For
Labour Party members
I
was expecting a pretty negative reaction to my last post from many in
the constituency it was aimed at, and the most constructive thing I
can do right now is to try and engage as best I can with those
arguments. Let me start with this:
“we
are re-building a mass social democratic party after a generation or
more of atrophy. That is a huge gain for the Labour Party but it
terrifies most MPs. Sorry, the days of doffing our caps are over.”
My
response is the same as any decent social scientist: show me the
evidence that this is what you are doing. It seems to me what Corbyn
has done is build an activist base made up in large part of mostly
idealistic, mostly young political activists, and I think that is a
great and valuable achievement. What terrifies MPs, and me, is if
this base gets delusions of idealism and grandeur, and saddles them
with a leader who will lead the party into electoral irrelevance. If
you think those fears are wrong, show me your evidence. Not your
hopes, but a concrete and realisable plan.
What I see so far is largely a government that acts as if it was
unopposed, or that provides its own internal opposition. The
exceptions are generally not the result of Corbyn. Look at the first
item in the list provided by Liam Young here:
the abandonment of cuts to child credits. This was not the first
major achievement of a new mass social democratic party, but of
opposition from members of the House of Lords and the misgivings of
some Conservative MPs. Iain Duncan Smith did not resign because of
pressure from Labour!
There
is a contradiction here that Corbyn supporters fail to acknowledge.
In the UK to have any chance of building a mass social democratic
party you need a parliamentary party to provide a voice that will be
heard. That means MPs on your side, not against you. The adoption of
a sensible fiscal rule - another item on Liam Young’s list - was an
example of that happening, but any attempt to repeat that now would
result in just endless discussion of internal divisions.
As Liam Young also says: “Most importantly all of Labour’s recent
success has come at points where the leadership has been strong and
the party united. Recent talk of splits, coups and dissent is
unhelpful and only weakens the Labour party’s position.” I agreed with that when I wrote this. If the
current leadership had succeeded in uniting the majority of Labour
MPs behind a consensus policy programme that would have been a
powerful force, but it failed. It makes no sense to extol the virtues of unity only when it suits you.
What makes me really sad is the contempt that some members seem to
have for Labour MPs. I can think of some that fit the caricature
frequently painted of diehard triangulating Blairites, but they are
far
from the majority. I agree that collectively Labour MPs became
embroiled in a failing electoral strategy before 2015, but you change
that by persuasion through evidence and hopefully example, not by
casting them as the enemy or as forever ‘lost’. Most of all, they
are not some kind of inconvenience that can be ignored or who will
collectively come to their senses if the membership continues to vote
for Corbyn. They are an essential part of the means of achieving a
mass social democratic party: that is why 2016 is not 2015.
In
short, if you still think Corbyn can succeed in forming a mass social
democratic party without the support of MPs, show me your plan of how
it will be done and the evidence that it will work. In 2015 I could,
unlike many commentators in the media, imagine that it was possible
that Labour MPs could be led from the left with the right leadership.
Corbyn earned the right in 2015 to try. But the evidence since then
shows that this is not the right leadership. I’ll go with a good
plan, but right now I do not see any plan at all.