Tuesday 28 July 2015

a twelfth new reflection ... 'corbyn for labour leader'

As the time for Labour members to cast their votes for a new leader of the party draws near with the announcement of the winner of the leadership election coming on September 12, it seems likely, as Stephen Bush in the New Statesman posited this week, that Jeremy Corbyn may triumph as the various polls at the close of the leadership hustings indicate and as Corbyn mania sweeps the media.

I hope Bush and the polls are proved to be correct and that the media continue to give Corbyn a platform to talk politics. He is the man to resurrect and rejuvenate Labour.

Where rival leadership candidates Liz Kendall and Yvette Cooper in particular stress the need for electability over policy and Andy Burnham comes across as increasingly desperate in his pleas for Labour members to elect him (he’s been raising his voice a lot of late in attempt to appear assertive and persuasive when really he’d struggle to coax a dog with a bone - in spite of his mother-me-eyes), Corbyn places emphasis strictly on ideas; ideas about how to make UK society more just and more inclusive, in doing so reinforcing his identity as one of the most experienced, principled and downright sensible politicians in recent memory.

It is clear the Labour party cannot compete and should not compete with the Conservatives on the centre, centre-right ground of UK politics. The Conservatives are better at spin and electioneering and in David Cameron and George Osborne have two politicians that positively thrive there; secondly and most importantly, a Labour move to the centre, centre-right makes the party less distinct from their Tory rivals and carries the simplistic and misguided assumption that the electorate as a whole is somehow predisposed to be right-wing in individual and collective outlook.

Corbyn, of course, is left-wing but he is not so far left as to be a communist, moreover his rhetoric is increasingly sounding like the politics of the future embraced by the youth of today, the core-voters of tomorrow what with his pro-diplomacy/anti-war stance, desire for more investment in the quaternary sector, an amnesty on tax-dodging international corporations (Boots, yes Boots is the latest!) and the frivolous, ultimately exploitative TTIP (Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership), not to mention more prevalent, better funded and implemented green policies. Indeed, it has been suggested in some quarters that if Corbyn was elected, the Labour party would have to rebirth and reform as in ’97 with New Labour (hopefully minus too significant a Blairite influence) and in this scenario it would be interesting to see whether the Greens would be willing to unite behind or combine with a Corbyn led Labour party – after all, he wants a broad church, a wider grass-roots movement driving change.

Even Alex Salmond at least hinted the SNP could do political business with a Corbyn led Labour party which might enable Corbyn to go some way to achieving a kind of reparations with the Scottish left-wing (pinches of rock salt at the ready). But Corbyn’s politics is that of encouraging dialogue, and it’s a dialogue he wants to begin at all times outside of Westminster, among the people – you and I, north and south of the 'divide', north, south of Hadrian's Wall.

One of Ed Miliband’s endearing characteristics was that he tried to listen to the people, even if his efforts to respond were sometimes political double-speak or intellectual gobbledegook; for Corbyn both listening and responding in a clear and dignified manner come naturally. I would venture to say our current PM believes so wholeheartedly in his blinkered vision of how society should be run and who for that he might as well leave his ear trumpets at home, while of Corbyn’s rivals for Labour leadership, Kendall can hear nothing but the sound of her own voice echoing in a barren, empty room, Cooper a radio jam, while Burnham’s favourite band is the Courteeners (ahem!).

Joking aside, it’s hard not to like Burnham, Corbyn's main challenger: he resembles a well-groomed extra from Captain Scarlet and is something of a man of the people with the ability to appeal in a tonal sense to the masses, some of whom voted for UKIP over Labour in the recent GE – but he seems, paraphrasing Tony Benn, to be a political weather-vane rather than a sign-post pointing the way to a better future. Nevertheless, he was gracious enough to say he would consider standing in a Corbyn led shadow cabinet whereas Kendall and Cooper were not, in the process delegitimising the views of thousands of Labour members at one gesture. Kendall said it would be ‘disastrous’ if Corbyn got elected which does lead one to wonder what she is doing in the Labour party. As an aside, her statement was endorsed by Chukka Umanna, a man who in this instance would do well to remember the trials and tribulations of his Streatham constituents who loyally voted him (Labour) in by a landslide in May.

Corbyn’s election to Labour leader may upset some in the party but only those who are actively encouraging Labour toward the centre ground, where the movement will be stuck between the proverbial rock and a hard place and be easy prey for the ghoulish spawn of Osborne and Cameron Incorporated. That is to the say the end point of a drift to the centre will also bring about a split in the party, but one that will leave remaining very little of principle to build on from a left-wing past that has given the UK the NHS, the National Assistance Act and public ownership of (other) major industries and services. Labour needs to reclaim this past now and take it (and some elements of Blair’s more aspirational, wealth generating policies) into the future. Corbyn is patently the only candidate to do so.

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