Mar 272013
 

Such is the latent paranoia politics engenders in one that on hearing the news David Miliband was stepping down as MP, I tweeted the following:

Careful! What if this is a Progress plot to focus attention on Ed M? Get rid of D, next on list is E. Then once E has gone, D comes back!!!

If truth be told, I have good memories of Mr Miliband (D).  I once attended, on a very hot London evening, an Intelligence Squared debate in which he participated.  He was very Blair-like, it is true, in his delivery – but his delivery seemed rather more searching and childlike in its desire to get at some truth than Blair ever managed to achieve.  Perhaps I was seeing him earlier on in his trajectory; perhaps Blair was more solidified and fixed by the time I lived under him.  I was, after all, still in Spain until 2003.  And two elections are bound to take their toll on the ability of a top-flight politician to continue in that childlike mode of discovery I, even now, associate with people like Miliband (D).

That Miliband (D) is still on a journey of discovery is, however, made manifest by last night’s news.  As the title to this post says, a charitable turn of events.  The fact that the charity in question is called International Rescue didn’t half bring to the surface a flood of Miss Penelope and Brains jokes.  The fact that an ex-Foreign-Secretary should be taking up a global responsibility in New York doesn’t half make me wonder about succession planning and the role of General Secretary to the United Nations!

Though only idly.  After all, Louise Mensch has also moved to New York …  (There’s competition in such company, I think; a city full to the waterways of the aggressive.)

What’s absolutely true is that the attention lavished last night and this morning on Miliband (D)’s departure from these shores far more than matches the attention lavished (not) on those ordinary Labour Party members and supporters who cut their connections with the Party over the workfare debacle recently.  And perhaps, in such moves, we could inscribe Miliband’s journey also: it’s arguable he’s doing nothing more than following many other political activists of firmly held opinion from the arena of multi-issue political parties into far more satisfying, focussed and pointedly charitable single-issue environments.

What you and you and you and you did last week in relation to your support for Labour, and as a result of attitudes and behaviours you really didn’t approve of, Mr David Miliband has decided to do today in much the same way.  We all, after all, have our markers in the sand.

Is this the beginning of the end of political parties?  It may be.  Fragmentation may inevitably be the pattern from now on in.  On the back of Mr Miliband’s sonorous resignation, others may follow suit; others may even cross the floor of the Commons.  Not a sudden decline; not one visible to its actors; just a slow and steady fall into an uncertain abyss where one’s voters simply begin to ignore one.  As one tweet which flitted past me last night seemed to say: “And why should the David Miliband story affect me exactly?”

A mainstream journalist (either the Telegraph or the Mail) even seemed to suggest that the change of role in question was more a “non-job” than a “dream job”.  I think, perhaps, more than anything else, this shows how complicitly foolish those in the Westminster bubble have become.  If, as I suggest, Miliband is following millions of other human beings out of party political activity, this doesn’t mean he is necessarily abandoning the political process itself.  Governments less and less exert power over how we do stuff.  More and more they are tied up by their unspooling obligations.

It may be that Miliband is as ambitious as always, but has seen that parochial little Britain really just doesn’t shape up any more.

And the future for Labour?  I’ve already said what I think.  And I’ll summarise it all with a final tweet from last night:

Labour’s leadership doesn’t need this or that figure. What it needs is hundreds of thousands of such figures. They’re called members.

Feb 072012
 

I do wonder.  This report today from the Guardian, for example, on the subject of the impact deprived families have on their offsprings’ ability to learn:

More than a quarter of children in the UK are not reaching their potential at school because of poor living conditions and unwell parents, a study has found.

Cameron, meanwhile, frames these families as “troubled” families – a quite supportive, even socialising, way of seeing.  He does, then, clearly have the ability to go to the heart of a matter – and, at the very least, describe it constructively.

I assume this is a facet of his previous experience in marketing.  After all, defining with clarity and a stylish brevity the essence of an idea is part and parcel of such a role.

In that sense, he’s not a non-stick politician but simply an eloquent professional who often knows how to identify what – today – in society is significant.  To paraphrase Chris Dillow on the subject of David Miliband, we may disagree with his analysis and conclusions – but we cannot argue with his ability to identify the key issues of our time.

And I also wonder if it is right to punish such eloquence.  Spain’s long-time Prime Minister Felipe González was always getting political kidney blows for being able to say so little so well – but is eloquence necessarily a sign of a man or woman who doesn’t think?  Surely the ability to reduce to its minimum expression highly complex ideas is the very indicator of a person who has thought rather more than the rest of us about subjects which affect us all.

We should treasure their eloquence – not criticise it.

So when I suggest that David Cameron may occasionally be right, I don’t mean I agree with him.  For one thing, my priorities are quite different.  I want to see the grassroots succeed in everything and everywhere.  My prime mission in life is clearly not to line the pockets of cash cow-generating corporate sponsors.

But, on the other hand, it may be that I am not in tune with vast numbers of people who occupy this ever less green and pleasant land.  Each age may deserve the politicians who rise to its surface.

And our age is the age of superficial authenticity – a social media-driven baring of souls which probably ennobles no one.

Just about sums it up, doesn’t it?

Or does it?

Perhaps we are confusing a weary glibness with eloquence – and a rapacious openness with honesty.  In that sense, the politicians we have might be nothing more than a reflection of a wider society.  And when we criticise their supposed eloquence, we may really be underlining our own inability to listen actively any more.

Soundbites are to the ear what cheesy bites are to the palate.

Food for a party – but not for life.
____________________

Further reading: a fascinating thesis from the Liberal Democratic Voice website yesterday: essentially, it argues that the natural place for all Blairites from now on in is actually within the confines of the junior partner in the present Coalition.

Curious.  But fairly convincingly teased out, all the same.

Feb 042012
 

Chris picks up on David Miliband’s deservedly resonant piece in New Statesman the other day in the following way:

If you ignore the mindless tittle-tattle, David Miliband’s New Statesman article raises a genuine issue: what should be the left’s attitude to the state? He writes:

The weaknesses of the “big society” should not blind us to the policy and political dead end of the “Big State”. The public won’t vote for the prescription that central government is the cure for all ills for the good reason that it isn’t.

As I pointed out in my own post on the subject, David Miliband has done everything since losing the leadership election to deserve our attention – at the very least in articles and interventions such as the one under discussion. 

I have to say there are very few things I now miss about Blairism – but one thing I definitely miss at the moment is that feeling that following trains of thought to unpredictable places had a natural place and right to exist in the Labour Party.  As an example of this, I saw Miliband (D) at an Intelligence Squared event last year – and I have to say whilst not entirely convinced by what he said, I was entranced by how he moved from one point to another.

And we need more of that eloquent intellectualism – not to use it to triangulate our enemies out of existence as in New Labour times (which is why such approaches have such a very bad name in our body politic at present) but, instead, to search out new ways of understanding our relationship to the universal themes of individual freedom, socialisation, survival and support of the strongest and the weakest – as well as the more traditional aspects of modern life which tend to occupy our leaders: economic and political organisation 

In any case, good politics is always more a case of reinterpretation over pure invention.  Blair wasn’t really original – he just gave the impression of being authentic.  And people value that – at least as a starting point.  It helps to build on the past, on previous foundations – something our most recent generations of politicians really haven’t cared to productively contemplate.

So what I do miss Blair for is that sense of authenticity and roundedness.  For that, I really do. 

I also agree with Chris that Miliband (D) should be allowed to be heard – mainly because if he is permitted his voice, the left will be on the road to a recovery of sorts.  Prioritising the bright and breezy generation of ideas over their dusty and technocratic classification is always a good sign.  And right now, we on the left need as many good signs as they can throw our way.

As Chris concludes:

Granted, David’s analysis and solutions here would be rather different from mine. But he is posing a good question. The tragedy is that, in our anti-political political culture, this question will be ignored.

It is up to us, then, to ensure that exactly this must not happen.

Feb 022012
 

There’s an interesting article by David Miliband over at New Statesman at the moment.  You can find it here.

I’m going to resist the temptation to fisk it because I think that – whatever your feelings in relation to his political history – that very same political history provides him with an interesting and relevant set of perspectives for the future of Labour.  And what he writes should really be read in full, because what he says deserves such eloquent attention.

I also think he has behaved remarkably well, at least in public (which is what I can see), since his defeat at the hands of his brother for the Labour leadership – and whilst such a behaviour might not go so far as to make his critics suddenly like him, it should surely be recognised and understood for what it is.

There’s not much of it about in politics at the moment – we should treasure it when we can.

So I’m not going to face him head-on in his arguments because the piece is just that: all of a piece.  Complex, cogent, easy to read – it mirrors the man I saw speaking at an event in London last year.  Yes, in a sense, he is like Blair – but perhaps only in the sense that you know he’ll never be lost for words.

Nor embarrass you with the words he finally chooses.

Except, maybe, when it comes to liberal intervention.

Anyhow, one thing I am going to take issue with is this section near the beginning (the bold is mine):

He makes two sensible claims about central government: that only the central state can perform certain essential tasks (regulation of banking is the example) and that “only the central state can perform certain other tasks fairly” (for example, in setting pension levels). The Tories don’t usually dispute either point.

But these claims are then elevated to be the guiding light for the advance of social democratic values. This is dangerous for a number of reasons. A central state unclear whether its starting point is the entitlements of citizens or the delivery of services is unlikely to achieve either; a central state without the discipline of decentralisation is likely to become bureaucratic and out of touch; a central state that simply aims to do more – with no discussion of who pays for what, never mind who does what – is going to run into huge constraints of affordability and efficiency; a central state that sees itself as the only source of public virtue is going to lead to an impoverished notion of public good; and crucially, more and more problems – from obesity to mental illness – are not amenable to resolution by central government diktat.

The weaknesses of the “big society” should not blind us to the policy and political dead end of the “Big State”. The public won’t vote for the prescription that central government is the cure for all ills for the good reason that it isn’t.

Active government is important beyond the demands of a minimal state. But it will only be effective when it mobilises people, whether as patients or parents or employees or citizens, to make choices and take decisions that reshape their own lives. That is why we are enjoined on our party membership cards to put power as well as wealth and opportunity in the hands of the many, not the few.

And I think, in a perfect world, where economic and political models operated finely, I’d find myself agreeing with the underlying thesis and mindset this section describes.  But I’m afraid, as my life develops and I see how monolithic the real battle out there is, that Miliband (D) has a serious problem with his tendency to fly the wings of intellectual freedom.

As he says of the “Big State”, so we could say the same of unions and political parties – and monolithic behaviours are never positive or desirable.  But where, unfortunately, we could say the same the most is in the case of those deep-pocketed sponsors of right-wing governments (and here I might say whether they’ve been Tory or Labour).  Capitalism itself, what should be a simple tool of financial and economic organisation, where two sides both understand each other as well as share common goals which serve to bring them together productively, has been turned into a violent battlefield of evermore massive entities and institutions – hardly ever aiming these days to serve the “patients or parents or employees or citizens” he describes but, instead, fighting in a rank Darwinian manner to serve themselves of wayward and impoverishing consumer wage packets.

(And I do honestly wonder whether this worldwide tendency to imposing profit-making mindsets on health systems which don’t really need them isn’t a case of big corporations realising their share of the grey-haired generation’s overall spending could drop pretty savagely if most of it were paid in taxes to a welfare state rather than direct to a health provider.)

David, I like your intervention – and, even if it were, don’t see it aimed at criticising your brother’s leadership.  But you should never forget what it’s like to be at the mercy of powerful organisations which have the power and money to lobby for their own benefit (which they will) – and which are, similarly, able to use all the legal tools at their disposal to impose their amoral will (which they do).

After all, you can’t defend the workforces of this world if you aren’t at least half as big as your opponents.  And there are many many companies out there doing things they shouldn’t – and which are much bigger than entire nation states.

The forces that drive us to monolithic mindsets are not unlike the dynamics of civil war.  Unable to trust the opposing side, we gather together and end up communicating only with those exactly like us.

So before you can convince the unions, the ordinary people and the thinkers in Labour’s broad church that the “Big State” should forever be consigned to a proud historical past, you will first need to get them to believe that “Big Capitalism” won’t end up sweeping the floor in an awful and uncontrolled imperious future.

Sort out “Big Capitalism” first, before anything – and, then, in its absence, the “Big State” may just shrivel away …

And if it didn’t, then we’d have absolutely no excuse whatsoever, now would we?

A capitalist’s nightmare?  Or a citizen’s dream?

You tell me.

Dec 042011
 

This is the clearest evidence one can have – if evidence was needed – that capitalism has failed:

Almost two-thirds of people believe the current generation of children will have a lower standard of living than their parents, as concern about the economic crisis hardens into long-term pessimism, a new poll shows.

And I say this because an essential part of capitalism’s dynamics is the belief and confidence its subjects have in the future.  Without these two elements, people do not invest; do not battle with the challenges; do not take risks.  So it is that capitalism is mortally wounded.

The temptation must be very great – as we are always going to be sons and daughters of previous generations – to do an Iraq on capitalism even as it is on its last legs: bomb it to bits (figuratively speaking, that is) and then wait and see what flowers all on its lonesome.

I would, however, prefer to believe we are capable of avoiding getting involved in such a destructive cycle for the second, third or fourth time in a generation and – instead – learn from such experiences to a wider societal benefit.  Two initiatives do make me wonder if other people think the same.  First, this rather idiosyncratic presentation (no web-based context – just an almost automatic download of a .pdf file) of how important the concept of business should be to Labour (more context from Next Left to this project can be found here).  Its Foreword provides sufficient background thus:

Foreword
Chuka Umunna
I welcome this collection, which brings together
many important contributions to the discussion on the new
economy we seek to create, and crucially the role of enterprise
within it.
Our economy faces huge challenges, both in terms of increased
competition from the emerging economies of Asia and
Latin America, but also the fact that it is not working for enough
people in the way it can and should. Because of the government’s
decision to cut spending and raise taxes too far and too fast, our
recovery was choked off well before the crisis in the Eurozone.
Living standards are being squeezed harder than in living
memory, unemployment is at its highest in seventeen years and
the ‘British promise’ – the understanding that each generation
will benefit from better opportunities than the last – is at risk
of being broken.
But underlying this are deeper, structural problems which
urgently need to be addressed. Since 2003 wages for middle
and lower income earners have stagnated while rewards at the
top have grown exponentially and so for many in our society,
pay has not kept up with the rising cost of living. Growth has
become too dependent on a small number of sectors and too
few regions, making us more vulnerable to external shocks.
We need an economy structured to deliver the jobs and growth
of the future; which is focused on sustainable, long-term success
rather than the fast buck; which enables us to complete globally;
and which creates high-skilled, better paid jobs for our workforce.
In addressing and overcoming these challenges, the role of
enterprise is paramount: we are clear that growth must be private
sector led – so we need more people setting up, leading
and working in businesses. Our record here is strong – in our
thirteen years in government, over a million new businesses
were created and the turnover of small and medium sized enterprises
grew by over a third.
But, as this collection reflects, we need to do more to champion
entrepreneurship: those who go into business, turning their
ideas into reality, generating profit and creating employment
in the process, taking pride in their work providing consumers
with greater choice or even a new product or service. These
are the values Labour represents. We do not underestimate
the capacity for enterprise to act as a motor of aspiration and
social mobility, providing a ladder of opportunity and enabling
people to make the most of their ingenuity and talents. As ever,
we are ambitious for British business.
Where we fundamentally disagree with the government’s
approach is that we see the state playing a crucial role in
creating the conditions in which businesses thrive. Where
they see the best government as that which does the least, we
see the capacity for active, intelligent government acting as a
partner, enabler and friend, setting the rules of the game, with
the capacity to shape and even create markets. For example, the
last Labour government set the target for all new homes to be
carbon neutral by 2016 – this helped create whole new markets
in architecture, retrofitting and green design.
Government has a wide range of tools at its disposal
including regulation, procurement, competition policy and
taxation – and must use these to support business, developing
and driving an ambition for the new economy. This means
ensuring that markets are competitive, encouraging innovation,
working with business to drive success and backing business
approaches which invest in the long term and do right by
employees, customers, country, and communities.
Clearly, this requires change on the part of government. We
cannot ignore the debate going on in the business world about
how productive businesses can add value to the bottom line
in the form of profit and do the same for the communities in
which they are located – businesses and their communities are
after all interdependent.
That is why the contributions in this book are so important,
exploring how enterprise can deliver the better outcomes we
need: spurring a return to growth and creating jobs, as well as
addressing the longstanding challenges which face our economy.
I have no doubt that Labour’s Business will help inform
and shape this debate as we move forward.
Chuka Umunna MP
Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills

As I pointed out yesterday:

It’s not time to reinvent politics – for politics simply piggybacks on the prejudices and mindsets of business.  Politics is the mouthpiece – no longer (was it ever?) the agent.

No.  We need to go much further that.

It’s now time to reinvent business itself – for only then will we half a chance of rescuing our scalps.  The root problem is business – and so the solution must also lie there.

Meanwhile, today in the Observer we find David Miliband spot-on, at least in this phrase I pick out of his thoughtful piece:

[...] The point of politics is not to compromise values. It is to understand dynamic forces in economy and society, and inch forward changes in the reality of life according to your values.

I think I can agree with many of the things I have quoted from in this post – or, at least, I can agree with them if I take an entirely textual approach to their content.  If I forget about who has written them and the political baggage they carry along with them – their biography and and their attributed psychology – then, in a sense, the option of valuing with greater equanimity does become possible.

Time to destroy, then, or time to engage?  Do we follow Bush Sr or Bush Jr?

I would hope we could be wise.  If politics were as it should be, I would be able to say it’d be up to you and me to decide. 

But it’s not.

So the question hangs heavily in the air: who will really decide – and, indeed, when?  And how will they choose?  Will they engage or, alternatively, destroy everything that is before them? 

And will they do it for us all – or simply for themselves?

Sep 262011
 

The other day, I said the following:

Take on all those vested interests? Banks, energy companies, supermarkets, insurers, private health suppliers and all? I’m all for it. If you’re really aiming to do that, Ed, you’ve got my vote where you never had it before.

I also added, in safety-parachute mode:

Want us to sign up to this almighty conflagration? Convince us, first, that by burning bridges there’ll be a way out – and back – for those of us who choose to ride alongside you. Do that – and the whole of British politics will be at your feet.

Paul now has this excellent post up on his site:

This week, I heard Ed Milliband and his team mention the words ‘vested interests’ in the sort of tone that suggests they’re against them. There was a bit of muttering about energy companies and supermarkets. There are a range of consumerist, corporate and monopolitstic targets I was hoping to hear added to the list.

I reached for my wallet, so to speak. That’s exactly what I’m looking for in a political party, and I doubt if I’m alone in this. I hate the very concept of ‘zeitgeist’, but if I didn’t, I’d have to concede that Ed had hit a very zeitgeisty note with ‘tackling vested interests’.

Then a shower of apparatchiks appeared on my radar, one after another, recommending a variety of tactical gambits that they imagine will get Labour across various lines.

To ‘regain trust’. To be ‘seen as being on people’s side’. To ‘offer the kind of leadership people are looking for’.

It all focussed upon imagined constituencies. My kremlinology is a bit rusty on this, but I think that the squeezed middle =Brownites, Middle England = Blairites and traditional working class = Blue Labour and so on?

Whatevah! No-one seems to have realised that if you tell everyone that you’re on their side simultaneously today you’ll get found out tomorrow.

It’s true what Paul says.  “Vested interests” made me stir too, in a way nothing has done so over the past sixteen months or so.  Unfortunately, I later discovered – on beginning to read the blessed beast – that it’s also in as old a text as the introduction by Ed Miliband to “The Purple Book”.  That is to say, they’ve been sitting on this narrative for months now, without really banging on about it at all – in the least.

So I loved it just as much as any of you freedom-loving people out there.  But, in the light of Paul’s analysis, I wonder if it’s just been dragged out to keep the activist hordes under control.  A full-throated campaign against “vested interests” could win the next election, no doubt about it.  It helps tie together so many apparently disparate but actually connected elements that its narrative power couldn’t fail to have its impact on us.

On the other hand, there are “vested interests” in the Party itself.  For example, and as was pointed out on Twitter,  David Miliband’s Movement for Change’s sponsors who I believe are the Sainsburys are hardly likely to want such an all-or-nothing dynamic when it might affect their precious long-term business plans.

Oh dear.  The intellectualism of the high-powered brains behind the pick-and-mix triangulation crowd means they still believe they can have everything.  Instead of focussing on one thing that just might work.

And, meanwhile, I am inclined to simply copy and past Paul’s mightily apposite conclusion last night – just so you capture the idea if, that is, you still don’t see where we’re going:

Ed. Do yourself a favour. Start banging on about vested interests all week. Speak of nothing else. For god’s sake, give us an enemy that the public can identify with. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests. Vested interests.

For the real “vested interests” are like God Himself – everywhere and absolutely deniable.  And I, for one, certainly do not intend to be that part of the crowd which chooses, either through cool-headed intellectualism or hot-headed attachment, to reacquire such an instinct for denial.

Jun 282011
 

Back from London, I have quite a lot to report.  One of the posts is going to have to wait till tomorrow but the other can appear today.

Yesterday’s event was organised by Intelligence Squared on behalf of Oxford Analytica (company website here) on the subject of “Ten Years After 9/11: The World Remade”.

Guest speakers included David Miliband “in full intellectual flow”; an ex-diplomat – amongst other things – called Michael Crawford (when I first received the email inviting me to the event, I have to say this name made me look up its organisers and participants), who proceeded to give a highly measured and intelligible analysis of the world since 9/11; an amusing self-styled “coffee-drinking bureaucrat” from the CIA and other acronymic organisations called Philip Mudd, who proceeded to terrify the life out of the girl sitting next to me by calling out her name and listing her publicly available personal details (age, birthplace, family details, inside leg measurement …) – whilst also saying the kind of things that would clearly limit his opportunities for future employment; a delightful China specialist called Rana Mitter, who brought the house down with epigrammatic summaries of where China currently finds itself (“open and illiberal”, if I understood correctly, was one I liked in particular); and finally a Russia specialist who was born in Texas and yet had a refreshingly upbeat take on where Russia is at today – especially when we consider what it was like a decade ago before the Russian people had really done anything to fully exploit their economic potential.

About the format of the event?  What I most liked about it was the fact that each speaker used a distinctive style from the previous and managed to follow on from acts which were all hard to follow in their different ways.  It was like being back at university – in the best sense of the word, that is.  Although most seem to have some kind of retainer-relationship with Oxford Analytica, there wasn’t a corporate approach to talking about the world and how it has developed in the last ten years – quite the opposite, in fact: if one cared to read between the lines, there existed gently-expressed but nevertheless firm disagreement between the different worldviews each speaker chose to expound.  Philip Mudd’s description of the existential nature of the “threat” meetings the security organisations held on a daily basis, both immediately after 9/11 as well as in the succeeding years, was one example where different truly-felt experiences collided in a most genteel but nevertheless distinctive way.  Whilst Sarah Michael’s appeal to the audience to see Russia outwith its traditional stereotypes was most attractive – and surely deserves further attention.

Meanwhile, Nader Mousavizadeh’s chairing of the debate was succinct and respectful – although the timeframe allotted and the number of speakers included meant questions, especially during the first section, were kept to a minimum.

I’d originally been offered the opportunity to interview one of the speakers and had put my name down for the CIA guy – mainly because of the article in the New York Times I’d read and posted about here.  This described how the US government was developing neatly packaged tools to allow those peoples who suffer repression from regimes – that is to say, regimes which close down online communication or use it to identify the opposition – to safely set up their own mobile networks and portable Internet infrastructures.  But when I flagged up the issue to the organisers of the event as something I was interested in finding out more on, I was rather brusquely told all opportunities for interviews had already been taken up.

I can’t say I saw many people doing much interviewing after the event either – perhaps this was simply a miscoordinated mailshot which should have been tailored more effectively.

*

I’d like to finish this piece by dealing with some of what was actually said.  David Miliband headlined the proceedings by describing the last ten years as a decade of disorder.  When he finished speaking, and he did so quite brilliantly (never having seen anyone who can list five points without a PowerPoint presentation – and not forget the fourth), he was quite sharply brought to book for describing the decade as one of disorder: for some in the world, it involved a substantial improvement and cementing of their societies (both Russia and China being significant examples of this, as the later speakers would serve to sketch out).  If one were caring to take a moderately colonialist and Western-centric view of world history, this would fairly be described as a decade of disorder.

But not everyone went to war in Iraq and not everyone suffered the consequences of rising oil prices.

Miliband did make some very ingenious points though, even as by so doing he revealed his own place in the grand scheme of things: he compared the disorder sparked off by what Philip Mudd described as the revolutionaries of Al-Qaeda (revolutionaries, note – not terrorists) with Microsoft’s Encarta encyclopaedia losing out to Wikipedia’s volunteers.  It does of course beg the question, and this is most definitely an elephant in the room not made explicit at this event: does the order that a monopolistic company like Microsoft bring to society, with all its documented sharp business practices, really mean so much to top-flight politicians like Mr Miliband?  Even Philip Mudd quite refreshingly pointed out, whilst I think letting it be understood that he didn’t believe in the sustainability of the current Arab Spring movements, that a true belief in democracy means just that: giving people the opportunity to have a voice with all its consequences.  Surely the lesson of Encarta versus Wikipedia is quite different from the conclusion Mr Miliband drew: despite its “detours” and distractions, an order of a very different kind is beginning to flesh itself out.

And this, in particular, caught my eye.  I think both Miliband and Crawford referenced the phrase “politics of empowerment” – and, again, I think it was Crawford who talked about “ungoverned spaces” versus “misgoverned spaces”.  I really did want to ask the following question – even as I really didn’t dare to let it see the light of day that evening.  Even as Mousavizadeh said several times: “Does anyone have a burning question they’d like to ask the speaker?”

But these kind of events don’t really allow for clarification.  And above all, I am a clarifier – not a grandstander.

So the question went unasked.  But here it is – for you to cogitate and take away with you if you care: if we believe in democracy, if we believe in the politics of empowerment, if we believe in letting people truly decide, what, then, exactly has the last ten years since 9/11 shown us in relation to the development of the Internet – in relation to how people organise, communicate and come together in the second decade of the 21st century?

Is this cyberspace – which has grown in parallel to the trauma of the Al-Qaeda revolution – an “ungoverned space”, a “misgoverned space” or a “differently governed space”?

And, depending on your conclusion, what can – or what should – traditional politicians and politics really learn from all of this?

Jun 122011
 

I’ve just watched “The King’s Speech” on DVD.  The first time I’ve seen the film in fact.  If you haven’t and plan at some time to do so (I can highly recommend it), I defy you not to blub at least once during its beautifully paced 113 minutes.  It does, incidentally, involve an unqualified Antipodean speech therapist who helps out the future King of England to overcome a terror of public speaking.

Back on the Internet, Luke Bozier just tweeted the following phrase – picking up on a piece by Fraser Nelson, writing in the Spectator:

‘The (Labour) party needs a psychiatrist, not a strategist.’. Always love Fraser Nelson. And not just for the accent. http://bit.ly/lvxDyr

There’s a good deal to be said for this.  We might even want to extend it to all organisations and workforces where dysfunctional behaviours are currently causing disrespect and waste.  Of which there are rather too many for comfort.  Not sure it’s going to be possible, mind, in a world where private bureaucracy is burgeoning and health systems worldwide prefer pharmaceuticals to expensive talking therapies.

Talking of which, the recent policy consultation process on Refounding Labour (more from myself on how a session made me feel here and more from Paul on what he thinks should really be taking place here) was already quite prescriptive.  Whilst the answer wasn’t exactly 42, someone had clearly done a lot of work on what they were looking to get out of it.  And it did feel a little as if the questions we were led through were couched in terms of conclusions which had already been more than tentatively arrived at.

So in a way, it may be a tick-box exercise.  In a way, it may be a primitive form of therapy.  In a way, it may seem designed to heal.  In a way, it’s probably destined to fail.  What the Labour Party prizes, above all, is its heroes.  Even more, perhaps, than those on the right amongst us.  It spends so much time searching its soul and saying its analyses are based on solid fact and evidence – but the leap of faith that being a socialist requires is both substantial and honourable at the same time.  As well as – primarily – primal. There’s nothing stronger than the emotion to be experienced when witnessing injustice by those with the power to cover it up.

If I find it difficult to believe in God, it’s perhaps because I’m a socialist.  And it’s not that my being a socialist prevents me in a theological sense from believing in God.  It’s that my being a socialist makes believing in God quite unnecessary for my peace of mind.  In a way, socialism is a faith – just as Roman Catholicism and Protestantism before it.  I have my existential support in my socialist philosophies – even as you have your existential support in your religious ones.

Fraser Nelson may be on the ball when he says that right now Labour needs a psychiatrist more than a strategist.  But perhaps he would be even more accurate if he said we all needed a Father Confessor – essentially to heal our aforementioned communal soul.

Meanwhile, David Miliband is right to declare that:

“I have moved on from the leadership election and so should everyone else. Ed won, I stand fully behind him and so should everyone else. I called for unity last October and I repeat that now. We all have our part to play in supporting Ed and the front bench team to ensure we expose this government for its reckless policies that are damaging the country. The rest is soap opera of which I want no part and the public have no interest.”

He is also right in declaring it a soap opera.  Where he is wrong, however, is in assuming the public has no interest in soap opera.

For it most evidently does.  And “The King’s Speech” is a quite superior example amongst many products these days which serves as living proof of this.

The Spanish have a saying for what we really should be getting up to: “Hablando se entiende la gente.”  Loosely translated, this means: “We understand people by speaking to them.”  Pretty simple really.

Even if there’s not much of it about any more.

So less consultation folks.  And a bit more real and equal dialogue.

How about it?

Sep 292010
 

I wrote a few days ago on the choice that David Miliband had to make between losing further or winning on behalf of us all:

It’s easy to be gracious in victory.  It’s far more difficult to be gracious in defeat.  Your true measure can only be fully understood when you have to experience and express despondency in public.

Today, he indeed does show his measure as both politician and person.

In defeat, I like him so very much more than I did when I felt that he felt he had a God-given right to cruise to victory.  He is a different and better human being for having lost – at least in my (sometimes jaundiced) eyes.

If only we could have heard triumphal leadership acceptance speeches from all the candidates before our final votes were cast.  We might have realised many things we did not understand at the time.

I am sure David Miliband will return.  What’s more, I’m sure he will deserve to.

Meanwhile, a different Ed from the one who cares to dominate the news cheers me up immensely here as focus and real politics, rather than the psychodramas of distraction, return – at least for the man in question – to centre stage.

I’ve said it before and will repeat it here – Ed Balls was the only leadership contender who grew in my estimation as the campaign progressed.

Ed Miliband may grasp his opportunity to impose his cunning intuitions on the rest of us.  Meanwhile, people like Ed Balls will swallow their pride and reservations on behalf of the people who really matter.  His pitch to parliamentary colleagues, but also ourselves, also to the rest of the country, here.

Politics is a dirty business.  Neither you nor I can change that.

And what I fear (so unhappily) is that Ed Miliband – despite knowing this all along – has chosen to keep it from us, has chosen to keep from us the fact that he knew.  His chubby-faced exterior, the sort you’d be happy to see your daughter going out with, hides a fierce recognition that the world is a horrible place, where people with power do unspeakable things to people who suffer from being at the bottom of the pile.

Unfortunately, it is precisely that certainty on behalf of the interests of others that I fear will drive him to hubris.

Perhaps that is always the fate of any politician of worth.

One thought to close tonight’s post.  I do wonder now if David wasn’t our Goliath after all.  I do wonder if Ed used us in some subliminal way and encouraged us to believe that he was the hard-done-by of the two Miliband brothers, when in reality it was the other way round.

I do wonder if, in fact, the more kindly of the two wasn’t the man whose smoothness I feared.  That is to say, what I interpreted as the smoothness and polish of a professional salesman a la Blair was, in reality, the kindness of an elder brother suffering politely – indeed, almost regally – what he knew like no one else to be the insufferable and ruthless triangulations of a younger brother on a hiding-to-nothing.

Ed Miliband has already shown himself able to publicly snub his supporters in the interests of electoral popularity as he puts the unions firmly in their place.

And he’s only on Day 4.

I realise now that David Miliband was nothing like Blair.

My mistake, I’m afraid.

My mistake.
____________________

Further reading: LabourList tonight follows up on the meme of Ed Miliband the Ruthless in this short editorial from Mark Ferguson.

Sep 282010
 

You really do know that David Miliband has lost, don’t you?  Have a look at the following screenshot from the BBC website today for all the evidence you need (click on the image to get the full-size version).

So what do we see?  David Miliband in the headline from his speech yesterday praising his brother Ed.  Then, at the bottom of the image, a dead giveaway which simply reads: “In Full: Miliband’s speech”.  And where does this lead us to?  Well, not to David Miliband’s graceful swansong.  Rather, at least for the media, to the only Miliband speech which now counts.  That is to say, Ed Miliband’s first speech proper as leader of the Labour Party.

Brutal stuff.

On the other hand, so is the “New Generation” turning of the page that forms the underlying thesis of Ed’s taking charge.  I was telling you all the other day that Ed could be to the Labour Party what Pope John XXIII was to the Catholic Church.

In the light of events, in the light of today’s speech by Ed at Party Conference, I feel even more certain of such an assertion.

I was planning to fisk both speeches today, but there is no embeddable sight or sound of David’s to be found anywhere (or, at least, I haven’t been able to find it) – either on YouTube more generally or on the Labour Party’s own YouTube channel in particular.  Nothing, even, as far as I can tell, on LabourList, where you’d expect some trace of David Miliband’s most recent comments to remain in their entirety.

The BBC do have something of it here – but no transcript for sure, no unmediated version of the content.  And I do find this interesting.

Don’t you?

Which is why I suggest you watch it whilst you still have the opportunity.  If this isn’t a latterday example of political airbrushing in the making (whether – I hasten to add – it be conscious or unconscious), I don’t know what is.

Meanwhile, back to Ed himself.  Below his speech in full (original source from the BBC here), with my occasional fisked comments inline.

Conference, I stand here today ready to lead: a new generation now leading Labour.

Be in no doubt.

The new generation of Labour is different. Different attitudes, different ideas, different ways of doing politics.

Today I want to tell you who I am, what I believe and how we are going to do the most important thing we have to do – win back the trust of the country.

We all of us share a deep conviction which brought us into this party and into this hall.

But each of us has our own individual story.

And I want to tell you about mine.

In 1940, my grandfather, with my Dad, climbed onto one of the last boats out of Belgium.

They had to make a heart breaking decision – to leave behind my grandmother and my father’s sister. They spent the war in hiding, in a village sheltered by a brave local farmer. Month after month, year upon year, they lived in fear of the knock at the door.

At the same time, on the other side of Europe, my mother, aged five, had seen Hitler’s army march into Poland.

She spent the war on the run sheltering in a convent and then with a Catholic family that took her in. Her sister, her mother and her.

My love for this country comes from this story. Two young people fled the darkness that had engulfed the Jews across Europe and in Britain they found the light of liberty.

They arrived with nothing. This country gave them everything.

It gave them life and the things that make life worth living: hope, friendship, opportunity and family.

And they took hope and opportunity. They worked hard; they got on.

My Dad learnt English, paid his way moving furniture during the day, and studying at night at technical college. He joined the Navy to fight for our country and afterwards he wanted to go to university. He did.

My Mum built a life here after the war, for all of us. I know nobody more generous, nobody more kind, nobody more loving and nobody more relieved that this is contest is over, than my Mum.

The gift my parents gave to me and David are the things I want for every child in this country. A secure and loving home. Encouragement and the aspiration to succeed.

This first section is effective backstory stuff which serves a double purpose – firstly, to round out the Ed Miliband family background in case the Daily Mails of this world find it impossible to further resist the temptation to make comments about “offspring born out of wedlock”; and secondly, used quite firmly and, in this case, quite shamelessly (for I think it’s clear that Ed is showing himself to be absolutely no novice at the darker arts of political communication), in order to provide him with the moral authority to begin to address that thorny subject of immigration, one of recent Labour’s many examples of communication and policy failure resulting from that triangulatory obsession to be all things to all men and women.

And so it is that Ed continues thus:

In those ways my family was just like every other. But in some ways it was different.

I suppose not everyone has a dad who wrote a book saying he didn’t believe in the Parliamentary road to socialism.

But you know, it wasn’t a cold house.

It was warm, full of the spirit of argument and conviction, the conviction that leads me to stand before you today, the conviction that people of courage and principle can make a huge difference to their world.

What my parents learnt in fear, they passed on to us in an environment of comfort and security.

And there was one more lesson that I learnt.

We do not have to accept the world as we find it. And we have a responsibility to leave our world a better place and never walk by on the other side of injustice.

This underlines the “New Generation” theme, a theme which may chime and resonate far beyond the Labour Party itself.  A theme which contradicts quite fundamentally the desire to include everyone, young and old, in the act of governance.  For – as we will see later on in the speech – Ed Miliband’s vision of politics, whilst encompassing a desire to renew, seems just as pyramidal as Blair’s ever was.

More, as follows:

Freedom and opportunity are precious gifts and the purpose of our politics is to expand them, for all our people.

That faith is not something I chose. It’s not something I learned from books, even from my Dad’s books.

It was something I was born into.

And that is why David and I have devoted our lives to politics.

And it is why I will commit to you here and now. My beliefs will run through everything I do. My beliefs, my values are my anchor and when people try to drag me, as I know they will, it is to that sense of right and wrong, that sense of who I am and what I believe, to which I will always hold.

New politics?  Substitute the word belief with, say, “Christianity” – and this could surely be Blair speaking.

Conference, I am so honoured that you chose me to lead your party and I know you share those values.

And I am proud that every day, day in and day out, in every village, and every town and city in the land, you work to put those values into practice.

Conference, can I thank you for the heroic work you did at the election.

The reason we denied the Conservative Party a majority was because of the incredible work of Labour and trade union members the length and breadth of our country.

From Birmingham Edgbaston to Westminster North and from Edinburgh South to the Vale of Clwyd, it was your dedication, your energy and your determination to fight for the communities you love that beat the Ashcroft millions.

And let me thank everyone, not just Labour Party members, but thousands of ordinary members of the public who drove the BNP out of Barking and Dagenham.

But let’s face facts.

We had a bad result.

We had a very bad result.

And we are out of government.

And let me tell you, there is nothing good about opposition.

Every day out of power, another day when this coalition can wreak damage on our communities, another day when we cannot change our country for the better.

And let us resolve today that this will be a one-term government. That is the purpose of my leadership of this party.

This is pretty damn clear and will provide the future justification for what I fear will repeat recent history as it becomes a short-cut approach to political hierarchy and structure.  Sentences like these will prove a linchpin and validation of what may unhappily happen in the years to come, as the pyramid of power that is a traditional British political party reasserts itself inside Labour.  For if I am right in what I say, the emotional appeal of Miliband (E) will be plenty enough to enthuse his “New Generation” of activists into signing up to a fulsome participation based on nothing more real (certainly nothing more systemic) than a personal trust in the leader.

Ed may not want it that way now, he may be clear about what he would prefer – but, whether consciously or not, he is laying down the ground rules for a capitulation to severely pyramidal politics, when, that is to say, push comes to shove and it’s time to shove the Coalition out of power.

But to achieve that we must go on our own journey.

And that is why the most important word in politics for us is humility.

We need to learn some painful truths about where we went wrong and how we lost touch.

We must not blame the electorate for ending up with a government we don’t like, we should blame ourselves.

We have to understand why people felt they couldn’t support us.

We have to show we understand the problems people face today.

This will require strong leadership. It won’t always be easy. You might not always like what I have to say.

But you’ve elected me leader and lead I will.

See what I mean?  This is the winner asserting his right to rule, his recognition and insistence that he alone commands the dizzy heights of power.  We may interpret this as him needed to show the media he’s his own man – but he’s showing the Party, just as much, the kind of structures he truly believes in.

I truly wonder if David Miliband would have dared to treat his own comrades in the same way.

This country faces some tough choices. And so do we. And we need to change.

You remember. We began as restless and radical. Remember the spirit of 1997, but by the end of our time in office we had lost our way.

The most important lesson of New Labour is this: Every time we made progress we did it by challenging the conventional wisdom.

Think of how we took on the idea that there was a public ownership solution to every problem our society faced.

We changed Clause 4. We were right to do so.

Think of how we emphasised being tough on crime was as important as being tough on the causes of crime. We were right to do so.

Think of how we challenged the impression that we taxed for its own sake and that we were hostile to business. We were right to change.

And think of how we challenged the idea of a male dominated Parliament with All-Women shortlists and made the cause of gender equality central to our government. We were right to do so.

And the reason Tony and Gordon took on conventional wisdom in our party was so they could change the country.

We forget too easily what a radical challenge their ideas were to established ways of thinking about Britain and how they reshaped the centre-ground of politics.

They were reforming, restless and radical.

This restless and radical soundbite is very good -  excellent, in fact.  This is probably the most effective part of the speech.  He apologises for New Labour but recovers the right to use the same discourse – the discourse of flexibility, of pick-and-mix politics.  The discourse, in fact, of a consummate triangulator.  Or, in other words, what every politician has done since the beginning of time: keep all their options open.

The old way of thinking said that economic efficiency would always come at the price of social justice.

With the minimum wage, tax credits, the New Deal, they showed that was wrong.

I am proud that our government lifted hundreds of thousands of children out of poverty, hundreds of thousands of pensioners out of poverty, proud that we created the highest levels of employment in Britain’s history.

The old way of thinking said that public services would always be second-class. But we defied the conventional wisdom.

I come from a generation that suffered school lessons in portacabins and crumbling hospitals. I tell you one thing, for the eighteen years they were in power the Tories did nothing to fix the roof when the sun was shining.

Our legacy is a generation for whom newly built schools and modernised hospitals are an everyday fact of life.

I am proud of the fact that because of what we did, yes we did save the National Health Service in this country.

The old way of thinking said that you couldn’t change attitudes towards gay men and lesbians.

Let me tell you that last month I was privileged to be in this great city, at Pride, to see not just thousands of people marching but thousands of people lining the street in support.

We should be proud that our commitment to equality means we have couples forming civil partnerships across the country and celebrating with t heir family and friends.

The old thinking told us that for 300 years, the choice was either the break up of the United Kingdom or Scotland and Wales run from London.

We should be proud that Labour established the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Assembly. And we should make sure that after next May’s elections we re-elect Carwyn Jones as the First Minister in Wales and we elect Iain Gray as the new First Minister in Scotland.

And I am so so proud that, against all the odds, we helped deliver peace in Northern Ireland. And it will be one of Tony Blair’s great legacies to this country and we owe our gratitude to him.

The old thinking told us that the challenges of the world were too big and our country too small to make a difference.

But thanks to our leadership around the world, development spending is now heading towards our goal, forty million more children are going to school each day, and two hundred million are protected from malaria. And that would never have happened without the leadership of Gordon Brown as Chancellor and then as Prime Minister.

Tony and Gordon had the courage to take on established attitudes and institutions in Britain.

It is that courage that made us such a successful political force.

But our journey must also understand where it went wrong. I tell you, I believe that Britain is fairer and stronger than it was 13 years ago.

But we have to ask, how did a party with such a record lose five million votes between 1997 and 2010?

It didn’t happen by accident.

The hard truth for all of us in this hall is that a party that started out taking on old thinking became the prisoner of its own certainties.

This last phrase – “… the prisoner of its own certainties …” – will surely become one of the most oft-quoted phrases from the entire speech.  Accurate and damning at the same time.  Here, it’s almost as if Ed is telling us: “New Labour was right all along.  What lost us those voters was the fact that it was actually Blair and Brown who deserted New Labour’s original guiding principles.  And what we need to do to regain our popularity is to do what Blair and Brown ended up deciding not to be: that is to say, faithful to the tenets of the truly restless and radical in society.  Faithful to what New Labour always stood for.”

In the light of this thesis, power didn’t exactly corrupt New Labour.  Rather, it simply diluted it.

The world was changing all around us – from global finance to immigration to terrorism – New Labour, a political force founded on its ability to adapt and change lost its ability to do so.

The reason was that we too often bought old, established ways of thinking and over time we just looked more and more like a new establishment.

Let me say to the country:

You saw the worst financial crisis in a generation, and I understand your anger that Labour hadn’t changed the old ways in the City of deregulation.

You wanted your concerns about the impact of immigration on communities to be heard, and I understand your frustration that we didn’t seem to be on your side.

And when you wanted to make it possible for your kids to get on in life, I understand why you felt that we were stuck in old thinking about higher and higher levels of personal debt, including tuition fees.

You saw jobs disappear and economic security undermined, I understand your anger at a Labour government that claimed it could end boom and bust.

And I understand also that the promise of new politics of 1997 came to look incredibly hollow after the scandal of MPs’ expenses. And we came to look like a new establishment in the company we kept, the style of our politics and our remoteness from people.

I stand before you, clear in my task: to once again make Labour a force that takes on established thinking, doesn’t succumb to it, speaks for the majority and shapes the centre ground of politics.

Now it is in the speech when Ed begins to mingle the assertion of his individual authority – a very traditional way of looking at politics (none of the namby-pamby enabling or facilitation processes of modern management systems for Labour politics then) – with a rather empty and unspecific set of references to that “New Generation” I mentioned earlier:

And I tell you this: if we are not this party, nobody will be.

This new generation that leads our party is humble about our past and idealistic about our future.

It is a generation that will always stand up for the mainstream majority.

It is a generation that will fight for the centre ground, not allow it to be dominated or defined by our opponents.

And it is a generation which thirsts for change.

This week we embark on the journey back to power.

It will be a long journey involving hard thinking for our party.

We do not start that journey by claiming we know all the answers now.

We do so by setting a direction of change.

Let me tell you what kind of country I want us to build together:

This generation wants to change our economy so that it works better for working people and doesn’t just serve the needs of the few at the top.

This generation wants to change our society so that it values community and family, not just work, because we understand there is more to life than the bottom line.

This generation wants to change the way government works because it understands the power of the state to change lives but also how frustrating it can be if not reformed.

This generation wants to change our foreign policy so that it’s always based on values, not just alliances.

And this generation knows very profoundly that to change Britain we need a new politics.

Above all, I lead a new generation not bound by the fear or the ghosts of the past.

So, Ed simultaneously acknowledges the other people in the Party who will help him lead us away from the “ghosts of the past” and defines who will have a right to participate in that leadership.  Once again, he talks new political structures but walks very old hierarchical relationships.

As we emerge from the global economic crisis, we face a choice: we can return to business as usual or we can challenge old thinking to build a new economy.

Let me say, I believe strongly that we need to reduce the deficit.

There will be cuts, and there would have been if we had been in government.

Some of them will be painful, and would have been if we were in government.

I won’t oppose every cut the coalition proposes.

This is actually rather brave, honest and wise.  Good stuff.

There will be some things the coalition does that we won’t like as a party but we will have to support.

And come the next election there will be some things they have done that I’ll want to reverse but will not be able to.

I say this because the fiscal credibility we earned before 1997 was hard won and we must win it back by the time of the next general election.

I am serious about reducing our deficit.

But I am also serious about doing it in a way that learns the basic lessons of economics, fairness and history.

We then get a short thumbnail sketch of economics which far more politicians should be prepared to share in public.  They won’t – but then, perhaps, this will only help Ed in his desire to be trusted beyond the Party limits.

Economics teaches us that at a time of recession governments run up deficits.

We were too exposed to financial services as an economy so the impact of the crash on the public finances was deeper on us than on others.

We should take responsibility for not building a more resilient economy.

But what we should not do as a country is make a bad situation worse by embarking on deficit reduction at a pace and in a way that endangers our recovery.

The starting point for a responsible plan is to halve the deficit over four years, but growth is our priority and we must remain vigilant against a downturn.

You see, it’s obvious really, when you cancel thousands of new school buildings at a stroke, it isn’t just bad for our kids, it’s bad for construction companies at a time when their order books are empty.

It’s not responsible, it’s irresponsible.

When you deprive Sheffield Forgemasters of a loan, a loan from which government would be paid back, you deprive Britain of the ability to lead the world in new technology.

It’s not responsible, it’s irresponsible. And we should say so.

And when you reduce your economic policy simply to deficit reduction alone, you leave Britain without a plan for growth, which is what this government has done.

No plan for growth means no credible plan for deficit reduction.

And nor should we reduce the deficit without learning the basic lessons of fairness.

We must protect those on middle and low incomes. They did nothing to cause the crisis but are suffering the consequences.

I say the people who caused the crisis and can afford to do more should do more: with a higher bank levy allowing us to do more to protect the services and entitlements on which families depend.

You see, Mr Cameron.  Ed Miliband is very dangerous.  Essentially because he’s prepared to be responsible and a populist at the same time.  Anyone can grab the headlines with the latter – combining the two will grab the hearts and souls of a nation.

The next bit is brilliant stuff.  Like all good marketing, like all good writing in fact, it shows without telling.  And what it shows us is that the aftermath of the credit crunch needs a spirit not seen here since the end of World War II:

And we should learn the basic lessons of history.

After 1945, we had the biggest debt we have ever had.

That generation did cut the deficit but they had a bigger vision: for our economy and a good society.

True patriotism is about reducing the debt burden we pass on to our kids.

But Mr Cameron, true patriotism is also about building an economy and a society fit for our kids to live in.

Mr Cameron, you were the optimist once but now all you offer is a miserable, pessimistic view of what Britain can achieve. And you hide behind the deficit to justify it. We won’t let you get away with it.

But I have a different ambition, to emerge from the global economic crisis tackling the deficit, but also learning the much deeper lessons that this generation must learn.

It is a huge challenge to change our economy for the future and the same old thinking will lead to the same old results: an economy too dependent on financial services, too many people stuck in low pay and growing inequality.

We need a plan for change. A plan to reform the banks, invest in the industries of the future and support the small businesses and entrepreneurs who are the lifeblood of this economy.

The new generation in the party understands the fundamental New Labour lesson that we must build prosperity as well as redistributing it.

I do just love the way he keeps on linking back into the original New Labour source, don’t you?  I may not approve, mind – but it is so consummately achieved that I can’t help wondering how I really did not perceive his strength at narrative during the leadership campaign itself.

Perhaps because standing as candidate and winning the prize are entirely different situations – allow completely different things to be asserted and effected.

And it also knows that there are huge vested interests and huge barriers to the wealth creators in this country, particularly small businesses and the self-employed.

These must be tackled. I tell you this, I am determined to make Labour the party of enterprise and small business again.

And I want British businesses, large and small, to be able to make the most of the advantages of globalisation.

New Labour was right to be enthusiastic about the opportunities that come in a more connected world: the movement of goods and services, the chance to travel, the new markets for our companies.

But this new generation recognises that we did not do enough to address concerns about globalisation, including migration.

All of us heard it on the doorsteps about immigration. Like the man I met in my constituency who told me he had seen his mates’ wages driven down by the consequences of migration.

If we don’t understand why he would feel angry – and it wasn’t about prejudice – then we are failing to serve those who we are in politics to represent.

I am the son of immigrants. I believe that Britain has benefited economically, culturally, socially from those who came to this country.

I don’t believe either that we can turn back the clock on free movement of labour in Europe. But we should never have pretended it would not have consequences.

Consequences we should have dealt with.

We have to challenge the old thinking that flexible labour markets are always the answer.

Employers should not be allowed to exploit migrant labour in order to undercut wages.

And if we have free movement of labour across Europe we need proper labour standards in our economy, including real protection for agency workers.

So you see.  That backstory stuff at the beginning cleverly lights the fuse.  If I didn’t know the mainstream media better than I do, the headlines tomorrow could read “New Labour leader publicly addresses issue of immigration for first time in history”.  And from that moral high ground Ed shamelessly devises for us.  Speaking as an immigrant about the problems of immigration, Ed has found a way to allow us all to begin to contemplate a workable discourse.

And then we come to the unions, as a force of decency not strife:

And, as every democratic country recognises, it is vital that workers have a voice that speaks for them.

I remember during this campaign I met some school dinner ladies. They had to buy their own uniforms, their shift patterns were being changed at a moment’s notice, frankly conference they were being exploited.

So they looked to their union to help them. They weren’t interested in going on strike, they loved the kids the worked with, they loved their schools. But they wanted someone to help them get basic standards of decency and fairness.

Responsible trade unions are part of a civilised society, every democratic country recognises that.

But all of us in this movement bear a heavy responsibility. We want to win an argument about the danger this coalition government poses to our economy and our society.

To do so we must understand the lessons of our own history too.

We need to win the public to our cause and what we must avoid at all costs is alienating them and adding to the book of historic union failures.

That is why I have no truck, and you should have no truck, with overblown rhetoric about waves of irresponsible strikes.

Yup.  Ed the Populist again.  Perhaps, even, Ed the Merciless.

The public won’t support them. I won’t support them. And you shouldn’t support them either.

But it is not just from trade unions that I want to see responsibility.

This new generation demands responsibility from business too.

During this campaign, I have met some extraordinary people doing amazing service for our country.

I remember a care worker I met in Durham.

She worked hard and with dedication, looking after our mums, dads and grandparents when they couldn’t look after themselves anymore.

She is doing one of the most important jobs in our society, and if it was my mum or dad, I would want anyone who cared for them to be paid a decent wage.

But she was barely paid the minimum wage – and barely a few pence extra for higher skills.

She told me that she thought a fair wage would be £7 an hour because, after all, she would get that for stacking shelves at the local supermarket.

I believe in responsibility in every part of our society.

That’s why I believe in not just a minimum wage but the foundation of our economy in the future must be a living wage too.

And we need a tax system for business that rewards responsibility:

To pay a living wage;

To provide high quality apprenticeships;

And family-friendly employment.

And we need responsibility at the top of society too. The gap between rich and poor does matter. It doesn’t just harm the poor it harms us all.

What does it say about the values of our society, what have we become, that a banker can earn in a day what the care worker earns in a year? It’s wrong, conference.

I say: responsibility in this country shouldn’t just be about what you can get away with.

And that applies to every chief executive of every major company in this country.

And, just as businesses have responsibility to ensure fair pay, so those who can work have a responsibility to do so.

This is one of the hardest issues for our party because all of us know in our communities people who are in genuine need and who worry about the impact of new medical tests, or changes to rules on them.

At the same time, let’s be honest, we also know there are those for whom the benefits system has become a trap.

That is not in their interests or the interests of us a society and we are right when we say it must be challenged.

Reforming our benefits system is not about stereotyping everybody out of work, it’s about transforming their lives.

Real help matched with real responsibility.

That is why on welfare, I will look closely at whatever the government comes forward with: not arbitrary cuts to benefits but a genuine plan to make sure that those in need are protected and that those who can work have the help they need to ensure they do so.

Work is a central part of life. But it is not all that matters.

This needs to be said over and over again.  Even more so, in a Big Society dynamic.  If we are to all contribute more to our own communities, we will need big and small business to be far more flexible in relation to working-patterns and working-hours.

We all care about making a living, but we don’t just care about that.

Here is our generation’s paradox: the biggest ever consumers of goods and services, but a generation that yearns for the things that business cannot provide.

Strong families.

Time with your children.

Green spaces.

Community life

Love and compassion.

I love this Ed.  If I didn’t know better, I’d say you believed in some religion or another.  As it is, you clearly believe in rounded people and aspirations which are not tied – uniquely – to the marketplace. 

New Labour embraced markets in our economy and was right to do so.

But let’s be honest, we became naive about them.

We must never again give the impression that we know the price of everything and the value of nothing.

Love this too.  Though I gather some arch-Blairites do not.  Perhaps arch-Blairites is wrong, though.  Perhaps ultra-technocrats would be better.

We must be on the side of communities who want to save their local post office, not be the people trying to close it.

We must be on the side of people trying to protect their high street from looking like every other high street, not the people who say that’s just the forces of progress.

And we must be on the side of those who are dismayed by the undermining of the local pub with cut-price alcohol from supermarkets.

We must shed old thinking and stand up for those who believe there is more to life than the bottom line.

We stand for these things not because we are social conservatives but because we believe in community, belonging and solidarity.

Again, his innate populism jumps out at you.  What if you are a social conservative, Ed?  More power to your elbow, say I.

And I tell you this: the good life is about the things we do in our community and the time we spend with family.

I feel this so deeply since the birth of my son sixteen months ago.

As we rebuild our economy, we must think how we protect families up and down this country.

Families can’t do the best job if they are stressed out, working 60 or 70 hours a week, can’t be there when the kids get home, doing two or three jobs.

We’ve got to change our culture on working time, not just for the good of families, but because it is through family that we learn right from wrong, develop ambitions for ourselves, and show kindness and respect for others.

When I look at some of the challenges we face as a country – from gangs to teenage pregnancy – it is only a government that stands up for families that are trying their best to bring up their kids that can offer answers.

So as we rebuild our economy we must think about how we protect and nourish the things that matter to families and to family life.

This new generation must also challenge the way we think about the state and what it can achieve.

I believe profoundly that government plays a fantastically important role in creating the good society.

This, then, is going to be Labour’s take on that Tory distraction that is the Big Society:

But our new generation also knows that government can itself become just such a vested interest. That unless reformed, unless accountable, unless responsive, government can impede the good society.

Our new generation, hungry for change, is unwilling to see that happen.

Like millions of people around the country, I went to my local comprehensive. I know the value of a good school, a good teacher.

And I know there are many parents frustrated, with a school that doesn’t suit your child or live up to your hopes.

There are amazing secondary schools in my constituency and amazing teachers and head teachers. But one of them was consistently failing its pupils.

And it pained me as an MP to walk into that school knowing those kids were being consistently let down. Now that school has been taken over, the kids life chances transformed.

That is what good public service reform is all about.

My generation recognises too that government can itself become a vested interest when it comes to civil liberties.

I believe in a society where individual freedom and liberty matter and should never be given away lightly.

The first job of government is the protection of its citizens. As prime minister I would never forget that.

And that means working with all the legitimate means at our disposal to disrupt and destroy terrorist networks.

But we must always remember that British liberties were hard fought and hard won over hundreds of years.

We should always take the greatest care in protecting them.

And too often we seemed casual about them.

Like the idea of locking someone away for 90 days – nearly three months in prison – without charging them with a crime.

Or the broad use of anti-terrorism measures for purposes for which they were not intended.

They just undermined the good things we did like CCTV and DNA testing.

Yes, indeed.  He backtracks on the really daft stuff – but won’t be a liberal pushover.  This is yet another example of old politics dressed up as new.

Protecting the public involves protecting all their freedoms.

I won’t let the Tories or the Liberals take ownership of the British tradition of liberty.

I want our party to reclaim that tradition.

So too in our foreign policy the new generation must challenge old thinking.

We are the generation that came of age at the end of the Cold War.

The generation that was taught that the end of history had arrived and then saw 9/11 shatter that illusion.

And we are the generation that recognises that we belong to a global community: we can’t insulate ourselves from the world’s problems.

For that reason, right now this country has troops engaged in Afghanistan.

They represent the very best of our country.

They and their families are making enormous sacrifices on our behalf and we should today acknowledge their service and their sacrifice.

Our troops are there to stabilise the country and enable a political settlement to be reached, as David said yesterday, so that Afghanistan can be stable and we can be safe.

I will work in a bi-partisan way with the government to both support our mission and ensure Afghanistan is not a war without end.

But just as I support the mission in Afghanistan as a necessary response to terrorism, I’ve got to be honest with you about the lessons of Iraq.

This needed to be said.  This will convince many people who left Labour to, at least, contemplate voting again for what they had always considered their natural home.  This is an important statement.

David would never have said this.

David would have been a prisoner of those “ghosts of the past” his brother referred to earlier in this speech.

Iraq was an issue that divided our party and our country. Many sincerely believed that the world faced a real threat. I criticise nobody faced with making the toughest of decisions and I honour our troops who fought and died there.

But I do believe that we were wrong. Wrong to take Britain to war and we need to be honest about that.

Wrong because that war was not a last resort, because we did not build sufficient alliances and because we undermined the United Nations.

America has drawn a line under Iraq and so must we.

Our alliance with America is incredibly important to us but we must always remember that our values must shape the alliances that we form and any military action that we take.

So many of the world’s problems need functioning international institutions. The days in which any country could achieve their goals on their own are over.

There can be no solution to the conflicts of the Middle East without international support, providing pressure where it is needed, and pressure where it is right to do so.

And let me say this, as Israel ends the moratorium on settlement building, I will always defend the right of Israel to exist in peace and security. But Israel must accept and recognise in its actions the Palestinian right to statehood.

That is why the attack on the Gaza flotilla was so wrong.

And that is why the Gaza blockade must be lifted and we must strain every sinew to work to make that happen.

The government must step up and work with our partners in Europe and around the world to help bring a just and lasting peace to the Middle East.

But to achieve all these things – a different economy, a different society and reform of the state, changes in our foreign policy – we must change our politics too.

Let’s be honest, politics isn’t working.

People have lost faith in politicians and politics.

And trust is gone.

Politics is basically broken.

Its practice, its reputation and its institutions.

I’m in it and even I sometimes find it depressing.

This generation has a chance and a huge responsibility to change our politics. We must seize it and meet the challenge.

So we need to reform our House of Commons and I support changing our voting system and will vote yes in the referendum on AV.

Yes, we need to finally elect the House of Lords after talking about it for a hundred years.

Yes, we need more decisions to be made locally, with local democracy free of the constraints we have placed on it in the past and free of an attitude which has looked down its nose at the work that local government does.

And I want to congratulate all our local councillors and tell you: I will be shoulder to shoulder with you at next May’s local elections, which must mean victory for Labour up and down this country.

And the following year, we will be proud not only of the Olympics in London, but proud too to see them presided over by the next mayor of London, Ken Livingstone.

And let me also congratulate Oona King on the campaign that she fought for the London election.

Let’s be honest, changing our institutions won’t be enough to restore trust on its own.

Look, in the end, it’s politicians who have to change.

So it comes back to individuals – just as much as the system.  I do like how it sounds, but I have to say my brain tells me you’re on a hiding-to-nothing.  You can change systems pretty quickly, pretty easily as a general rule.  You can’t, however, change people’s behaviours and attitudes.  That takes much longer.

I simply don’t think it will work.  Either Ed is being naive here or he is telling us what he thinks we want to  hear.  I have to say I don’t know which I would prefer to be the case, which I fear the most as an eventuality and truth.

This generation must reject the old ways of doing politics. And must speak to the issues our generation knows it must confront.

The focus groups will tell you that there’s no votes in green issues.

Maybe not.

But taking the difficult steps to protect our planet for future generations is the greatest challenge our generation faces.

When I think about my son, in 20 years time he will be asking me whether I was part of the last generation not to get climate change or the first generation to get it.

And climate change, just like the aging society, can’t be tackled by the politics we have.

They don’t lend them selves to the politics of now: instant results, instant votes, instant popularity, X-factor politics.

So we can’t be imprisoned by the focus groups.

Politics has to be about leadership or it is about nothing.

You see?  A clearer definition and attachment to pyramidal politics you could not have.

The next piece is another example of how brave Ed can (already) be.  He also, I think, captures the spirit of the time.  We might not like what the Coalition is doing to our country – but Coalition government is what the public asked for.  And conversational politics is what we all need right now:

I also know something else. Wisdom is not the preserve of any one party. Some of the political figures in history who I admire most are Keynes, Lloyd George, Beveridge, who were not members of the Labour Party.

Frankly, the political establishment too often conducts debate in a way that insults the intelligence of the public.

We must change this for the good of the country.

I will be a responsible Leader of the Opposition.

What does that mean?

When I disagree with the government, as on the deficit, I will say so loud and clear and I will take the argument to them.

But when Ken Clarke says we need to look at short sentences in prison because of high re-offending rates, I’m not going to say he’s soft on crime.

When Theresa May says we should review stop and search laws to prevent excessive use of state power, I’m not going to say she is soft on terrorism.

He he he.  Brilliantly traditional knockabout stuff.  Even as he says he’s not going to be knockabout.  Massive win here!  (Even though I don’t approve of such an approach …)

I tell you this conference, our generation must find a new way of conducting politics.

And that brings me to some of the names I’ve been called…

Wallace out of Wallace and Gromit… I gather some people can see the resemblance.

Forrest Gump… Not so much, I think.

And what about Red Ed?

Come off it.

Let’s start to have a grown-up debate in this country about who we are and where we want to go and what kind of country we want to build.

A few days ago our contest came to an end and now the real contest has begun.

I relish the chance to take on David Cameron.

We may be of a similar age, but in my values and ideals I am of a different and new generation.

The new generation is not simply defined by age, but by attitudes and ideals.

And there is a defining difference between us and David Cameron – and that is optimism.

We are the heirs to an extraordinary tradition, to great leaders who were above all the optimists of history.

The optimism of 1945 which built the National Health Service and the welfare state.

The optimism of Harold Wilson and the white heat of technology and the great social reforms of that government.

The optimism of Tony and Gordon who took on the established thinking and reshaped our country.

We are the optimists in politics today.

So, let’s be humble about our past.

Let’s understand the need to change.

Let’s inspire people with our vision of the good society.

Let the message go out, a new generation has taken charge of Labour.

Optimistic about our country.

Optimistic about our world.

Optimistic about the power of politics.

We are the optimists and together we will change Britain.

So then.  What do we have?  All in all, a speech where Ed Miliband finally throws caution to the winds as he carefully couches his language in the terms of those darker arts of communication I mentioned earlier: yes, I repeat – those darker arts.   This is the leader we needed if what we wanted to do was take the next generation by the scruff of the neck.

Without, that is, giving up on the traditional political arts of fudge and obfuscation.

Mr Miliband (E) is a very very clever man indeed.

I severely underestimated him.

I don’t think I was the only one.  Leastwise, I hope I wasn’t.  I wouldn’t like to be the only fool on the block.

This is a change-maker in the making.  A man with a sense of destiny.  A man not only for his time but – also perhaps – a man able to make, entirely in his own image, the time he was made for.

This is not exactly a new politics.  This is more an old politics renewed.  Not quite the same thing I grant you – but, I suppose, for the moment, for those who feel abandoned by the Coalition even as it talks of consultation, it will more than happily suffice.

Sep 252010
 

It’s easy to be gracious in victory.  It’s far more difficult to be gracious in defeat.  Your true measure can only be fully understood when you have to experience and express despondency in public.

David Miliband may wish to retreat from what will feel like the most frustrating of moments.  A minimal difference has meant that a once-in-a-lifetime prize has been lost to – of all people – a younger brother.

But it is now in David Miliband’s hands to do far more for the Labour Party than his brother ever could.  In that defeat I speak of lies an opportunity to forge a different politics.  A different politics his younger brother asks for but cannot deliver by himself.

David Miliband has acquired tremendous political and human capital.  It is now his choice entirely.  It is now up to him. 

He may heed the call or not.

And whether he does or not will not ultimately alter the matter a single jot – for either way, whatever he decides to do in the end, we will inevitably have his true measure as both human being and politician.

Sep 122010
 

“All good leaders follow the led!”  Yes.  An oxymoron of a phrase if there ever was one.  But I realise, now, that I have my touchstone for the Labour leadership campaign.

There seem to be a number of rather unpleasant comments floating around at the moment, which – if true – insult us all.  Forrest Gump is a story of notable triumph over considerable adversity.

None of us should care to use the object of such a tale, however fictional it may be, to smear another’s character.

By doing so, more than anything else, we uncover our own prejudices. Prejudices which revolve around the relative virtues of individuals: in both their particular qualities and their innate usefulness to society.

A sad day in the leadership campaign, I have to say.

Meanwhile, David Miliband’s team interprets the future from a concept of people management located firmly in the past.  Unable to perceive the sea change that will rock British politics over the next few years, it is clear that he and his advisers can only construct themselves in terms of their opposition, and how they choose to currently run things.

Essentially, in exactly the same way as the large companies which sponsor them.

On the other hand, I find myself looking for a good leader, a responsive leader, a manager and facilitator rolled into one: that is to say, a leader who knows how to follow the led.

Which leads me to my final score.  Ed Balls first choice.  Andy Burnham second.  And Ed Miliband in third position will do me just fine.

But let it be understood I was only going to preference the first two choices until today’s childish news of these kindergarten slurs.

In fact, we might say “Bad Day At Red Rock” all round, Mr Miliband (D).  I mean if you’re that prepared to threaten us so we feel obliged to follow you before you’re duly anointed, just think how you might act after the event itself.

I now shudder to think.

Sep 082010
 

I’m just getting a tad fed up with the Murdochs.  They know how to make lots of money in a highly competitive industry such as newspapers – which is all to their credit.  But knowing how to edit reality doesn’t give you an automatic right to participate undemocratically in our due democratic processes.

You can tell I’m getting mightily disgruntled with our blessed and supposedly prophylactic Fourth Estate.

So what has provoked my little rant this morning?  Well.  This story in the Guardian last night, which seems to indicate that Miliband (D) will be supping with the kingmakers, whilst his brother Ed will get a less lavish treatment from the same organisation:

David Miliband has still not decided whether to attend because his violinist wife Louise Shackelton is playing that night. But a source said it was right for Miliband to sup with Murdoch: “That is what you do when you are trying to persuade people that Labour is a strong and effective opposition party.”

Ed is not being left out. He is to have lunch next Wednesday with Dominic Mohan, editor of the Sun, and possibly Brooks.

Anointed heirs to Blair?  Or, perhaps more importantly, to Cameron?

It does make me wonder if the real reason Cameron fears Miliband (D) is not so much because he could win the next general election but, rather, because he might successfully be able to woo and win over Murdoch.

I am so glad I still haven’t voted in the Labour leadership election.  I strongly suggest, if you haven’t yet yourself, that you leave it to the very last moment.

Only the Lord knows what might happen between now and then.

Remember, I’ve still got five points I could still choose to reassign.

In the light of such stories as the above, I might just jolly well decide to change the ground rules after all!

Sep 042010
 

I suppose, in life, this question has many interpretations.  Life is a journey and – as such – can afford itself certain luxuries.  We can allow ourselves to get things wrong more than once.  Maybe – even – over and over again.

But politics isn’t like life.  It isn’t even a simulacrum.

Politics is a race to earn the right to short-circuit half a nation’s rights by short-cutting the route to the rights of the other half.  Or at least that’s how it seems to always play in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.  It appears that we can only contemplate the tribalism of the House of Commons writ large.  Two sides to a debating chamber – those who are in and can act and those who are out and must gape. 

Occasionally, that is to say, once in a generally very blue moon, when a Tony Blair comes along and raises the communication bar to such an extent that we verily yearn for their bedside manner, for one glorious sequence of moments we believe these rigid moulds of conceptual concrete can be shed and properly broken.  But our hopes are always destined to be dashed.

In reality, the bedside manner we learn to crave after is too often based on the conclusions extracted from hard drives full of expensive data which political scientists are paid to arrive at.

And the communication bar that is so professionally raised is based more on the ability to sell a human relationship than live a human relationship.

Tonight, the Observer publishes an awful editorial on their choice for Labour leader, which essentially confirms the dreadful state of British politics.  You can read it in full here.

It is a classic example of audience segmentation at its worst and is driven by a desire to square so many circles that the word triangulation seems to contain far to few angles to properly describe its tedious sitting-on-the-fence approach to political commitment.

They got it wrong with the Lib Dems.  They will get it wrong again with David Miliband.

The last paragraph simply reeks of the self-congratulatory and patronising prose of those who grew up in a previous century:

The Labour party would be wise to choose a leader who has the intellectual agility and political experience to meet that threat. The combined skills of the Miliband brothers, working in concert, will be essential. For the top job, David Miliband is the better candidate.

This is a corporate understanding of what modern politics must mean like no other newspaper in the land could understand it.  This is the conditional heartless dynamic of a philosophy of human interaction where everything has its price and no one is exempt.

I miss my Manchester Grauniad so dreadfully tonight.

The Left has lost a great defender of its soul.

Crap really, I’m afraid is all I can say.

And a great disservice to Mr Miliband (D). 

Sep 022010
 

I received today, like many others, an email from David Miliband.  I thought with your permission I’d reproduce it in full below, with comments inline that have occurred to me.  Before I do so, let me first explain that yesterday was what I have termed “capitulation day” for me.  It was the first time that I saw the Labour leadership candidates speak as candidates in front of cameras.  Up to that point, I had limited myself to reading their speeches and evaluating public reaction via Twitter, online papers and other media of a non-audiovisual nature.  As a result, this was my impression – sadly, but given the medium hardly surprisingly, superficial:

All I can say is that David Miliband’s eloquence worries me, Ed Balls’ confidence bemuses me, Diane Abbott’s purity puzzles me and Ed Miliband’s youth makes me want to ruffle his head of hair as I do my eldest son’s quite frequently.

Meanwhile, Andy Burnham seems kindly enough and makes me feel he’d be pretty good as my local MP.

That, however, is the problem of allowing oneself to see politicians through the eyes of the television camera.  A terrible error of judgement I managed to avoid committing until today.

So.  Back to Mr (D) Miliband.  Here, without further preamble, is the email I mention above – with, as promised, my comments inline:

Dear Miljenko,

I respect both Tony and Gordon deeply. But their time has passed. Their names do not appear on the leadership ballots. And now we need to stop their achievements being sidelined and their failings holding us back.

I have to say that this opening paragraph is brilliant.  But, as already observed, such eloquence is also evidence of a highly developed ability to easily square circles – ie to synthesise and potentially triangulate in the best traditions of New Labour.  Something you will already appreciate does not necessarily enthuse me.

The email then continues as follows:

I’m sick and tired of the caricature that this leadership election is a choice between rejecting or retaining New Labour. It does a disservice to all of the candidates and, even worse, a disservice to the thousands of members who’ve been participating in this contest over the last few months and working hard for years.

This is fair enough – and well put.

To those trying to trash our past and those trying to recreate it, I say enough is enough, it is time to move on.

Indeed.

I joined the Labour Party back in 1983 because I believed then, as I do now, that we are stronger when we stand together. And that has never been truer than when applied to our Party.

I believe that this election is about pulling together all the talents of our Party. It’s about teamwork, mutual respect – and a rejection of the tired old Westminster games of closed door briefings, posturing, attack and rebuttal. I want to change the way we do politics.

This is the right message – but the process currently being employed which forces us to elect a leader rather than a leadership team, a process no one seems to care to question or reject, will not allow anyone, however eloquent they may be, to change the reality on the ground.  This is pyramid politics of a structurally pervasive nature which those who’ve known nothing else will never contemplate dismantling.

And that includes you, Mr (D) Miliband.

And then, to my surprise, as I read with eyes half-closed, I come to a line which makes me sit up and almost beg.

Because I want to lead a government not a gang, a movement not a machine, where honest debate can be a source of strength, not a sign of weakness.

This phrase is the veritable star of the piece.  Halfway down the email, I am suddenly entranced.

And we do this for a simple goal – because we want Labour to be the Party that enables hard working people to achieve their aspirations.

That means building a new economy – to drive down unemployment right across Britain. It means ensuring work pays with a living wage. It requires tackling the too wide gap in life chances.

In politics, moments matter. So as your ballot papers land on your doorstep in the next few days, I humbly ask for your vote for Leader of our Party.

If you’re planning to vote for me as your first preference or second preference please let me know by clicking here

Or if you’re still undecided please click here and a member of my team will be in touch

Together we can cast the old play book aside – we can once again reflect the lives, the communities and the best hopes of the British people.

The first 100 days of the Coalition Government has shown their creed – and made our task all the more urgent. There are millions of people who need Labour to win again to deliver them a fair chance in life. And I will not let them down.

I am ready to lead. But at this crucial moment I need your support to make the Labour Party the change Britain needs.

Please vote for me as your first preference.

Thank you,

David Miliband

So let me repeat that again and hold it close to me as my touchstone:

[...] I want to lead a government not a gang, a movement not a machine, where honest debate can be a source of strength, not a sign of weakness.

Can I then trust him to deliver?

Do I really want to vote for another pyramid?

Should I really contemplate another hierarchy which might, as it drives my leader evermore distant, one day provoke a tired Mr (D) Miliband into first forgetting and then finally reneging on that trust I so generously deposited in him?

And all because the shackles of democracy might absurdly prevent the cleverest amongst us from ruling only by virtue of their intelligence.

Will I one day find myself angrily reading another set of memoirs where a servant of the state serves himself of the state?

Oh yes.  My dearest Mulder.  I know where you are coming from.  I do so want to believe. I just don’t want to have to trust.

Show me how.

Someone.

Please.

Jun 122010
 

Here’s Andy Burnham’s pitch to Labour Party members, which – to my surprise, of the three I think I’ve received to date – is the one I find most chimes with my current mood.  Comments inline.

Dear Miljenko,

I will always be proud of what our Labour Government achieved. But, now, Labour needs to rebuild. Too many people have lost sight of who we are and what we stand for.

To come back stronger, we need an honest debate about the last 16 years. We must bring the wider Labour family back together. Then, we will be ready to set out for this century an inspiring Labour mission that is both true to our roots and speaks directly to the voters that we need to win back.

This idea of an honest debate about the last sixteen years is absolutely spot on.  Paul at Never Trust a Hippy is coming to similar conclusions in a slightly more focussed context here.

This is what I mean by Reconnecting Labour. I have a strong sense of what we need to do and I believe I can give Labour what it needs:

* a Leader that people everywhere can identify with
* a Leader who can put the heart and passion back into our Party
* a Leader who offers a real contrast to the Cabinet of millionaires that now run our country

This last point may be populist – but Burnham is no demagogue.  The country is now being run by a cabinet of millionaires.

I come from an ordinary family and am proud to represent my home area in Parliament. My feet are firmly on the ground and I’ve never forgotten where I come from. This is why I can give a real voice to the millions of families who fear a Tory Government cutting without compassion, leaving them with no breadwinner or taking away hope from their children.

This goes to the heart of the issue to hand.  Cutting without compassion is what we will get if we allow a government run by high-level decision-makers used to understanding the world through executive summaries to control our futures.

We may not have much choice, of course.  This government may be locked into power for the next five years.  But at least let us ensure the reasons behind our suffering remain clear and visible for all to see and understand.

But I’ve also got the right experience to lead, having done some of the hardest jobs in government, including Chief Secretary to the Treasury. It was a huge privilege to serve as Labour’s Health Secretary and my proudest moment in politics was to bring forward the NHS Constitution which secures our Party’s finest achievement for this century.

But there is much more I want to do. My own life experience has shown me that we still live in a very uneven country, where children without connections find it hard to get on and where life chances are determined by the postcode of the bed you are born in. We still live in a country where families on low to middle incomes often find the odds stacked against them. And we still live in a country where older people live in fear of the costs of care.

The second paragraph again describes realities as seen by foot soldiers.  Yet it is coupled with the first which indicates Burnham would be no procedural pushover; that is to say, he would not be lost at sea when dealing with the buffeting storms, the inertias, of civil service machinations and mandarins.

Labour will reconnect with people by bringing forward inspiring ideas to meet the challenges of a new century that are in the best traditions of our Party. That is why I will continue to argue for a National Care Service – free at the point of use – to give older people peace of mind.

My mission is always to break down elites wherever they exist – and that means looking at how we run our own Party too. For too long, we’ve taken members for granted. We need to listen more. Under my leadership the party, you the members – our MPs, MEPs, MSPs, AMs and councillors – together with the trade unions and affiliates will all play as one team. No more squabbling and turf wars. At times of crisis in the last Parliament, I always put loyalty to our Party first.

This statement is weaker – elites grow up partly, but quite often, because too many people put loyalty to the organisation they belong to before they do to the logic, rationales and realities of a situation.  Burnham had me in his pocket up to this point – but then sort of lost me in a sudden New Labour flurry of command and control-ism.

It is because I have never had any time for factional politics that I can unify our movement.

Yes.  Quite.  We can all agree on that.  But – in reality – how can this be achieved?  Unification around the lowest common denominator or a healthy level of dissonance which leads to true renewal?

And it is by pulling together that we will expose this Government and present the British people with a credible, principled, and more visionary alternative – a unifying force for all those people who want to live in a country with a fairer spread of health, wealth and life chances.

I do not stand for the leadership lightly. I have never had anything handed to me on a plate and have worked my way up from my local branch to the Cabinet table. I now stand to lead the Party I love and have served at every level for 25 years because Reconnecting Labour is my life’s passion not a slogan.

Yours,

Andy

Anyhow, and even despite my reservations expressed above, this gently flawed pitch from Andy Burnham has allowed him to leap up my list – and quite curiously sort of made me wonder if we really do need the telegenic Milibands to rule the absolute heights of the political roost after all.