The Challenges for the Labour Right

The Coalition Government is not going to spend the £100bn in a Keynesian move to boost demand and lift the economy out of its current state. No matter how much some shout about it that is simply not going to happen.

The Government is not going to move away from its message of fiscal responsibility and consolidation. Politically, the public agree with them that it is right that the state contracts; they also agree with us in Labour that the cuts are causing unnecessary pain.

The argument for Labour must therefore centre on where and how we would cut, rather than whether we should at all. This also presents a challenge for the Labour Right: How do we respond to our new situation?

An acknowledgment that we did not spend every taxpayer’s pound well when we were in Government would be a good start. It does not mean that we are “surrendering” to the Tories – We are not. We are giving ourselves a chance to win the argument that we must win to return to Government in 2015.

The instincts of the post Crosland reforming tendency in the Labour Party have, pretty much, stayed consistent for the 56 years since the publication of The Future of Socialism. It has been to redistribute the fruits of growth in the economy, not by increasing taxes but by using the power vested in the state to encourage economic expansion. It has also included a recognition that ends are more important than means.

Equally, that is not going to happen. There is little appetite in any of the major parties for the huge stimulus that would be required to drive growth from the centre in the UK economy. If a recovery does come it will not be fuelled by more Government spending.

The recovery will be driven by exports to economies in the ‘New World’ that are rapidly expanding: Brazil, Russia, India and China. This week we have seen the good news that the new Jaguar ‘E’ Type will be built at Jaguar/Land Rover’s Castle Bromwich site in the West Midlands. Land Rover (Now owned by the Indian car giant TATA) continues to invest in its Solihull site. One in six Land Rovers, Range Rovers and Jaguars built last year were shipped to China, where sales grew to 42,000, an increase of more than 60% in a year.

All rather a roundabout way of saying that if a recovery does come before the next election (and there are a few signs that there will be a recovery) then it will not be George Osborne who has made that happen. If he is remembered as a Chancellor it will be as a man who was said to be the greatest political strategist since Machiavelli who turned out to be rather, erm, lacking. If the Tories don’t get an overall majority at the next election they will have failed to win elections for the past 23 years. The blame will rightly be placed on George Osborne after a politically disastrous budget.

That leaves a challenge for the Labour generally and for the Labour Right. Whilst we are in opposition we have an opportunity to undergo intellectual self renewal. A number of important debates need to be had: Why did we fail? Why have we lost people’s trust? How can we regain that trust? How can we win again? How will we use our time when we are next in Government?

The Crosland ‘revisionist tendency’ can be useful to Labour here. We should also be asking how a crisis of 1980s neo liberalism has resulted in a lost of trust and belief in the State. The answer to that, probably, can be seen in the experience of incumbent Governments across Europe – They lost because they were in Government. The Left suffered worst because we have traditionally been advocates of sheltering the most vulnerable from the worst excesses of the market, and failed.

New Labour was so successful because it did away with the shackles that had been placed on us by the Left of the Party. Means were no longer as important as ends. The ends stayed the same, the means changed. Undertaking a revisionist experience of our time in Government as New Labour cannot cease now – We must acknowledge that there were areas where New Labour failed and we must reassess in that context. 1994 era New Labour is as irrelevant to the modern Labour Party as the experience of Labour under Michael Foot in the 1980s.

Social democrats and centrists need to reevaluate the means that we use if we are to achieve the dual ends of economic prosperity and social justice. Again, the ‘revisionist tendency’ can be useful. There will be little or no new money for Labour to borrow or spend. The challenge must therefore be how we can achieve more with Government spending to advance Labour’s values.

This week I attended a discussion with Hopi Sen, the Labour Blogger, and he suggested a change in our thinking. This involves a change in what we mean by ‘universality’, and a recognition that universal benefits are no longer appropriate. We must, instead, move towards a universality which centers on common experiences rather than on a ‘everybody receives the same’ ideal.

For example, Hopi suggested the scrapping of universal child benefit for higher rate tax payers and replacing it with free childcare for under 5 year olds. An example of something that would cost nothing, but would simply redistribute money towards a common experience – Labour values in action at a time of fiscal austerity.

After this discussion I went away and had a look at my membership card. If you look at the back of a Labour Party membership card (I get sent a new one every year: please stop doing that!) it says this:

 “The Labour Party….believes that by the strength of our common endeavor we achieve more than we achieve alone, so as to create for each of us the means to realize our true potential and for all of us as a community in which power, wealth and opportunity are placed in the hands of the many no the few, where the rights we enjoy reflect the duties that we owe, and where we live together freely, in a spirit of solidarity, tolerance and respect”.

Soft financial redistribution is not the only value of the Labour Party. We also pledge ourselves to putting power back into the hands of the people. I see that in two ways: Making Government more accountable and giving people choice in and control over the services that they receive from the State. It means giving people the opportunity to participate in devolved democracy, have political parties which are not in hoc to vested interests and have power taken away from central government and given to local government that is accountable. It also means putting public services in the hands of the people that use those services: the ability to visit any GP that you want to see, to have access to social care provision which befits years spent paying National Insurance and devolving power in the NHS – that would have prevented the Government from making it’s last top down reorganisation.

It also means giving victims of crime rights, giving them the chance to see the progress of their investigation through a single, centralised system and allowing the police to respond to anti social behaviour that can be so destructive to individual lives and communities.

Another value that stands out to me there is that the rights that we enjoy must reflect the duties that we owe. That means making work pay, giving people the opportunity to find a job that is suitable to them, but then imposing a penalty if they fail to take that job. Putting this value into practice means having a sensible and rational conversation about immigration; not just talking about the positives, but also recognising and the effect that it has on communities.

It also means tackling the issue of disconnected individuals who feel that society owes them nothing and that therefore owe nothing to society. Tackling this problem, in the shadow of last years riots in the UK’s cities will be crucial in rebuilding communities which appear to becoming more fragmented and disjointed. Lessons here can also be learnt for Labour here in reengaging with communities after out shock defeat in Bradford West.

This all means that we cannot repackage old thinking and reasoning and present that to the public in the political equivalent of an under heated Asda Basic’s ready meal.

We must be truthful with the public that in choosing Labour it will not be a couple of years of pain followed by years of growth and government spending. If there was a Labour Government now times would be hard. If we win the next election they will be hard, but we should (and will) say how we will make life that bit easier for ordinary man and woman.

The challenge for the Labour Right is that we must have these debates. We may not win them. In fact, we may well end up losing many of them. Having time in opposition to discuss and debate policy openly is on of the small benefits of being in opposition.

There are not many of these opportunities, so we should take advantage of them whilst we can.

The Labour Right must make its voice heard.

Politics: Coming To A Town Near You.

Labour Leader Ed Miliband on the Labour Doorstep

The following is a guest post by Tim Carter (@ForwardNotBack), a former Labour Party Press Officer.

The election teams rush to the constituency, generic posters and leaflets are handed out. Candidates are selected or announced. Carefully crafted biographies are passed to the media.

Our candidate is more local than yours (not mentioning that in some cases only by a distance of 20 miles) scream the early leaflets.

In the backroom of the hastily organised campaign office, heads shake and the local voter identification sheets are gazed upon with despair and teams are dispatched to boost the contact rate.

I the room next door a couple of workers sit reading back issues of local newspapers, hoping to find ‘the issue’ that will frame the local campaign… hours are spent searching the Internet for comments from the main rival(s) that will damage them and hopefully become a big issue. Coffee mugs, half eaten sandwiches and cold pizza slices litter the rooms.

Suits… have I mentioned the sharp, dark suits that adorn the activists who will soon be pounding unfamiliar streets, leafleting, knocking on doors and chatting to locals. Suits are everywhere, usually accompanied by red, blue or purple ties.

Local issues decided, hospital closure – every candidate is against it, even if their party is behind the plans. More funding for a local organisation or charity – who could oppose that?  Camera at the ready, candidate smiling (or looking stern) front page of introductory leaflet sorted. Winning here…On your side… The local choice… transferable slogans that make an appearance in towns up and down the country.

Then the attack… there has to be an attack. Inexperience, wrong priorities etc throw in a national issue and away we go.

When the candidate is around the rule is to smile, never let on that the latest batch of voter ID returns look worse than expected. Never lie just hide behind ‘it’s going well, early days, we will know more next week’

A buzz spreads through the office. A VISIT! Excitement grows and balloons are ordered. A quick programme is drawn up. Photo opportunity outside the threatened hospital with local campaigners is hastily arranged and local newspapers informed. Hours spent preparing briefing notes for the national visitor. The big day arrives. The phone rings… 5 MINUTES! The experienced hands continue with their work, the assembled local activists are pushed out of the front door, balloons and placards at the ready. A car enters the street cameras flashing. The car stops. The door opens and out steps…the under minister for paper clips. Heads drop but the campaign must go on. Above the murmurs of ‘who is that’ a cheer goes up… the campaign has begun in earnest!

Ed Miliband’s Speech To Launch Labour’s Local Election Campaign

 

 

Photo/Guardian

My thoughts:

  • Ed gave a confident performance – the most confident that I have seen him in person.
  • Ed’s message was clear. Two issues (Crime and living standards) that will resonate with the public. Using the Health and Social Care Act as a political tool will motivate Labour activists and voters who have switched to Labour.
  • Difficult questions from members of the public were well handled. Ed was challenged from the Left and chose to distance himself from the position of some audience members on opposing all the cuts.
  • Ed seemed generally supportive of the idea of local mayors as a platform for Labour to demonstrate our competence in Government as a platform for the 2015 GE.
  • Ed was challenged about general disaffection with politics and the people who say that “you are all the same”. He responded by saying that he would not promise anything that he could not deliver and that politics was fundamental to society.

The text of Ed’s speech:

It is almost two years since David Cameron and Nick Clegg promised change.

The British people have given them a chance.

But two years on, it’s time to take stock.

They promised us growth that lasts.

And we haven’t even had any growth for eighteen months.

They promised fairer taxes.

But two years on, they are raising taxes for pensioners but cutting them for millionaires.

They promised us a stronger society.

But, accrding to the British Crime Survey, violence, theft and robbery are going up – the fastest rise in a decade.

Wrong values, wrong priorities, wrong choices.

This is a government out of touch.

But we are not going to rely just on the unpopularity of this government.

Because I know a lot of people thought Labour eventually lost touch when we were in government.

That is why Labour is changing so that we can once more change the country.

The issues on which Labour will campaign in these local elections are rooted in real life, in the experiences people in every local authority area in the country.

Living Standards

Jobs

The NHS.

Crime

On each of these issues we are with you.

These solutions are about making different choices, having different priorities and showimg we can deliver even when there is less money around.

Living standards

I’ve met so many people who say it’s so difficult to make ends meet.

Families all around this country are facing a quiet crisis of rising costs.

When they fill up a tank of petrol, take the train to work, or pay their gas or electricity bills.

And the government doesn’t understand what it’s like.

They are letting companies put up train fares by as much as 11%.

They are letting energy companies overcharge pensioners.

And they are making it worse in their decisions on tax.

Labour councils are working to keep your costs down.

In Manchester, despite having their budgets cut, the council are keeping every Sure Start centre open which helps keen childcare affordable.

In Newcastle, Labour councillors have kept libraries open, so families can afford to find a book to read to their children.

And just up the M42 in Gedling, the council is helping keep mortgages and parking affordable.

If Labour was in government in Westminster, we would end rail rip-offs by capping fare increases on every route.

We would force the energy firms to give pensioners over the age of 75 the lowest possible tariff.

We stop the tax on pensioners by not going ahead with the 50p tax cut.

And reverse the cuts to tax credits by reversing the more generous pensions tax reliefs the government introduced for the richest.

None of these require extra spending.

They just need better choices, different values.

Jobs

We have a jobs crisis in this country.

A million young people are out of work.

The government have set up a work programme which doesn’t even guarantee work.

A jobs programme which doesn’t even guarantee jobs.

How out of touch can you get?

Labour councils and councillors across the country are already showing there is another way.

In Liverpool for example, a Labour council is creating more than a thousand new apprenticeships and building more than two thousand homes.

Working to bring back hope.

And if we were in government in Westminster, we would tax bank bonuses to guarantee 100,000 unemployed young people real jobs.

We would conquer long-term youth unemployment all around the country.

Every person aged 18 – 24 who was out of work for a year would be given a placement in a small business or similar.
And we’d make sure they take it.

Real jobs, real prospects, real training.

We would get Britain working again.

NHS

Look what they’re doing to the NHS.

David Cameron has betrayed all his promises on the NHS.

His government came to office saying they were going to leave the NHS alone.

‘No more top down reorganisations of the NHS’ is what they said.

But as soon as they got in, what did they try to do?

Not just a reorganisation of the NHS.

But the biggest reorganisation in the history of the NHS.

Breaking it up.

Damaging patient care.

And spending money reorganising even while they sack nurses.

How out of touch can you get?

Labour councils will act as the last line of defence against the fragmentation of the NHS.

And if we were in government now, we would protect 6,000 nurses’ jobs by dumping their top-down reorganisation

Crime

And when it comes to keeping our communities safe, look what this Tory-led government are doing. Taking 16,000 police officers off the streets.

Ditching ASBOs.

How out touch can you get?

Our parents and grandparents often say that communities were safer and stronger in times gone by.

You were more likely to know your neighbour, kids respected the elderly and young people felt the country had something to offer them.

We can’t recreate the past.

But I believe in a country with those values of respect, responsibility and opportunity.

The Labour Group here in Birmingham is campaigning to introduce a tougher approach to anti social behaviour and challenging cuts to the West Midlands police budget.

And that is the approach we want to see:

Common Sense Policing

That means three things.

Firstly, keeping frontline police on the streets.

Keeping PCSOs on the streets.

Secondly, it means that the police and local authorities must have enough power to deal with antisocial behaviour.

ASBOs aren’t perfect, but I have had too many people in my constituency in tears about their neighbours from hell to think that the solution is to just scrap ASBOs altogether.

But that’s what the Tories are doing.

Thirdly, we need to encourage police to nip problems in the bud.

Instead of just giving people a caution knowing they will commit further offences, those who do the wrong thing should be forced to make it up to the victim.

Make good on the damage they have caused, help rebuild the community project, clean up the graffiti, fix a wrecked garden.

Of course, it won’t be appropriate in all circumstances and should only happen if the victim wants it to happen.

When offenders have to confront the consquences of their crimes and meet their victims, they can come to understand what they have done and the damage they have caused.

This has made some less likely to commit further offences: it puts them back onto the right path.

Here in the West Midlands, the police are already working with local authorities to try out this approach.

And it is working.

But the problem is less than one in thirty victims across the country sees this kind of approach being employed.

So the difference with Labour is that:

We would be keeping police on the streets not taking them off.

We would be strengthening powers to deal with anti social behaviour not taking it away.

And we would force offenders who break something or cause damage in the community to fix it.

That’s commonsense policing.

The Tories have abandoned any pretence they can govern for the whole country.

They have abandoned Middle Britain.

They prefer to listen to those who have given millions of pounds to the Conservative Party.

Labour would govern for the whole country, not just for the wealthy few.

Those are the values that in these tough times, this country needs more than ever today.

Those are the values at the heart of what we are campaigning for in these local elections.

 

NB: Nicholas Watt from the Guardian has a report on the questions asked of Ed Miliband here.

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