Mark Steel: Labour and a bout of mutual loathing
Wednesday, 3 September 2008
One of the main reasons for the founding of "New Labour", its supporters insisted, was to ensure there would never be a return to the days when Labour was forever rowing with itself, over issues such as nuclear weapons or the unions. And this has been a huge success, because now they all agree on those issues and instead hate each other because they all want a job that's more important than the one they've got.
Where an argument in the Labour Party used to be a battle about the meaning of socialism, now it's a posh version of a power struggle in a borstal. It would be more honest and much more thrilling if Alistair Darling put some pool balls in a sock and whacked them round Brown's kneecaps, yelling "Now listen – I'm the daddy in this party now – right!" And then flushed Ed Balls's head in the toilet.
None of the current Labour leaders appear to believe in anything, except for what's best to get them through the next week. But none of them can admit this and say, "The main and substantial difference it would make if I were to be Prime Minister, is that in those circumstances it would be me being Prime Minister, and none of the others."
And those that can't seek the post of Prime Minister are all lining up behind whoever they think will look after them if they win. And so they might as well choose who's on what side by picking teams. All the MPs can stand in a huddle while Miliband and Ed Balls take turns in picking their favourites, until at the end there's just Blunkett and Prescott, stood with their hands in their pockets while the two captains whisper, "I don't want either of them," – "Well you've got to have one," – "It's not fair, they were on my side last time."
Explaining his reasons for founding "New Labour", Tony Blair stated he never again wanted to see the party receive the vote it got in the 1983 election. But at the moment it looks like the 8 million votes it got that year is a height it can only aspire to. So if Brown departs, maybe one candidate who should consider standing for leader is Michael Foot. At least his conference speech would go, "Yes, aha, now, Georgia, well some of you don't remember Suez, well this Cameron chap, as Ophelia might have put it, seeks the wind, is that right, it was the same with Neville Chamberlain," and most people would say, "It's certainly an improvement."
Never again, the idea went, would the party go into an election with ideas that were clearly a minority view in the country. Yet every possible contender for leader still backs the Iraq war, and no one who opposed it from the start will be allowed near the contest. Or to put it another way, the 11 years of New Labour government were summed up by the cricket commentary on Test Match Special. A commentator was complaining about the rigorous security at the ground, as it had taken 45 minutes to get in.
Then suddenly up popped the voice of Geoff Boycott, saying "You've Tony Blair to thank for that." "I'm sorry," said the first commentator. "He was told," said Geoffrey, "that if he went around causing wars there'd be an increased risk of terrorism, but he took no notice, he thought he knew best." You could feel the BBC governors shrieking, "Shut him up – tell him he couldn't play fast bowling or something," but Geoffrey was adamant.
So there we are – back in 1997 none of us, not the most cynical, realised that a New Labour government would end up being chastised for being too pro-war and pro-America, on Test Match Special by Geoffrey bloody Boycott. No wonder they're shafted.
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Comments
18 Comments
Are Labour and the Conservatives keeping us from voting them out of power by preserving shoddy voting systems and limiting the education and promotion of voters?
Personally, I don't care who votes and who doesn't. It'd be better if people went to atleast void their papers, but if there are thousands of lib dem or green voters sitting on their butts saying, "why vote, it wont change anything".
Mark's piece here reminds me of the McCain/Palin thing in America, McCain doesn't care for his country, if he wins the he leaves another nightmare president in control of the US. And here it seems that polititions still just want to be PM, they see it as there ultimate goal, in the game which is their life. I am sure that Blair saw it that way, and that Cameron does too, as for Brown though I have no idea.
Posted by hexhunter | 04.09.08, 12:20 GMT
I just saw some NuLab goon of indeterminate sort of, thingy type thing (Northern, spectacles - not in the Cabinet: mind you, who can name half of them? All one does know is that one's concerned that they're out of kindergarten and does their mummy know?) anyway, I'm wandering, anyway, this chap said, poker-faced, "We're going to win the next election"!!!! They're so out of touch/utterly 'cking stupid/both (either that or it's just more politico-speak bolleaux) that (if the latter does not pertain) they can't see the loaded Luger pointed at their collective [numb] skull. This NuLab outfit has taken all [doubtless, former] Labour supporters for a right royal ride. They're gonna get annihilated at the next Gen E (but do we want the bloody Tories, though? What choice do we have? None. Don't anyone say the poxy LibDems, puuuhhhleeeese!) Welcome to British democracy.
Posted by Rupert Fotherington-Smythe | 04.09.08, 11:39 GMT
Another great article.
I have a feeling that regardless of whether the government was Labour, Conservative or Lib Dem, the result would be the same.
I suppose because politics comes under such immense media scrutiny, politicians have become reactive, rather than constructive. Not that I have a great admiration for the sort of people who go into politics these days; but they do seem to be in a no-win situation.
Perhaps the greatest sadness is that we complain that the lunatics are taking over the asylum; but very few of us want to vote, let alone take part in politics at the grassroot level - and that's the only way its going to change.
Posted by Dominic | 04.09.08, 09:27 GMT
Stephen Williams, that "expulsion" of Palestinians, coincided with the attempted annihilation of all Jews, by the invading armies of Egypt, Syria, Trans-Jordan, Iraq and volunteer forces of other "brother" Arab countries. The same year, hundreds of thousands of Jewish Refugees from Arab countries began to arrive, but were fed, housed and welcomed, unlike the unfortunate Palestinian refugees, who, lacking compassion from their "brother" Arabs, continue to fester in their camps after 60 years. Change the record, Mark Steel`s article is not about your anti-Israel obsession!
Posted by Zubi | 03.09.08, 23:50 GMT
Atleast the labour leaders are not connected to the cocaine industry like the tory elites LOL.
Posted by Dirty Euro | 03.09.08, 23:19 GMT
Mark good as always, you make the Independant for me, keep it up. New Labour was the old plus new bits added on. However as they went on the old got forgotten, GB said no linking of Retirement Pension in 2000 and the war plus stupid three times the cost PFI saga, and the old was out. The old said we wont vote or vote for the other side as their both the same, that will teach em! So New Labour is dead to all but the Westminister village. That means 12/13 cabinit ministers must go, but whos going to do it. MP's who say, next week will be better and next week never comes. If MP's had any balls they would get rid of New Labour ministers and tell GB to like it or he can go to, Oh! he's new labour. We are stuffed good and proper.
Posted by James | 03.09.08, 22:58 GMT
This is good. I take it all back: Mark Steel can write.
Although I do feel quite sorry for him, given the degree of exasperation he seems to be feeling. Clearly, he at least really does care about the state of his party.
Perhaps he should start writing a series of pieces in the same, accessible style, explaining to us poor saps exactly what the "meaning of socialism" actually is (if there is one) in the noughties.
I'd welcome that.
Posted by Jono | 03.09.08, 22:16 GMT
All our politicians seem self serving in the two main parties. They look after their friends and say LOOK in that patronizing manner when challenged by the public as though none of us can understand. It's not that we don't understand, it's that we don't agree. The NHS is now full of them, minor politicians making stupid decisions that clinical staff know won't work. The only aim being their own career development, by the time it all goes wrong they've risen up the ladder and the clinical staff get the blame.
Posted by M | 03.09.08, 19:27 GMT
Jeanette, he doesn't even go to the funerals of soldiers who have fought for his government, let alone victims of murders. The man is a total scumbag.
Great article.
Posted by Technomist | 03.09.08, 19:20 GMT
This is the problem with party politics - it becomes less about running a country and more about strategic positioning of people who want to grab all of the power. It also devalues the general election - we don't vote for our local candidate, but instead for a party as a whole.
The bloke who whines about "sub-Marxism" was probably thrown off-kilter by the lack of article last week.
Posted by Matt | 03.09.08, 19:19 GMT
18 Comments