Dear All
In politics, one thing is constant, that is resignations
after a change of leadership happen, now that the Corbyn era of left wing
politics is over, it almost seems natural that Keir Starmer would want a clear
out. You might think this represents a fresh start, but you would be wrong, two
opposing ideologies sit uncomfortably in the Labour Party. On one side you have
the left, portrayed as ‘the hard left’ and on the other the right wing of the
Labour Party who typically are referred to as Blairites by some and ‘moderates’
and ‘progressives’ by themselves and the media. The Labour Party with a new
leader hasn’t had a ‘Starmer bounce’ in the polls but it could be rationalised
that due to coronavirus normal politics are some way off.
Normal politics for the Labour Party are even further away,
because of one document, the internal report titled; ‘The work of the Labour Party’s
Governance and Legal Unit in relation to antisemitism, 2014 – 2019’. Running to
851 pages, it is a document worth reading as it shows how elements in the
party, and employed by the party sought to damage and destroy the chances of a
Labour Government in the 2017 election.
You would think such an explosive report would demand an
inquiry, and you would be right, but rather than address the issues, instead we
will get an inquiry into how the report was leaked and by whom. For Keir
Starmer, this report is #Watergate because it gives the left a legitimate
platform of grievance. So, what about the people named in the report connected
to serious current figures in the party, what happens to them?
Nothing!
And this is the crux of the matter, you see in order for the
Labour Party to become electable, both sides of the party have to be able to
work together, or at least compromise for the greater good. If you have read
the report, do you see that happening? A question which follows on is, ‘if
there isn’t trust in the party can anyone who is the leader sell a disunited
party to the country as a credible alternative to the current Government’?
Basically no!
The problems of the Labour Party are further compounded by
the fact that the Labour Party in Scotland
and Wales
needs a revamp. Scotland
is particularly bad in terms of representation at both MP and MSP level when it
comes to first past the post seats. There is one Labour MP in Scotland
re-elected in 2019, Ian Murray, his success is based on local issues and
convincing people to switch to Labour from Conservatives and Lib Dems. But
before you ask, his seat has affluent areas which reject the SNP; this is what
has pushed him over the line. Murray
was staunch anti Corbyn right from the start; he was part of the drip drip
effect early on who attempted to push Corbyn towards resignation by refusing to
serve in his Shadow Cabinet.
So, what happened to the Labour Party? To understand this
properly you have to look at Scotland
back in the nineties and early 2000’s. The party was taken over by middle class
careerists, some straight out of Universities who ended up as candidates. At
this point in time, the party commanded huge majorities. We are talking
thousands and thousands and thousands of votes in working class seats. At this
point, imagine you are a punter with a problem, so you go see your Labour MP or
your MSP for help. So, you have a middle class university careerist along with
their middle class careerist staff, or family waiting to help you. But despite
having a case, they don’t help you, but the majority for the MP or MSP is so
huge, what is the lost of one vote or a family of voters. Over time, being
ignored and being humiliated and treated like dirt and basically shat on by a
UK Labour Government saw the Labour vote in Scotland to utterly collapse.
This disengagement from the public wasn’t just by the left
but also the right wing of the Party elected officials to public office. And,
while the party held public office, there was no interest at all or mechanism
to fix it because the party had power! With the elected representatives in Labour
Party abandoning the working class, up pops the SNP, right time; right place to
take the vote assisted by the Westminster
expenses scandal. This was a tipping point, because it allowed the SNP to
wrestle Holyrood from Labour control. Once gone, between the years of 2007 to
2011, the Scottish Labour Party wasn’t an effective opposition which led to an
even worse defeat. You could go on and on about Scottish Labour defeats from
2007 to date and how bad their campaigns were, how out of touch the leadership
were, but it is all a matter of record. In Scotland , regardless of whether the
leader was from ‘the left’ like Richard Leonard or ‘the right’ like Kezia
Dugdale, it made no difference.
Latest polling at present will see no improvement in
Scottish Labour from being the third party of Scottish politics at Holyrood.
The Labour Party has a slogan, ‘For the Many, not the Few’, but in the years
from 2007, ‘Could do, won’t do’ is what many felt the service of elected
representatives meant. Incidentally, although the ‘For the Many, not the Few’
is catchy, it is unrepresentative of the party’s choice of candidates; middle
class university educated, these are the people who become leaders or senior in
the party. The point of what I have written above is that the Labour Party has
lost its way; it has also split into two distinct camps that are as much apart
as they could be politically.
Keir Starmer couldn’t wait to wholesale remove Corbyn allies
in the Shadow Cabinet. When this type of thing happens, the narrative is not
about who is kicked out but rather about ‘the new team’. I would ask is the new
Shadow Chancellor better than the previous one? Or was his removal part of an
ideology of what is basically about a purge. If ‘the left’ have no place, where
is their incentive to work constructive or even work for or on behalf of the
party? In the wake of the new leader results, Jennie Formby, a close ally of
Jeremy Corbyn, has now stood down as Labour's General Secretary. She said now
is the "right time" to resign as Keir Starmer begins to reshape the
party.
I recently spoke to someone maybe involved in the reshaping
of the party, which won’t be an easy task, because the whole project is ruined.
How that reshaping exercise will pan out we will see in a post coronavirus
world. But changing structure is as equally important as changing policies, and
changing structures must also apply to Labour HQ staffers who put
fractionalisation ahead of the party. Like a jigsaw, if the reshaping of the
party doesn’t address all the issues, then no prizes for guessing the next set
of Labour Party election results at a UK level. This issue of Scotland must
also be addressed, but the noise of federalism is the wrong message to sell to
pro UK Scots. One thing early on I realised is that Keir Starmer doesn’t get Scotland , if he goes the route of federalism
solves everything, the party in Scotland
wouldn’t garner seats in order to put him into Number 10.
To fix Scottish Labour is a huge task, there have been
claims particularly by Jim Murphy when he claim to have done it which I didn’t
believe, and as the 2015 Westminster election showed, neither did the public.
12 weeks out from that election, I wrote a post, basically called, ‘fucking it
all up’. It was rather apt because that campaign started badly and when
downhill faster. Is getting a drink at a football game, the most pressing
injustice in Scotland ?
Add to it, it was a Westminster election which
meant, no matter how many Labour MPs were elected they couldn’t change the law
in Scotland .
This is what I mean when I say that the Scottish Labour Party where treating
people with contempt; the party was to be wiped out at the ballot box returning
one MP.
Finally, in politics, we sometimes hear of the phrase
‘steadying the ship’, but in the departure of Jennie Formby has her resignation
achieved that, I think not. As long as there is an ‘US and Them’ mentality in
the party, and the Labour Report I think establishes that, the road back to
power doesn’t look good. In leaving as Gen Sec, Jennie Formby said her two
years in the role had been a "huge privilege" and wished Sir Keir the
"very best of luck" in leading Labour into the next General
Election. Her time as General Secretary had been a turbulent period for the
party as it was rocked by anti-Semitism claims and rows over Mr Corbyn's
leadership. What ‘the left’ didn’t have was a legitimate grievance, in the Labour
Report, they do, and although there is an inquiry, Starmer can’t kick that can down
the road and quietly do nothing about the contents. If the party can’t find a way forward together, the reshaping exercise
will become another exercise in futility.
Yours sincerely
George Laird
The Campaign for Human Rights at Glasgow University
6 comments:
I'm honestly at a loss as to where the Labour party's gonna go now.
Corbyn failed.
His predecessors failed.
What now?
Dear Anon
When a party go to extremes in leaders, a huge section of membership is disenfranchised, that is what has happened here.
Keir Starmer probably things that there can be a return to the Blair era, but he is wrong in that regard, too much baggage, the public lost trust under Blair, and it didn't return under Corbyn due to bad PR, bad policies and infighting.
Lisa Nandy represented a clean break with the past, not Starmer, he is a poor man's Blair, dull and uninspiring.
George
Lie@bour reduced my wages 50%, Living in an economically deprive area, I found life a lot easier under Thatcher/Major. I will never ever vote Lie@bour again.
I think Starmer will pull Labour back up. Meanwhile, I see that the ISP party has been formed, using similar tactics to the Wings party - only campaign for a list seat. Someone in the Electoral Commission really needs to investigate this. It stinks of corruption.
Dear Anon
Funny about the ISP strategy is it not?
George
Someone is out to get Wings. The Twitter account was suspended, then one of the regulars set up a similar and it looks like it will go the same way.
As for campaigning for a list seat only, the SNP are none too pleased as they would likely lose out.
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