There was a
lot of speculation over the weekend about why Labour lost the last
election. It was sparked by the release of Margaret Beckett's
Report, and the criticism of it, by Deborah Mattinson, the party's
former pollster. But, none of this speculation really addressed the
question of why Labour lost. The real reason is that Labour has
failed to convince a majority of voters of the correctness of the
ideas and principles for which it stands. Indeed, one reason it
failed to do that is because, for the last thirty years, it has
followed the advice of pollsters, and others to tailor its message to
what they claim the voters want. In the process it has made it very
difficult for anyone nowadays to know exactly what it is that
Labour's principles are, because they have been made increasingly
vacuous, and and ever changing, in order to meet that objective. Its
one reason that Jeremy Corbyn's clear principles have cut through,
and been taken up enthusiastically.
The various
pollsters and pundits who treat politics as a commodity, encouraged
by the fact that they are really only interested in selling a set of
politicians to the public, so that those politicians have a job for
the next five years, have no interest in trying to win voters to a
set of ideas. And, of course that means that when someone like
Corbyn comes along, this challenges their world view. But, it also
causes a problem for the supporters of Corbyn, because their alternative concept of politics, whereby it is about standing for a
set of principles and trying to convince others of their correctness,
is not something that can be achieved overnight, and it is a view
that cannot be abandoned, therefore, simply on the basis that you
have not yet achieved that aim.
If we think
about other areas of life, it would be seen as obviously ridiculous.
When Galileo, discovered that the Earth was not flat, and that it was
not at the centre of the Universe, that view was not at all popular,
especially with the Catholic Church. Had he been advised by today's
pollsters, spin doctors and political gurus, he would have
immediately dropped the notion, and done the obvious thing of falling
in behind the popular view. The same thing could be said about
Darwin's views on evolution, and so on.
Yet, in a
world where short-termism, and instant gratification dominates, the
idea of sticking to a set of principles and beliefs, and engaging in
the long haul slog of convincing others of those views is always
going to be difficult. The advocates of that commoditised, fast-food
view of politics will be quick to criticise Corbyn if Labour does
badly at the polls in May. Yet, that is even more ridiculous, given
that he has only been leader for a few months, that right-wing Labour MP's
have been trying to undermine his message during all that time, and
despite the fact that in so short a time, it is quite clear that the
old adage applies that you cannot fatten a pig on market day.
The problem
for Labour, however, is also different than for the Tories. The
reality for Labour is that in order to win it has to be able to offer
the vast majority of society solutions to their problems, and other
than at specific times of prosperity, those solutions are not simply
in the gift of any government. The solutions required for the
problems of the vast majority of society cannot be provided by any
government, no matter how well meaning it might be. Those solutions
rest in the hands of the vast majority of society itself.
In times of
prosperity, when the demand for labour-power is high, wages will
rise, unemployment and so welfare spending will fall, and the
government will be able to assist in a redistribution of wealth and
income within the confines of its powers. But, apart from such
times, governments cannot themselves effect such changes. Ed Miband,
started to grasp that concept with his talk about “pre-distribution”,
and John McDonnell, is now talk about this, by reintroducing the idea
of encouraging worker-owned co-operatives, and so on.
The real
solution to workers problems of low incomes, temporary employment and
so on, cannot be resolved by government tax and benefits policies,
but only by workers themselves having control over those aspects of
their lives, through the establishment of worker-owned co-operatives,
linked together through a co-operative federation. They cannot
resolve the problems that exist at an international level, other than
by themselves forming international organisations, and working within
existing international organisations such as the EU, to further their
collective interests. Any suggestion by Labour politicians that the
current EU referendum can be viewed through the lens of “Britain's
interest”, will necessarily undermine that collective interest,
just as the SNP focus on “Scottish national interest”, did so in
the Scottish referendum.
The answer
to the social problems within workers' communities, across Britain, will
not be resolved by governments, but by the workers within those
communities themselves taking back ownership and control over them,
and establishing their own democratic structures for doing so. The
problems of criminal gangs, and people traffickers, utilising the
refugee crisis in Europe, will not be solved by national government,
each trying to pursue its own “national interest”, but only by
workers, across Europe, uniting to provide a common European solution,
to bring in refugees, to establish the required facilities and
infrastructure, in each country and locality, so that they can be
absorbed.
But, there
has been a very long period, during which voters across Europe, and
elsewhere have been encouraged to the view that politics is something
they consume, like any other commodity, rather than that it is
something that is integral to their own lives and existence.
Restoring that knowledge is a long term task, and in the meantime,
any government that fails to provide the necessary solutions, will
not get the votes required to form a government.
No comments:
Post a Comment