PERHAPS AN ANTI-LABOUR SENTIMENT IS NO SURPRISE COMING FROM AN ANARCHIST OPINION
COLUMN, BUT MY ATHEISM, THIS SHOWER OF SPINELESS REJECTS FROM CENTRIST CENTRAL
CASTING HAVE HAD NO COMPUNCTION AT ALL IN SUCKING UP TO THE NEWLY-INSTALLED
IMPERIAL ORANGE.
~ Rob Ray ~
After a furtive half-minute in a back room tickling Trump’s earhole last week
Sir Prime Minister Keir is smoothing his hair out for an in-person conversation
on Thursday, at which he seems to hope that the so-called special relationship
can be rekindled.
For a party that prides itself on not being the Tories (little else can be said
of their principles) there certainly seems to have been a rush to be as much
like the Maga Republicans as possible recently. Just this month there’s been
Rachel Reeves doing her best impression of a poundshop Musk by announcing (yet
another) audit of regulators aimed at “removing red tape” – including on arms
sales. Even the previously vaunted AI safety ideal is on the chopping block.
Over at the Home Office meanwhile it’s time for another round of the “how harsh
can we be to migrants” show as an effort is made to deny citizenship to refugees
arriving by “dangerous routes.” You might ask how refugees, who cannot claim
asylum without being here but aren’t allowed visas, might arrive without taking
a dangerous route. Yes, quite.
Labour’s disinterest in repealing the Tories’ anti-protest laws has been covered
in this column before, but its insistence on fighting the legal case for keeping
climate and Gaza protesters in jail for as long as possible during a prison
crisis has been particularly cruel.
And most damning of all is the use of upcoming welfare cuts to fund increased
defence spending – a measure tailored specifically to appeal to the whims of the
US president, and useless for any other consideration. Billions of pounds that
could have gone to saving lives in Britain, destined to adorn a balance sheet
when bragging at a G8 dinner.
Hardly surprising, in this atmosphere, is the disinterment of Blue Labour, a
monumentally thick-headed idea in its first 2010s incarnation and a worse one
now, trying the same “chase the rabbit down the hole” tactics that gave Reform
its big break in the first place.
And yet all of this, the “hey look we’re like you” of audits and migrant
bashing, the mealy-mouthing around topics like Gaza and Ukraine (where just days
prior there had been sabre-rattling bellicosity towards Putin and promises of a
100-year partnership), the selling of whatever minimal principle still remained
in hopes of being “the adult in the room” with Donnie are as nought. The US does
not care whether Labour is pre-emptively grovelling, and Trump will humiliate
his poodle regardless.
It’s perhaps the most numbingly pathetic part of this “strategy” for Reform
shoe-stealing and Trump placating that it doesn’t even work on its own terms.
People who have turned to Reform may be self-defeating, many or most may be
bigots, or even willing dupes. But this isn’t the same thing as being stupid.
Farage is a grifter, but he’s been banging his drum for decades. His politics
are consistent. Labour on the other hand … everyone knows this lot. Their
policies are weathervane. Making a big song and dance of performative cruelty
only pushes the boundaries of what’s acceptable, or even desirable, in the body
politic.
And Trump will simply tell Starmer what to do with menaces, sounding vaguely
magnanimous about it if Labour sucks up hard enough.
This is looking likely to be party politics for the next four years. Labour
chasing Reform domestically, and Trump on the world stage. Which is a departure
from what was being suggested by liberals and even much of the left as we
entered the new government last year, that we’d at least be spared more Tory
mess.
Turns out the anarchists were right, and we’re getting largely the same Tory
mess. Dogend neoliberalism washed down with a slug of watery Faragism.
While centrists do what they were always going to, there has been at least some
acceptance on the left, at long last, that hopes of an electoral route for
progressive reform through Labour are now dead. And inevitably there has been
recent talk, on the left, of starting a new party, or of trying to capture the
Greens.
Either would be a waste of time.
The problem is not that we lack a party, it’s that any left party would lack a
constituency. Labour gets away with this stuff because there’s no counter power
to scare them out of it. They had election results in 2017 and 2019 showcasing
this very fact, in which the public, offered a social democratic model by Corbyn
and McDonnell, looked at it and said “nah, not plausible.”
And of course it wasn’t. The left Labour machine was almost solely electoral, it
had no economic muscle in the absence of a serious trade union or social
movement and was getting its arse kicked by the media even before putting a foot
in Downing Street. The public was correct to be sceptical and will continue to
be so until we, collectively, have something of substance to offer.
And that doesn’t start in Parliament.
For those of us who give a damn, the next four years should not involve worrying
about what’s in the polls. Our concern should be for building the networks and
community resilience that we failed to build ten years ago. Overtly and
constructively fostering cultures of solidarity to reverse the alienation which
has produced so many of the stupid ideas which currently infest our body
politic. That’s what underpins Reform’s rise, along with MAGA in the US.
And given both climate change and the resumption of belligerent geopolitics, we
need to have a sense of urgency about doing so.
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