30 August 2016

Labour: fiddling while Labour burns?

Any number of Labour observers, headed up by their no doubt increasingly-stressed MPs, are concerned about the weight the party will have to throw around in the next Parliament, what with the dire predictions of electoral destruction--not to mention the resurfacing Cameroonian plan to axe fifty constituencies which will apparently squeeze Labour even further.

From my interested and, if I may say so, reasonably well informed viewpoint, Labour appears to have fallen into full victim mode. Bullied by segments of its own membership in the courts, cowed by the iron grip it has given its own leader, its MPs ignored by their own party leadership and, it seems, membership: I don't really know which bit of Labour is Labour any more. The party is a victim and the diagnosis is quite possibly terminal confusion.

It seems to me that a medicine that would have an immediate effect would be clarity. (My wife takes that for her hay fever, a-ba-doom-tsh). No organisation so divided can hope to coalesce suddenly around an issue, unless Theresa May suddenly decides we should go to war with Germany. But in order to coalesce somebody needs to put the markers down, and that puts Jeremy Corbyn and what we might call the 'official' Labour party leadership in the driving seat - for evidence of their relative power, see the little tsunami of ineffectual resignations that so delighted us during July. Besides, who else in a political party can send up the flare that will draw together the surrounding boats?

We turn, then, with eager gaze to Jeremy Corbyn. This, surely, is a moment for him to seize. I've written before that I don't mind Jeremy Corbyn. I am glad that somebody like him has been able to ascend to the summit in our system, suggesting that the epoch of the spads has yet to take hold totally. I agree that much of the media hostility is unjustified. I don't see him as a messianic guaranteed winner, but I don't think he's the unelectable millstone of lore. Given a cause, some clear messages, and a reasonable electoral wind I think he could confound the doommongers.

Will he do it? Can he seize that moment? A government, led valiantly by Mrs May into the jaws of Brexit, with a small majority; Europe, the issue that destroyed the last Tory government and leader after leader for a decade; an economy on the brink of dreadful post-Brexit statistics; and surely the opportunity to grab the agenda from a new government, to detect the weak spots left, or caused by, the exit of David Cameron.

What's coming through? What am I, as a relatively engaged observer, picking up? Challenges to Theresa May about her One Nation agenda, her commitment to real equality, to protecting the positives of EU membership or even just getting a good deal? No, I'm afraid not. It's really just Owen Smith's non-dick non-joke and today the monumentally uninteresting call for a "digital Bill of Rights". And, for good measure, he's decided to ape a recently-defeated leftist US election candidate. Inspiring stuff. (After all, no previous US politician has successfully adopted a grassroots, internet-driven strategy that we could cite instead, have they?) Mind you there are other echoes of Bernie about Corbyn, but I'm not sure those are necessarily desirable.

Am I blaming Corbyn? Not entirely. Of course there is a persistent media narrative hampering him. But he's not without his platform. And he's not without his position. And he did make it into the news, even if he fell away quite quickly, with his "Digital Bill of Rights" (I can't bear to abandon those quotation marks, as though they can protect us from the inanity of it all). He has his choices and his opportunities. And it seems to me that he just isn't making the best of them.





26 August 2016

The Boris Factor 2

"Even those who thought [Boris] was brilliant - and most people could see that - were often dismayed by his lack of judgement, his tendency to hyperbole, to overexcitement, even to hysteria."

Sorry, that should have read "who thought [Churchill] was brilliant". Yes, we're back on Lessons about Boris from Boris's Book About Churchill again.

This passage goes on:
"In 1931 he became so worked up about the prospect of Indian independence that he called Mahatma Gandhi a 'half-naked fakir' - in words that have certainly not been forgotten in India."

Today's lesson from Boris: "Churchill offended foreigners and he was still a top chap. Surely I can be too, eh chaps?"

A thought

Either Theresa May is just going for the simple life - "I'm going to get us out, so no point dithering" - or she can see clearly that there is absolutely no way any government could deliver without the people changing their minds, so she's going to do the best she can and wait for the whole project to fail - and pin it on the original Leavers.

10 August 2016

The Boris Factor: 1

I'm currently reading Boris Johnson's book The Churchill Factor: How One Man Made History. This hovered on my list for a little while, and then the author was made Foreign Secretary. I'm a great believer that how a person writes, and what they write about, tells you much about them. John Major's memoirs, for instance, as well as his later writing about cricket and music hall--two subjects he successfully enthused me about, at least a little--reveal him to be a much warmer and wittier character than the media painted him. Margaret Thatcher, meanwhile, writes just as perfunctorily as her apparently humourless and mechanistic image suggested; Tony Blair's memoirs were as ghastly as I'd feared, but Chris Patten's significantly better. 

I recall Johnson's biography of Churchill being reviewed, fairly neutrally, on Radio 4 some time ago, and one of the panellists remarked: "thank goodness we have Boris Johnson to cast some light on this little-known figure from British history."

Well, it turns out that Boris Johnson's biography casts light not just on Churchill, but on Johnson.

Exhibit A.

"Rab Butler might have been Prime Minister. In 1940, he was a junior minister, and a strong supporter of appeasement. Here is what he had to say about the ascent of Churchill:
"'The good clean tradition of English politics has been sold to the greatest adventurer of modern political history,' he was heard to say. 'Surrendering to Winston and his rabble was a disaster and an unnecessary one', mortgaging the future of our country to a 'half-breed American whose main support was that of inefficient but talkative people of a similar type.'"

2 August 2016

May: Might she not?

Step 1. Restate how precious the United Kingdom is to you.
Step 2. State clearly that you wish to reach a common UK negotiating position before activating Article 50.
Step 3. Open negotiations on UK negotiating position.
Step 4. Refuse to budge on the principle that Brexit means Brexit.
Step 5. Act surprised when SNP rise to hysteria about the prospect of Brexit and announce a second referendum on independence is imminent.
Step 6. Save the Union by trumping second #indyref with second #EUref, in which the key question is: is Brexit worth the cost of splitting the UK once and for all?


Enough already with the US-style paranoia, Corbynistas

After a frosty response to a few of my anguished posts after the EU referendum, the last thing I want to do is tell anybody engaged in political discussion to shut up. So yes, I've titled this post "enough already" but that doesn't mean "stop talking".

That disclaimer out of the way, the thing that's pushed me to post this is this story, about the ongoing wrangling over the level of support for Jeremy Corbyn as Labour leader. I noticed a comment on a Facebook post about it which referred to "the MSM". Only by reading the responses - which all seemed to be familiar with the term - did I realise that this means "mainstream media". And suddenly, dismay hits:

1. "Mainstream" is one word. Ugh.
2. The term "mainstream media" is one I associate with the cries of Trump supporters in the US, the headbanging right who exist somewhere in a twilight zone of paranoia and alienation. In this weird world, the vague feeling that "something's not right"--based on something that could be justifiable alienation, could be personal psychopathology, could be political expediency--entitles you to bypass completely all critical analysis, and instead cleave to the conviction that the media are all liars and none should be believed, or that what matters is what you believe to be true...these are the prime ingredients of what is increasingly called 'post-factual politics'.
3. And then you look at the way the Corbyn debate is going--was that a Corbyn rally? Isn't that crowds celebrating Liverpool's last European Cup win? Why is this not on the 10 o'clock news?--and it's just depressing that the tone is so concerned with "how my cause is being represented by the media" and not really on the issues.

I'm a bit fed up of being told that the mainstream media isn't reporting Corbyn rallies. I've been open minded about Corbyn--I was warmer to him than many, I think, at the start of his leadership--but as I grow increasingly cool, I'm totally aware that he has a very large support base and that lots of people are flocking to support him. No, it's not headline news--I don't think it should be--but the news stories are there, the buzz on social media is there, and ultimately: I don't really know what Corbyn thinks, or even what his supporters think, because all I see is "don't believe the lies!"

It seems to me that the left in the UK is losing its attention on facts and debate and opposition, and has instead pitched its tent in that twilight zone of outrage and suspicion that has hosted the US right for so long. Am I suggesting that Corbynistas are as lunatic as Trump supporters? No. I'm worried that a segment of British political thought which is usually a bit less hysterical has decided to go where the right so often makes its home. Theresa May has stamped her authority on her party for the moment, but these are the Tories. It won't last. Eventually the lunacy will start again. And if the left hasn't recovered some sense of purpose, there will be an even smaller proportion of those in British political life who still put moderation, sensibility and rationality above selfish outrage.