Sunday 31 July 2016

Alas piffle Jones

The mere fact that something is a truism does not imply that it is true. One example is "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger", a thesis it would be interesting to test out on Polio victims. Another is "the pen is mightier than the sword". I'm not actually aware of any historical instance of a writer taking on a fencing master armed only with a Parker fountain pen, but if this did happen, I suspect it did not end well.

The point is, of course, supposed to be about the power of ideas, and to that extent there is a certain truth in it, which is a comfort to those of us who are far more comfortable inserting semi-colons into sentences than we would be thrusting rapiers into a foe. Amongst this legion of geeks I count myself. Still the kind of ideas with which I am concerned here, political ideas, are powerless in the absence of a political movement, and are only formed reliably in close critical relationship with such a movement. This is, understandably in the wake of the SWP rape crisis, the kind of talk which evokes nervousness on much of the left; yet it is often the most vital maxims that require the most careful handling. Whatever is meant by 'a movement', it has to be more than the whims of some central committee. But that is a matter for another day. When ideas come apart from a movement which they can inspire, and which can test them in the crucible of daily life, then they become lifeless things, phantoms and illusions.



Which brings me to Owen Jones. I am, I should say, angry about his intervention in the Labour leadership contest. The Labour left which gave rise to Jeremy Corbyn, and which is currently being tried in his person, also provided Owen with a hand up to his career as a commentator. I remember well him cutting his teeth in the pages of Labour Briefing and his early political days as a co-chair of the LRC's youth wing. He was born of the movement to which he has delivered a timed slap in the face. It is sometimes said that the Left speaks too easily of betrayal, and there may be something to this. Yet a sensitivity to treachery is the flip-side of valuing comradeship. If you are prepared to show solidarity with me, I should be similarly prepared to take you into account in making my own decisions. This might be uncomfortable talk for those for whom individual freedom, or career, or whatever else is the highest conceivable good. Others of us think that the freedom to shout lonely in the desert is no freedom worth having.

In what does the betrayal consist here? A political writer who views their writing as an intervention, as opposed to, say, a means to a better CV has to consider not only what they want to say but whether this is the right time to say it. There is much that could be said and asked about Corbyn and the movement around him; I have myself been far from uncritical. The time for articulating that is not, however, when the man is seeking re-election as leader of the Labour Party in the wake of a concerted attempt to wrestle the Party back into the hands of the Blairite cabal. There is a question we should ask ourselves before we ask questions of others. That is the question implicit in every picket line, "which side are you on?"; and the answer we give to that provides the context for our subsequent questioning.

Owen has chosen to lay bare his soul on the internet; that is his decision. I have nothing to say about it. Of more interest are the nine questions he asks at the end of his piece - without, one notes, offering much in the way of answers. Marx said that each age asks only the questions which it can answer. He might have added that the way those questions are understood, and for that matter framed, constrains the answers that are considered admissible. Nowhere is Jones' descent into a bland safe parliamentariansim more apparent than here, the sense he gives of what an acceptable answer to each of his questions would look like. I do not consider myself similarly bound by the norms of Westminster nicety, and for what it's worth I think that the primary reason the inhabitants of Westminster's famed bubble (amongst whom Owen must now be numbered) are disturbed by the member for Islington North is that he has refused to play the game of Westminster politics as normal. For all that, Corbyn is still a reformist, and some kind of answer to Owen's questions is probably needed, given that they have now been asked.

Here, off the top of my head, is a first attempt. 

1. How can the disastrous polling be turned around? Well, a few of us have been expressing concern about the polls for a good while. There's a lot that I would want to say about the need for forming a movement that works at community level to form 'public opinion', rather than receive it as a passive given. It is the model of politics as an exercise in customer relations, rather than social transformation that needs to be challenged above all else by any Left movement that takes contesting elections seriously. The point is not that we should not want to win elections, but that we need a new approach to how we win elections.

All of this said, Labour's polling really warrants the term 'disastrous' during the period since the EU referendum and the beginning of the relentless attacks on Corbyn from within the PLP. Outlandish though this idea might seem, perhaps Labour might do somewhat better in the polls if those attacks were to stop.

2. Where is the clear vision? I don't really understand the question. There is a reading of "clear vision" on which the phrase is as oxymoronic as "thoughtful Sun journalist". Vision is the stuff of motivating principles, big ideas, and utopian imagining. Vision is not meant to be clear in the sense that Owen seems to demand. The parable of the Good Samaritan presents a vision of how human beings might live, but it wouldn't necessarily be much use on the doorstep. It would certainly be a brave minister who gave it to a civil servant as indicative of the government's intentions. I think anyone who believes that Jeremy lacks vision in this sense hasn't been listening to him. Much of the British population has a good excuse for this, since much of what Jeremy has said hasn't been reported. If only there was, for example, a left-wing writer with a regular column in a national paper who could help on this front.

Perhaps, though Owen is concerned with policy rather than vision. Some of these have been forthcoming: think about John McDonnell's announcements on matters macroeconomic, providing a clear alternative to the Conservative programme. But there have been relatively few detailed policies, this is true. Is this a bad thing? It depends whether you are happy with what one might call the Thick of It model of policymaking: policies arising ex nihilo from the heads of special advisors and the cars of front bench politicians en route to press conferences. Once upon a time the Left argued that policy should emerge from the labour movement, through its democratic structures. If this is right then it is a good thing that there hasn't currently been much policymaking in Owen's required sense. Here we see the double bind in which Corbyn is being placed: if he doesn't do politics as usual, he is criticised; if he does do politics as usual, what is the point in Corbyn?

3. How are the policies significantly different from the last general election? See answer to previous question. Jones does accidentally touch on the interesting area of economics. Here McDonnell is quite right not concede to pseudo-Keynesian nonsense about the deficit. Yet in the background lurks a more troubling issue: capitalism can no longer afford social democracy. It's not simply a question of "the money being there", as the familiar leftist refrain has it, but rather of whether capital views the money being used for [insert favoured social spending here] is consistent with the reproduction of capital. This was the case during the long (and exceptional) post-war boom; this is in general no longer so. That doesn't mean nothing can be done - here again, I have not been uncritical. McDonnell is not, that criticism aside, not without good ideas - to with redistribution, investment, and productivity. Far more importantly, Corbyn's Labour is committed to setting working people free to fight for themselves, to do what the state can increasingly no longer do. The repeal of the Thatcher era trade union legislation is far, far, more important than anything a Shadow Chancellor can do.

4. What is the media strategy? Once again, the assumption of politics as usual pervades the question. "Most people", that most useful of demographic categories for a columnist with an axe to grind, don't get their news from social media. They get it from the mainstream print and broadcast media. This is probably right. It does not follow that it is written into the grain of the universe that this is so. What if people had more opportunity to talk about politics through the presence in their communities and workplaces of a real mass movement? 

At this point, I feel slightly as though I'm lapsing into John Lennon territory: you may say that I'm a dreamer. So let's allow that what is said in the mainstream media matters. As indeed it does; hence all those books by 80s Marxist sociologists on the press. It is a difficult question what a socialist electoral movement might do to get the best media coverage. Even putting it this way, though, assumes that the traffic between media and politics is one way. The media follow as well as lead; the Scottish Sun at crucial points cannot get away with carrying the same line as its southern cousin - witness the vastly differing attitudes towards the SNP and independence in recent years. Newspapers need to sell in order to survive, and political consciousness determines what they can say and still sell. Allowing even that, there's still some kind of question: how might we get nice things said about Jeremy in the papers? Again I can only express my wish that there was a reasonably well-known left-wing journalist about who could help in this respect.

5. What's the strategy for winning over the over-44s? Well, as the man himself says, pensioner poverty and social care are important issues. And I simply do not believe that the interview Owen describes is the first he has heard from Corbyn on these questions.

6. What's the strategy to win over Scotland? Labour needs a really big rethink on Scotland and the national question. With this proviso, it would be pretty easy to make the ad hominum point that the people who presided over Scotland's reduction to a solitary Labour MP, namely the Labour right are not likely to be the best people to win it back for the party of Keir Hardie. However, it's not clear that Labour needs to win over Scotland. It held a majority in England in 2005.

7. What's the strategy to win over Conservative voters? Liberals can be useful in spite of themselves because, much like stopped clocks, they sometimes tell the truth accidentally. Thus Bill Clinton, "it's the economy stupid". There is good evidence that a good number of swing voters opted for the Tories because they didn't trust Labour on the economy. An economic strategy of the sort McDonnell has in fact crafted is a good start here. The task now is to communicate it, a task from which this leadership contest is an unhelpful distraction.

8. How would we deal with concerns about immigration? It's not because of immigrants that you can't get a hospital bed, a job, a council house... Talk about immigration, but talk about it precisely in terms of its function to deflect attention from the Tories' attacks. To say this is to treat the electorate as agents, who can be engaged politically, rather than as passive consumers to whose "concerns" we need to appeal. I'm terribly sorry, I should say in passing, that Jones' dire liberal baby, the Immigration Dividend, went nowhere, but them's the brakes.

9. How can Labour's mass membership be mobilised? This is the crucial question. I'm not really sure that it's a question for Jeremy Corbyn, though. It's a question for all of us. Over to you, Owen.




Wednesday 27 July 2016

Lies of the Labour leadership contest 5: Owen Smith supports radical policies

Lie 5:

Owen Smith is in favour of a democratic 'revolution', awash with radical policies. He said so, after all.


Bollocks because:

Leaving aside the fact that this radical revolution is, even by the recent lights of Comrade Smith, not for immigrants, his conversion to neo-Corbynism is, um, pretty recent.

Monday 25 July 2016

Lies of the Labour leadership contest 4: Jeremy Corbyn terrorised MPs

Lie 4:

Jeremy Corbyn has intimidated MPs.

Bollocks because:

Saying that you will talk to somebody's father, even if this actually happened, is not intimidating that person, if the person in question is older than seven. Nor is it bullying for your staff to enter the office of a resigned colleague. 

I'm left worried for the PLP's collective ability to cope with life. If they are so easily reduced to quivering wrecks, one wonders how they manage to leave their houses in the morning. So, please, no matter how tough your own life might be, spare a thought for these poor, fragile, specimens.


Friday 22 July 2016

Are you now, or have you ever been, a socialist?



Now, here's a thing. This email was sent out to CLP membership secretaries, at least in some parts:

Verification of new supporters
 During last summer’s leadership contest, we asked CLPs to assist in the process of verifying new members’ eligibility by raising any concerns about individuals who have applied to become a Labour Party member or supporter. 

The window for supporters to sign up as a registered supporter to take part in the Leadership election was open from 5pm on Monday 18th July at 5pm until Wednesday 20th July at 5pm. Each registered supporter application is subject to a validation process and CLPs' role in that is vital.
Should the Party consider it necessary, the applicant will be referred to a panel of the NEC who will make the final decision on whether their application will be accepted. Successful applicants must subscribe to the aims and values of the Labour Party and information on the criteria in which applications will be referred to the NEC Panel below.
In line with Labour Party rules, please could you promptly check the new supporters appearing in this report and submit any worries or concerns about a member’s eligibility, alongside any evidence you have, by emailing validation@labour.org.uk.
 Any queries, please contact your regional office who will be able to assist you.
 While the window for joining as a registered supporter has closed, we are still processing the applications so this first report includes only those processed so far.  These reports will come daily until all supporters have been processed, to ensure you are able to check all registered supporter applications. Later reports will also include details of new affiliated supporters for validation and we really appreciate your support and cooperation with this at this busy time. 
 Criteria to be considered when checking new registered supporter applications:
 Any applicants rejected in the 2015 leadership election
 If they were a candidate, agent or nominated a candidate in opposition to a Labour Party candidate in 2015 or 2016.
 If there is evidence that they have publically (sic) stated that they voted for a candidate in opposition to a Labour Party candidate in 2015 or 2016.
If there is evidence that they belong to, support or subscribe to an organisation whose aims and values are contrary to those of the Labour Party. This includes other political parties and organisations with contrary political aims and the evidence may include attendance at meetings or posting (more than once) on blogs or social media in support.
If the applicant has been party to membership abuse, such as not paying their own membership fees.
If they publically state or send any abusive comments regarding any candidate, any Labour representative or any other member.
If they have made any public statements including, but not limited to, racism, abusive or foul language, abuse against women, homophobia or anti-Semitism, or of an otherwise abusive and discriminatory nature.
 Applicants who have been auto-excluded or expelled and those who have been rejected as members within the last 2 years will be automatically rejected. In addition, all supporters are required to be on the electoral register and that check has taken place, so there is no need to check individuals against the electoral register. However, if you feel an individual listed below falls into one of those categories, please raise that by emailing validation@labour.org.uk
This speaks for itself, really. The powers that be at regional and national bureaucracy levels don't want supporters who voted for another Party, an approach to new interest slightly less welcoming than that of the Peoples' Front of Judea. And going to meetings of other political organisations? Wow. That said, we should be measured in our response to this. Apparently 'foul language' is enough to get you disenfranchised.

Fuck that.

Monday 18 July 2016

Lies of the Labour leadership contest 3: Corbyn undermined Lilian Greenwood

Lie 3:

Jeremy Corbyn undermined Lilian Greenwood, a member of his Shadow Cabinet.

Bollocks because:

Let's leave aside the irony of Blairites complaining about a leader sitting lightly to their front-bench. Let's give Greenwood the benefit of the doubt and assume that everything she is saying is true, sadly a dangerous assumption in the present climate.
This is bollocks because the job of a Labour Shadow Cabinet minister is to articulate the policy of the Labour Party. Where there is no such policy, front benchers can and should be able to contribute to the ongoing debate. What Greenwood means is that Corbyn has upset the norms of polite, cosy, parliamentary business as usual. He has offended worshippers at the shrine of collective cabinet government, and has dared to have ideas that haven't been cleared by a focus group.
In however partial and inadequate a way, this is a step towards Labour being transformed from a Westminster branded product to a mass democratic movement. That is why Corbyn must stay.


I refer readers to my earlier post on Lie 1 on other aspects of Greenwood's outburst.

Saturday 16 July 2016

This can't happen again. Support the CLGA slate for the NEC



The events of recent days have made it very clear why it matters that Corbyn supporters get elected to Labour's National Executive Committee. That body very nearly kept the leader off the ballot, and when it voted to include him it did so by means of a secret ballot. It has banned local Labour parties from meeting for the duration of the contest, prevented new members from voting and has introduced a £25 charge, prohibitively high for many, to register as a supporter.

We need a better NEC. So please, if you have a vote, vote for the CLGA slate:

Ann Black
Christine Shawcroft 
Claudia Webbe
Darren Williams
Pete Willsman
Rhea Wolfson




Friday 15 July 2016

Lies of the Labour leadership contest 2: A journalist was intimidating NEC members

Lie 2:

Johanna Baxter, as reported by the Guardian, and quoted yesterday on this blog:

“A prominent journalist was texting members of the NEC, saying they had to vote for Jeremy, a union general secretary was phoning round members of the NEC telling them they had to vote for Jeremy,” she said. “It is intimidation and he endorsed it.”
Bollocks because:

The actual "intimidating" text, as disclosed on Jones' own Facebook page:






Thursday 14 July 2016

On behalf of the mob



Intimidation in politics is no laughing matter. There are parts of the world where airing your political views will get you thrown in jail, beaten up, or worse. Westminster, it is fair to say, is not normally one of those places.

This makes events in the past 36 hours of Labour politics perplexing. As the most right-wing government in living memory was appointed - Britain now has a Chancellor who holds the general public responsible for the 2008 financial crisis and a Foreign Secretary who wrote a poem about the  Turkish president having sex with a goat* - the theatre of conflict in Labour's civil war moved to the NEC.

The NEC voted to place Corbyn on the ballot without requiring that he seek nominations. This much is good news. What is less fantastic is that this vote was conducted by secret ballot. Corbyn and others voted against having a secret ballot. They were right to do this: NEC members ought to be accountable to those who elect them, and this requires their voting record be public. Accepting this is part of what prominent elected office in a democratic organisation involves: it is not everyone's cup of tea, it inevitably attracts lobbying and criticism. It can be hard. But this is democracy in action: NEC members (or MPs, for that matter) do not hold their position by right. They are put there by members and accountable to members. Lobbying, arguing, disagreeing with representatives is part of healthy democracy. To subscribe to the idea that the people (the demos - those of us NEC right-winger Johanna Baxter called, in solid Burkean conservative tradition, the 'mob') get their input only at election time is not to take seriously what it is for the demos to rule.

This does not mean that anything goes. It hardly need be said that the putting of a brick through Angela Eagle's window is disgraceful, and the sharing of Baxter's own personal mobile number on-line should be condemned. However, there are channels to deal with this kind of behaviour: legal recourses and internal Party procedure. These exceptional cases are being used as cover for a broadening of the understanding of 'intimidation' to block avenues of accountability and undermine the Corbyn campaign. So, the Guardian reports of Baxter:

“A prominent journalist was texting members of the NEC, saying they had to vote for Jeremy, a union general secretary was phoning round members of the NEC telling them they had to vote for Jeremy,” she said. “It is intimidation and he endorsed it.”
It cannot be stated loudly or often enough: the described behaviour is not intimidation. It is lobbying. And it is legitimate lobbying, as Labour's ruling body preprared to meet to make one of the most important decisions that has ever fallen to it. The fact that an NEC member is seemingly traumatised at the thought of a union leader, in particular, intervening in the politics of a party called, well, the Labour Party, is a timely reminder of why we should elected a better NEC this year.

Lobbying is not intimidation. Nor is anything which makes someone feel intimidated automatically intimidation. Peoples' responses can be unreasonable, and the ruling caste of a Labour bureaucracy that have got used to a professionalised model of politics which isolates them from the concerns and passions of the mass of humanity seem systematically conditioned to respond unreasonably to political pressure. Add to this a culture in which a therapeutic cult of universal victimhood has increasingly substituted itself for proper politics and in which disagreement itself is considered pathological - for which someone's much-vaunted right to their opinion is translated as their right not to have their opinion challenged - and you have a recipe for wrapping New Labour in cotton wool and, absurdly, claiming that the political force which rained bombs down on Iraq is a delicate snowflake, in need of special protection.

You have, moreover, an excuse for the further privatisation of politics. Engaging with the leadership election is to be something that happens in the seclusion of one's living room, on the internet, with a solitary vote. Participation in a mass political organisation turns out to be akin to watching porn. The merits of the candidates cannot be debated at Party meetings, because there will be no Party meetings until the election is over. Members are, in a masterstroke of collective passive aggression, being intimidated into not lobbying representatives or arguing on behalf of a candidate, lest they be thought abusive.

There are victims in this country. They will sleep on the streets tonight, or will be struggling to feed their children on the few coins they have for the rest of the week, or are crying alone in detention centres. They deserve representation, and that is why we, the Left, should not allow ourselves to be intimated.

*A gaffe which, given recent allegations about the former Prime Minister, if nothing else demonstrates an impressive amount of Tory chutzpah.

Wednesday 13 July 2016

Lies of the Labour leadership contest 1: It's not about policy

The first in an occasional series


Lie 1:
This isn't about policy, it's about Corbyn's inability to perform in parliament, win the electorate, or unify the Party.

Bollocks because:

Are we supposed to believe that if a standardly charismatic, uniformly popular socialist were leading the Labour Party right now, the likes of Chuka Umana and Margaret Hodge would be getting on with supporting them and advocating their policies? Is it a coincidence that the MPs who non-confidenced Corbyn are generally those who voted for benefit cuts and, where relevant, the Iraq war? This is political through and through. 

Sunday 10 July 2016

Words and expressions

Realistic - What are realistic policies? Social democracy of the old school is not realistic, even in its own terms. Capitalism can no longer afford it. We live in a world where people starve, die from preventable disease, lie homeless on the streets, and are threatened by war and other forms of violence in their millions. To even begin to address this questions will involve a politics well beyond the bounds of normality. That is realistic. The thought that a firm, pragmatic, hand on the rudder will make the world, liveable, let alone better than that is naive utopianism.

Electability - Give the people what they want, as though you were selling a product. Even people who sell products don't do this. They tell the people what the people want but don't know that they want yet. Hence advertising. But politics isn't a product. Peoples' political beliefs, generally a confused bag, are generally pretty right-wing in contemporary Britain. That much is true (although on some questions they are well to the left of, say Angela Eagle). However, this is not a fixed thing. Political beliefs are fluid, changed by on the ground movements, the experience of politics. That is already happening to an extent. And it needs to happen, because of what is realistic (see above).

Government or Protest - This is a false dichotomy. The labour movement historically wanted government in order to express protest. What is true, however, is that no socialist should want to use government just as a ready-made tool to serve their own ends. The state, and its instruments, is far from neutral. Thus Ralph Miliband on the effect of office on Labour. In governing, a socialist party which genuinely provided political representation to the working class would need to transform government itself. Fear of this possibility, dimly perceived, is part of what is behind the current Labour coup.

Unity - Of whom? To which ends?


Saturday 9 July 2016

A tale of two leadership contests

So the waiting is over; Angela Eagle has declared that she will stand for the Labour leadership. Unkind commentators might comment that if one of the problems with Corbyn is supposed to be his lack of charisma, viewing Angela Eagle as the solution is like pushing for Wayne Rooney to host Mastermind on the grounds that John Humphrys lacks intellectual gravitas.

This would be to misunderstand what is going on. Eagle is either a stalking horse or a sacrificial lamb - pick your favourite zoological metaphor. Her function is to instigate a contest. There is no thought amongst those who are presently cheerleading her that she will actually end up being the Labour leader. Instead, the plan is that some equally dull, but better known and supposedly member-friendly figure - Alan Johnson or Tom Watson - will be the benefactor from the coming bloodletting.

All of this is actually pretty boring. There is little to say about it that hasn't already been said. Eagle's statement makes it clear that she doesn't understand the Labour Party as extending beyond the bounds of the PLP. The same can be said about the widespread bluster about 'Party unity' from within the PLP. The present composition of the PLP is a boil that needs lancing for the Corbyn leadership to prosper; but this has always been the case.



More fascinating is the Tory leadership race. The party of Family and Order not only use women to bring about leadership contests, they are even open to having a woman as leader. Whatever one might say about the authoritarian Teresa May or the gibbering idiot Andrea Leadsom, they are undeniably both women.

This was enough to get Guardian columnists excited and have people chattering about 'feminism'. It is good, they argued, to have women in prominent positions. To be indifferent simply because one such position is that of being Tory leader is to be unflinchingly dogmatic, to prioritise other concerns over women's liberation. Similar sentiment lurks behind the insistence that Margaret Thatcher should be admired as a 'strong woman' or campaigns to get more women onto the boards of FTSE100 companies.

Admittedly, the feminist credentials of one of the candidates have taken a bit of a knock since it became clear that she believes having had sex with a man and having functional ovaries makes her better suited to being Prime Minister than her opponent. Yet there are more fundamental reasons to worry about the trend towards seeing examples of liberation amongst the ranks of the powerful. For one thing, it's not clear where the limits lie: would the election of Marine Le Pen as French President be a step forward in the war against sexism? But more fundamentally, whenever you hear that something is 'good for women', you should ask yourself which women?

It is perfectly true that the relative absence of women from the Tory benches and the boardrooms is a product of patriarchy. Tory MPs are disadvantaged because they are women: however that disadvantage expresses itself and is experienced in a way that reflects their typical class, racial, and religious backgrounds, and their prominent position in a right-wing political party. Compare their situation with that of a lone mother, going without food to feed her children on ever-reducing benefits. Would the ascendence of either May or Leadsom - both enthusiasts for austerity - be good news for her? What about a woman who gets paid less for doing the same work as her male colleagues? A black woman facing deportation? A Muslim woman victimised by anti-terror laws? Should a lesbian, bi, or transwoman rejoice at the election of either homophobe?



The power feminism that celebrates the Tory leadership contest allows basically reactionary political ideas to clothe themselves with a bit of post-60s diversity. In this respect it is analogous to campaigns for Muslim leaders or gay CEOs. It provides an easy option for those who want to feel the world is changing for the better without having to exert any energy to make it do so, as well as for those who fear that if the world actually did get better this might not be good news for their bad balance.

This should not be news to anyone vaguely on the left. If anything it is the kind of question which marks out the boundaries of the left. Most people, however, have no fixed politics of any kind. And there is a debate to be had with them about how best issues around gender, race, and sexuality are addressed. And here the argument has to be made and won that the only way to make progress in these areas in a way that actually makes life better for the bulk of the population - rather than holding out the largely illusory hope of 'making it' to a place amongst an elite - is as part of a movement that recognises the way these concerns intersect with class, and which organises and campaigns on the basis of all of them.

Which is why, of course, the battle for the institutions of the labour movement matters.