When I became part
of John McDonnell’s Economic Advisory Council I knew that would put
me in the political spotlight. I write about what I helped achieve in
that role in my forthcoming book.
I left over Labour’s support for Brexit in part because my clear
and public anti-Brexit views could be used to attack Labour, when the people driving Brexit were Conservatives. I found out yesterday that at PMQs the Prime Minister was carrying on
regardless, although in this case it was over Labour’s 2017 manifesto.
In reality I was
strongly supportive of Labour’s overall fiscal stance in 2017. I
wrote a lot in my blog before the election, and a summary of my views
are in a chapter in a book
of essays by various authors published by Verso and edited by John
McDonnell. The point I wanted to stress was that it didn’t matter
if the IFS were right that the numbers didn’t add up, because the
fiscal stance was good for the economy, and could well satisfy Labour's very good Fiscal Credibility Rule.
The paragraph that
says all this in the book starts
“Let us suppose the IFS was correct, …”
and I go to argue in that case that the ex ante deficit would have
boosted the economy and it might not have added to the deficit ex
post.
Unfortunately she said, holding a copy of the book in her hand
“In an article by an economic adviser to the Labour Party, he says about their manifesto, “the numbers did not add up”. That this was a “welcome feature” and “largely irrelevant”Well it may be irrelevant to the Rt Hon Gentleman and the Shadow Chancellor but it’s not irrelevant to the people’s whose taxes go up, whose jobs are lost and whose taxes pay Labour’s debt”
Nowhere
in the article did I say I thought the numbers did not add up. I was
clearly misquoted. If you say otherwise, imagine I write an article
that says ‘suppose austerity is expansionary’ and
go on to explain how that generates consequences that contradict reality. It is called a proof by contradiction, and that is similar
to the structure of my argument. To report that I said “austerity is expansionary’” would be ridiculous. If it was done to
score political points you would conclude it was a lie.
Was
this an unfortunate case of misreading? It seems extremely
implausible. I’m certain that when the PM or more probably some
adviser misquotes someone in a draft PMQ response, someone - possibly
even the person themselves - checks that the quote is correct. You
have to have serious comprehension difficulties to misunderstand the
meaning of “Let us suppose”.
So
I tweeted this
“Apparently the Prime Minister quoted me saying about Labour's 2017 manifesto "the numbers did not add up" In fact I said "Let us suppose the IFS was correct" and examined consequences. I have never taken a view on whether they did/didn't add up. If that is what she said, she lied”
I
later looked at a recording of PMQs and she did indeed say that.
Now maybe I am wrong about a deliberately lie told to gain political
effect. If it was an honest mistake she or someone who works for her
can explain to me how that mistake was made. I asked CCHQ for an
apology, but I am not holding my breath.
The
Mirror picked it up here,
as did the BBC in their PMQ factcheck.
In the scheme of things the issue is very minor, but the Prime Minister lying whatever the context should be important. But the sad thing
is that no one is surprised by this kind of thing any more. We in the
UK look at Trump’s lying with horror and think this is something
uniquely American. But this government has been pulled up countless
times (e.g. here)
for misleading the public by misusing statistics and of course the lies of the Brexiters
are shameless. The majority of press titles will ignore or play down any
criticism of Conservative ministers or the PM (unless it is over
Brexit), and the BBC is timid to say the least. It is asymmetrical of
course: any mistakes the other side makes are examined in great
detail. If you do not have the media to call out lies, they will pass
as the truth and democracy dies.
She lied the previous week about the blood sugar monitor that
ReplyDeleteshe wears is readily available free of charge on the NHS. My friend's daughter has something like it and it costs her family £160 (which they can't afford). The local Lions club is helping out. This lie was exposed on Politics Live. Haven't seen a "correction". Didn't Amber Rudd have to resign her post for "misleading Parliament"?
Sorry, as an American, the scope of Theresa May's lying seems miniscule compared to what we hear from Trump every day. I grant that it stings more when the lie is about you. I hope and trust that the UK never descends to the depths we are experiencing.
ReplyDeletePerhaps you're taking it up with the wrong people.
ReplyDeleteCCHQ?
Perhaps the parliamentary ombudsman would be better, or try the speaker? I'd probably go with the former, but, CCHQ, really?