know to be a firm OULC favourite, and rightly so.

It captures, for our generation and beyond, what the corruption and oppression of those dark years must have been like, its keen eye for detail evoking the systematic coarsening of public life, the wearing down of public servants and institutions, the erosion of public space, and the destruction of civil society that were the hallmarks of the old Tory consensus. I suggest that those of you with copies try dipping into that book again, and start looking from pig to man, man to pig, and wondering which one is which.

We (and by we I mean you and me) can do better. We have to do better, or the left in this country just doesn’t have a future. The Labour party is a broad church, it’s a very old one, and it’s all we’ve got. How might we go around rebuilding it for a new age, divorced from both the class warfare that defined it in the 50s and 60s and New Right infiltration that’s ruined it today? A new pragmatism is one answer, along with a firmer commitment to institutional and constitutional change.

The key to confronting the huge economic and environmental challenges ahead lies in a paradigmatic shift in political culture – a revolution in how people and government interact, coupled with a new understanding of what the state can achieve for the community; a ‘de-othering’ of government, if you like. The Cameroons recognise this, but as Conservatives they are incapable of drawing the right conclusions about how this new consensus might be achieved in practice. The Labour party recognises that the challenges of the 21st century demand a reconfiguration of the mixed economy.

It’s obvious that we need a nationally co-ordinated, long-term transport strategy, funded and managed by accountable public servants in government departments, in the public interest; the same ‘commanding heights’ approach is also needed on energy, the environment and higher education, whilst post-crash banks may find the invisible hand of the market wielding the carrots and sticks of a tightly regulated, and partially state-owned, financial services sector.

At a local level this needs to be counterbalanced by a reinvigoration of city, borough and county councils and an end to the micromanagement of public servants. This doesn’t mean embracing the so-called ‘choice agenda’ – rather, it means giving real financial clout to local government and making improved public consultation, rather than the false freedoms of a marketised public sector, the emphasis of public service reform. Strange as it may seem, a continuing commitment to constitutional reform is absolutely vital to these changes.

We need the House of Lords, but we need it as an elected, non-partisan second chamber, which offers balanced representation of regions, interests, and expertise, rather than a new playground for a closed political elite. This is a precedent set not only by the American senate, but by the ancient differentiation between County and Borough seats in the House of Commons.

Time and again, history shows us that lasting, positive change is most frequently brought about by radical constitutional and institutional transformations that reconcile the structures of government with those of society; Britain’s post-war malaise – a malaise which, it is now evident, was not ended by either Thatcher or Blair – is due largely to our forbears’ failure to achieve just this reconciliation. The harsh realities of a new age require a fresh, innovative, and wholly pragmatic approach to progressive government. It’s up to us to shape that new consensus, and to help deliver it for future generations.


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