The British media is focused on
Jeremy Corbyn, the radical outsider who, according to opinion polls, might win
the Labour Party’s leadership vote. That vote is in about seven weeks’ time, so
don’t hold your breath. But it is worth making some comments on what this
reveals about British politics.
Most of the Labour leadership
contenders make Ed Miliband look like a charismatic guru who could inspire
followers to walk over burning coals and not feel a thing. By comparison,
Corbyn is an exception, at least in having a personality and some political
beliefs. I would only point out that his political beliefs have not prevented
him from remaining a Labour Party Member of Parliament for more than thirty
years. Just consider what that means. So many years and so many crimes, either
committed by, or supported by, the party to which you belong. Was the Labour
Government’s interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq weird anomalies – against
which a critical voice could build an effective opposition? Or would history
judge instead that Labour has always supported British imperialism’s interests
and that dissident voices reflected naivety at best?
However, Corbyn’s dissident beliefs on Iraq and Palestine, among
other things, are not the basis of his support, either in his London
constituency or among ordinary Labour party members in this leadership contest.
Instead, that support comes from his anti-austerity stance. Yet while his
inner-City constituency might support Corbyn’s position on opposing cuts in
welfare payments, the rest of the UK does not. Against his stance, one has to
consider why the other Labour leadership contenders basically support the
Conservative government on the need to slash welfare payments, something summed
up by the recommendation of Harriet Harman, acting Labour leader, to abstain in
the recent Parliamentary vote on welfare cuts. The Conservative government’s
proposals reflected not just a Conservative prejudice, but also a view that
they would go down well with their supporters and others. Recall that, in the
May 2015 UK general election, close to 50% of the British electorate voted
either for the Conservatives (36.9%) or for UKIP (12.6%).
This is the substance of the
horror expressed in the news media, by Tony Blair and others who are shocked by
Corbyn’s rise to prominence in the polls. A vote for Corbyn as Labour
leader will make Labour even more unelectable! It is not a question of his
anti-New Labour beard, or even his opinion that the government should discuss
with Hamas and Hezbollah. The key point is that he has failed to reflect in his
political stance the fundamental conservatism of the British electorate.
It will take an eruption some
years in the making even to begin to alter the scene. Perhaps that will come
when this Conservative government eventually encounters its own ‘Poll Tax’
moment, a wall that Thatcher hit after believing that British politics was at
her command. But, at close to the peak of her power, even she could not make
her favourite adviser, Alan Walters, like Caligula’s horse, a consul and instead lost Nigel Lawson, her once-feted Chancellor. This
miscreant group of slimeballs has less ability. It is full of low-grade
chancers, not least Boris ‘water cannon’ Johnson, so it could unwittingly
contrive to generate protest from the UK populace. However, personally, I do
not bet on that eventuality making any real difference.
Tony Norfield, 25 July 2015
(some small amendments to the text on 31 July)
(some small amendments to the text on 31 July)