Jess Phillips once
remarked that if Corbyn messed up she would stab him, not in the
back, but in the front. In spite of Corbyn not having messed up, spin
and bluster to the contrary notwithstanding, 172 Labour MPs this
evening carried through on that threat.
The battle begins
now. It is not over, it has not even begun.
There are, you see, two models of democracy coming head to head. For one, basically a form of quasi-democratic elitism, parliamentarians need to be comfortable above all else. They are the experts, they are the ones who do the hard work, and they need to feel good with their leader. If their confidence goes, then so does the leader. The alternative, a democracy with a meaningful demos, was the motivating thought between those trade unionists who at the turn of the 19th and 20th century organised to get working people represented in parliament.
Democracy is nothing
more than a hollow slogan, the uninteresting five-yearly choice
between identikit media-performers, unless it is grounded in mass
movements, connected to workplaces and communities. The direction of
communication and accountability within a party, for this model, is
from the bottom up. The members of the Labour Party choose the leader
of the Labour Party. And, let the 172 think about this as they lie
down to sleep tonight, it is the members of the Labour Party who
choose Labour MPs.
If a model of
democracy that gives the disenfranchised a sense of control over
their own lives doesn't win over, in the form of a fighting,
organised, growing, locality-based Labour Party, linked to revived
trade unions and social movements, there are other supposed solutions
on offer. They are from UKIP, and at the fringe Britain First. They
don't care very much about democracy of any sort.
So get ready for a
fight. I'm no doubt preaching to the choir here, but if you haven't
already done it:
- Join Momentum (and go to its events)
- Join Labour (and go to meetings)
- In a few weeks, vote for the CLGA candidates for Labour's NEC
We need to keep our nerves. The strategy will be to dent your confidence. It is not about policy, they will say, but Corbyn can't win. Journalists and academics will be wheeled out to confirm this diagnosis. Commentators will use the word 'realistic' a lot. You will be made to feel like an oddball or a mischief-maker for supporting Jeremy. Do not fall for it. We are right, they are wrong.
This is the fight of our lives. Let's win.
This is the fight of our lives. Let's win.
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