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Friday 6 January 2012

Consensus Politics and Ethical Socialism



There is something very attractive about the view that greater consensus will lead to a more civilised approach to politics. Negotiation, accepting differences and coming to agreement lies at the heart of good relationships, so why not good politics?

But there are dangers in consensus, particularly if you are committed to an ethical vision of a politics that can affect real social change.  We’ve been reflecting on the reality of these dangers for the Labour party since they came more clearly into focus about 10 days ago.

Tim Montgomerie of Conservative Home claimed that ‘we all’ now accept that compassion has to be limited, focused towards the ‘deserving’ rather than the ‘undeserving’ poor. (Of course, who decides who are deserving and who are not, as well as the ramifications of this approach, he was not prepared to say.) 

Demonising one group in society as ‘undeserving’ is troubling, and usually involves assumptions about people claiming benefit. In practice, those claiming benefits are a very diverse group of people. Such cultures did not spring out of nowhere: they were created under the last Tory government when it failed to develop new industries as it ripped out the old. And, to our pain, the Labour government did not do enough to support new businesses in those stricken areas.

Montgomerie’s argument reflects the neo-liberal consensus of the last thirty years. Success or failure is something that can be identified solely with the actions of the individual. This is far from an adequate way of analysing the complex roots of poverty, both of wealth and aspiration. It is not surprising to hear conservatives make simplistic statements about the nature of poverty. It is more upsetting to hear parts of the Labour Party expressing similar views.

Tristram Hunt MP on Question Time recently offered a case in point. He suggested that to raise welfare pay outs in line with inflation was a mistake: “I think the system is flawed. What they’ve done is taken one month’s inflation figure of 5.2% and they will apply it across the year - instead of taking the year-long average.” David Dimbleby asked him: “You would have endorsed a lower figure to unemployment benefit and pensions?  Hunt replied, “Yes, I would have”. 

Cutting tax credits is undoubtedly putting a real strain on working families up and down the land.  A woman in the same audience made that abundantly clear: “It isn’t about unemployment benefits so much, it’s housing costs…Most people who work in this town earn between £12,000 to £15,000 per year.. Housing Benefit cuts are hitting families hard. We have rents of £400-£500 per week.” You don’t have to be a mathematician to work out what this means for people’s lives.  

But pitting the working poor against the unemployed is a recipe for ethical disaster. It creates scapegoats who can be marginalised and treated as less than human. It’s not healthy, and, more importantly, it isn’t fair. A better approach is to argue for the living wage, and interventions that actively narrow the gap between top and bottom earners. 

Jumping on the populist bandwagon that believes all claimants are scroungers is an abnegation of Labour’s responsibility to challenge these increasingly common myths of the feckless poor who are reaping the whirlwind of their own irresponsibility. Such myths must be tackled head on, and this necessitates spelling out the complex interlinking factors of poverty and welfare dependency. We should not be simplifying the argument in order to satisfy an unthinking and uncaring approach to social deprivation.

So Labour is confronted by three urgent questions that require an answer: 

The first: who represents the Labour Party? And, conversely

The second : who does the Labour Party represent ?

The third : Can you only get elected if you appeal to the prejudices of middle England?

The first question raises the importance of broadening the party’s base and, particularly, getting people from non-middle class and professional backgrounds into representative politics. And we certainly need people in there who have some life experience in various walks of life. Alan Johnson is a great example both in his background and in the way he practices his politics. There are such people out there and we need them at the forefront of our politics. Only by allowing their experiences and voices to challenge and shape our policies can we hope to address the malaise in social and political life.  Although Labour won the by-election last week the overall turn-out was very poor.

The second question raises the fundamental question of what the Labour Party is for. We need to reengage with our history, recognising what brought us into being and why it was necessary to create a party that spoke for ordinary working people. And that means thinking about who we represent today. 

Thirdly, to gain power again, we have to put forward positive policies that speak to the kind of society we want to create; policies that are appealing and, importantly, that have broad appeal to those people we meet on the doorstep.  We must bear in mind that their needs are quite different today as a consequence of living in Cameron’s Britain of austerity. Therefore we need to examine Labour’s agenda critically and compassionately.

Thank goodness Mehdi Hasan of the New Statesman was on the Question Time panel and able to talk about the facts of poverty and welfare dependence. It is this kind of solid, informed response that we need. In response to a recent poll that found 54 % thought unemployment benefits were too generous, he asked whether those people would still think that if they knew the average claimant received £67.50 per week. He also elaborated on realities of a labour market where five people are chasing every job. In such a climate, can the narrative of the lazy unemployed really be maintained? 

To his credit, Tristram Hunt did refer to people losing their jobs in steel manufacturing and mining in the 1980s.  “Where are those manufacturing jobs now?” he asked. Indeed.  We only have to refer to the Sheffield Forgemasters fiasco that occurred immediately after the General Election. Under Labour, public money was utilised to bail out the banks, and simultaneously Labour was concerned that jobs were maintained. It made economic sense. But this Tory-led government would not take similar steps to support manufacturing. Those jobs were lost and as a consequence we have more people on benefit.

The Labour government’s strategy to keep people working was right. At the time of the last general election the economy was starting to recover, and the debt we incurred in bailing out the banks would, eventually, have been recovered too. The Eds are therefore right to resist the consensus behind Osborne’s failed Plan A and they deserve more support for pursuing this strategy than they are currently getting from some sections of the party.

It’s time to dispel some of the myths in order for us to state clearly that we are the party of compassion. The majority of people, we believe, would welcome this. Many are asking about the direction of the Party at the moment, and we need a renewed commitment to the core Labour values of justice, compassion and inclusion. That means re-establishing the party as the voice for the voiceless. And nothing could be more important, given that we are looking at a whole new struggling population – the squeezed middle – whose voices are not being heard. 

It’s time for Labour to question the voices of consensus who espouse compassionate conservatism. It is time to stand up for the values that brought so many people into the Labour party in the first place.

It’s time for Labour to enter the fight for Britain’s soul.

I co-wrote this with Bev Clack and it was recently posted on The Green Benches

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