I have been weighing up whether the Labour
Party is worth the candle after around nine months of re-engagement,
having, once again, observed it from the inside. I decided to try and be
as objective as possible - does it match what I believe and is it good
for the people of this country? These are the only two considerations
for me. There is another consideration: is it good for my petty personal
interest but, frankly, I would probably never have been a Labour Party
supporter if that was so. Politics is about interest but it is also
about values and I place values before interest while others (which is
their right) do the opposite. Let us weigh up the evidence.
FOR THE LABOUR PARTY
1. There is no other party that at least purports to protect the
interests of the most vulnerable in our society although a) the least
worst is perhaps not the best, b) the record of Labour in office under
Blair was chequered to say the least with its distracted interest in
international issues, and c) there are 'conservative' forces that are
equally evidentially concerned with the causes of poverty and with
solutions (represented within the Labour Party by the increasingly
isolated Frank Field).
2. A significant element in the leadership
including the Leader represent the forces of peace and redistribution
although a) the rest of the leading networks in the Party seem
determined to oust it by fair means or foul and b) this values-driven
element (of which I approve) seem to be consistently politically inept
and naive.
3, It still represents the bulk of the Labour
Movement although a) the trades unions seem no longer to be concerned
about society as a whole but only with their special interests and b)
the trades union movement is now largely associated (with exceptions such as the sterling work done in the transport, construction, retail, banking and manufacturing sectors) with a defensive
strategy to maintain a large and often inefficient state sector as
producers rather than having much concern with the services to be
supplied.
AGAINST THE LABOUR PARTY
1. It is not
organisationally fit for purpose. It has hollowed out in the North. It
has lost Scotland and is under pressure in Wales. In the South, it has
become dominated by naive cultural activists of the liberal-left in a
state of alternating outrage and despair. In some urban areas, its
structures are controlled by ethnic feudal elites. Its elected
representatives are narcissists and out of control. Its leadership is
weak, though not always a weakness of its own making. The party apparat
(the professionals) have far too much influence and control within a
supposedly democratic party. It is collapsing from within.
2. It
has become dominated by cultural and identity politics for short term
urban electoral reasons at the expense of class and national interest
politics. Its European policy - thrust upon it by the apparat -
alienates much of its working class base and is deeply flawed in its
analysis of the nature of the European Project, aligning it further with
the international liberal economic system. It has allowed itself to
become distracted by urban culture wars between ethnic groups. It has
also aligned itself with the movement to control thought and language
and avoid free debate ('liberal totalitarianism') and it connives in the
rewriting of history for political purposes. It has refused to face the
very real problems created by global flows of migrants and tried to
suppress all debate on the matter. Parts of its apparat have been taken
over by sectional identity elements, most notably radical feminism
(which is not to be confused with the commitment to social and economic
equality between persons of all genders).
3. It has totally
neglected any form of political education nor has it encouraged critical
thinking and open debate (although the Leader has made moves in this
direction on Trident and other matters though signally not on Europe).
It has confused political organisation and building a party with issues
campaigning as if it was little more than a giant NGO. It has acted as
claque for the campaigning of NGOs that collude with other political
interests. If its policies are coherent (which is to be doubted), they
are poorly communicated.
In short, on the debit side, the
democratic socialist and labour party of the early twentieth century has
turned into a chaotic and naive liberal-left party that floats on the
tide of history instead of creating it. It became little more than a
mass of aging tribal loyalists supporting a small number of paid
opportunists and cynics (amidst which men and women of integrity are
undoubtedly to be found), all of limited horizon and education, but also
without or with decreasing experience of mass social and political
organisation.
The 'Corbyn revolution' merely brought all this
out into the open - within a party that has been rotting for decades -
by introducing a new and unstable force of passionate and
inexperienced people who contain within their cohort ideologues as their
most active element, an element even further disconnected from those in
the working class whose livelihoods do not depend on the public sector.
From being a national working class party, the Labour Party has become
an inchoate coalition of sectional special interest groups including
urban ethnic groups and ideologues with increasingly little to say to a people who are suffering not only from austerity in the short term
but neo-liberalism in the long term. The commitment to a subsumption
under a European ameliorative neo-liberal project should be the last
straw for many natural supporters of a genuine class and community-based
democratic socialism.
The positives for the Party would be
enhanced if a) it ceased its trajectory towards a civil war organised from
the Right and unified itself around a national redistributive and
democratic programme that eschewed culture wars and identity politics
and offered a viable anti-austerity strategy or b) it was simply
destroyed and replaced by a national democratic socialist party that
could undertake this programme more effectively.
To recover ground
would require a) the re-imposition of party discipline at every level
around a programme that mediated between the party members and the
general public where the party apparat and elected representatives were
subject to the authority of a Leader elected by the members, b) the
intellectal content of the party's programme to be radically upgraded to
rely on only evidence-based solutions to value-driven problems instead of
rhetorical and cultural position-taking c) the trades union movement
either returned to a socialist position or partially sidelined as a
special interest group and d) the liberal internationalist programme
to become secondary to a pragmatic national democratic and redistributive
programme.
None of these changes seem likely. To maintain and
vote for the Party in its current condition is irresponsible. Placing
values to one side, the national interest would not be served by having a
Government of half-baked thinkers with ill-thought out policies and a
propensity to legislate in the direction of thought and language
control, let alone behaviour control. Worse, this Party would have half
its eye on the absurd dream of transforming the European Union into a
socialist paradise and be subject to the whims and fancies of whichever
faction demanded some life-denying ideological policy to maintain a
Parliamentary majority.
So, as Lenin, put it - 'What Is To Be
Done?'. First, when one is in an hole, the first rule is to stop
digging. This mess is not something that ordinary members can possibly
have any control over. There is no sign that the Party Leadership has a
grip on things and can make the necessary changes. Across the Party and
the Labour Movement, the ruling elite are like ferrets in a sack or
large rats fighting over a small cake. There is nothing to be done
within the Party. It is degenerate in the most fundamental sense.
All the ordinary person can do who has the values that should have been
expressed by a strong Labour Party is to stand back and not only let it
implode but hope it implodes quickly so that something can take its
place or that, perhaps, one or other of the 'civil war' wings of the
party can be transformed into something that can represent the
aspirations of the mass of the population while not being led by some
maniacal cuckoo in the nest like the unlamented Tony Blair, the Conan of
the Middle East.
The argument that anything is better than the
Tories does not stand up any more. Idealism is not enough. Politics is
about power and that means the competent control of a powerful and
dangerous State, including the deep state aspects of it. It does not
mean getting office in order to be taken over by the State as happened
under the last Labour Government. Whoever is incompetent at controlling
the State leaves the Deep State to control us. A competent democratic
force that challenges the State is always preferable to an incompetent
one that is the creature of the State. The Tories need to be challenged
by something far more competent than they are, tougher, disciplined,
even brutal in its support for core values of redistribution, democracy,
community and individual freedom, including the freedom to dissent.
The Labour Party has become a waste of the space given to a radical,
progressive, democratic force in this country. It will cease to have my
membership. It will cease to have my support until it deals with the key
issues of organisation and discipline, cultural and identity politics
and values-deriven political education. None of these changes are likely
and so I await something new that can do practical things for our
poorest and most vulnerable, ensure maximum freedom and opportunity for
the majority, maintain our national identity along progressive lines and
control and limit the State and other institutional forces. I look
forward to seeing pigs arrive at Terminal 1 Heathrow ...
My text of my resignation letter to the Party will follow in due course. This farrago was not what I signed up for.