Steve Richards: A change of leader won't save Labour
It has to reinvent itself as a vibrant party when its self-confidence is non-existent
Saturday, 26 July 2008
Stepping back from it all for a moment, the biggest shock in relation to the Glasgow East by-election is that no one is really shocked at all. Labour has been performing abysmally in local and by-elections for several years now. Glasgow is part of a trend and not a mad aberration, another earthquake on ground well used to eruptions.
The result confirms, rather than reveals, that Labour faces a nightmarish onslaught from an informal coalition of parties, the SNP in Scotland, the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats in England. This is similar to the forbidding anti-Labour coalition that kept the party out of power for18 years in the 1980s and 1990s. Wherever Gordon Brown and his demoralised troops move on the electoral map there is a new, vibrant enemy ready to wipe them out: a Cameron here, a Salmond there, and possibly a Clegg here and there too.
For Labour this is the precise reverse of the mid 1990s when it led an anti-Conservative coalition, striding hand in hand with the Liberal Democrats and others to demolish an unpopular Tory government. Labour has completed the circle and returned to the electoral dynamics of the 1980s.
In some ways the party's position is more precarious now than it was then. Towards the end of the exile in opposition Labour's membership grew. Even in the party's dark days of landslide defeats there was always a hint of energy, sometimes destructive energy, from the bottom to the top, with a range of stars in the shadow cabinet and a membership spurred on at least by a loathing of the Thatcher government.
Now there is virtually nothing. On Thursday night I went to sniff the political air outside Westminster, attending a meeting in Birmingham organised by the Blairite Progress group and the more leftish Compass organisation. A common theme was the near-fatal decline in party membership. There was much talk also about how Labour was broke financially compared with the millions pouring into the Conservatives' coffers. This was on Thursday evening. Many said at the meeting that their only hope was that Labour might win Glasgow East. I wonder what their mood is now.
How has a party that won easily three successive elections reached such a point so quickly? There is one obvious answer. The fact that it is obvious should not undermine its potency. Labour is being punished for the economic downturn. As a long-serving former chancellor, Brown is the perfect figure on whom voters can target their anger. Currently he is trapped in a double whammy, being blamed for higher mortgage, oil and food prices at the same time as these have changed perceptions of his past record as chancellor.
No elected leader of the Western world survived the increase in oil prices in the 1970s. At the very least it is safe to say that no British prime minister will win by-elections in the middle of a downturn. Voters will take the opportunity to give them a kicking. I do not believe Labour can win a by-election anywhere in the country at the moment.
But the reasons for Labour's decline are deeper than the economic situation, and deeper, too, than Brown's leadership. One Blairite cabinet minister admitted to me years ago, shortly before the 2001 election, that New Labour's support was broad but shallow. At the time of this perceptive observation, the emphasis was on the broad. Labour won a landslide shortly afterwards. But it was never going to take much for the shallowness to manifest itself. In blurring ideological dividing lines, in hiding behind the safety of apolitical technocratic language, New Labour built up a big tent of support, but there were always plenty of exits from the bulging canvas.
The danger of making competence a government's biggest selling point comes when the government is shown to be incompetent. Thatcher was forgiven for her monumental cock-ups because she appeared to be heading somewhere which a majority of voters thought they approved of. It has never been clear where New Labour was heading. Instead, it has had two leaders claiming to make "the long-term decisions" and acting in ways that were "the right thing to do". They are value-free claims to make. That is why the challenge for Labour is much bigger than simply changing a leader. It has to reinvent itself as a vibrant, more clearly defined party after more than a decade in power and at a time when its collective self-confidence is virtually non-existent.
For all the speculation about his future, Brown made a powerful start in addressing this daunting challenge in his speech yesterday to the party's policy forum in Warwick. It was the best he has delivered since becoming Prime Minister, delivered without notes, carefully structured, beginning and ending with accessible stories about people whose lives had been transformed through recent policies.
He spoke well in the darkest of contexts. At the moment there is only subdued panic in Labour's ranks. Many anxious, partially scheming ministers and MPs are on holiday already. But this autumn will be tempestuous with Labour's conference the most highly charged for decades.
If Brown does not rise to the occasion, then a change of leader becomes more likely. He is helped by the fact that the mechanics of changing a leader and the lack at the moment of an obvious alternative mean that the choreography is complex, risky and a diversion from the much bigger task of reinventing a centre-left party after more than a decade when only two individuals, Blair and Brown, pulled all the strings.
At the end of the meeting in Birmingham on Thursday night, I asked the packed audience whether any of them thought a change of leader would help their party's cause. Only one person raised his hand. Yet afterwards several members of the audience came up to me and said that privately they talked of little else.
They said they did not raise their hands because they feared a change would be even riskier, adding that if they had a clearer sense of which path was more, or less, precarious, many more would have raised their hands. In their agonised undemonstrative ambiguity they speak for many in the Cabinet and beyond.
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Comments
15 Comments
Things started going wrong for Labour when Tony Blair so enthusiastically followed GW Bush into Iraq. Mistakes have occurred with Gordon Brown such as the loss of people's data by Government departments, but the media became obsessed, putting every case however small on the front page. When big companies have lost your data, the media are not interested. Was there an outcry when the Daily Mail had details of their employees bank accounts stolen, or when the Tories sent details of people in Crewe and Nantwich's voting intentions to a Journalist?
The media have had it in for Gordon Brown since he decided against an election last October, and some journalists are also surprised how biased against him the media now is.
The media complained a couple years ago how fed up of spin they were, and now they are cheerleading David Cameron - Tory Blair who is spin without policies.
Posted by PR | 26.07.08, 23:49 GMT
I hear that Tony Blair described Gordon Brown as a modern day tragedy, or something remotely similar.
That's a bit rich!
We suffer the consequences of a despotic regime over and over again... It matters not who is the figurehead, unless some snakeoil salesman can make it look like something worth buying, that is what Tony Blair was really good at, that is why I voted for these morons, not once, but TWICE!!
Put me down before I vote for the Tory muppets.
Posted by Evan Owen | 26.07.08, 21:16 GMT
The labour leader is a great man he has given huge ammounts of aid to africa and saved the lives of millions of africans. He is a great man and deserves more time. He has great mental strength and intelligence. Surely someone who has saved so many lives is a hero for all of us.
Posted by Dirty European socialist | 26.07.08, 21:04 GMT
I am sick of seeing articles questioning Godon Brown's ability to lead the Labour Party. He was unfortunate to inherit the loathsome Tony Blair's messes. Why did those who now attack Gordon not make their voices heard during Blair's hypocritical years? Alongside George Bush, Tony Blair is responsible for thousands of deaths and great suffering in the Iraq conflict and it is a pity the European Court at the Hague is not judging them both.
Posted by D R Nash | 26.07.08, 20:50 GMT
In the end, the pendulum effect always applies. After 11 years of Labour this to the fore with a vengeance.
In these circumstances the government of the day takes the blame for all the ills and receives little credit for things they get right. At the moment this is made worse by a leader who seems to have little feeling of how best to portray himself or his government. So, whatever the prime minister does, it looks like the end for this government in two years at the most and in the meantime they will limp along in the present unhappy fashion.
Posted by David Priest | 26.07.08, 19:51 GMT
My worry is not just Browns failure to connect with the electorate, he has also lost trust after the untruths surrounding the abolition of the 10% tax rate, and other issues. Whatever, good Brown does now will not give him credit withe the electorate and he should therefore go now. Futhermore, Labour party membership is crumbling largely down to Browns inability to inspire or energise. If this man limps on for another 2 years, we will have no members left to campaign let alone win many seats.
Posted by Keith | 26.07.08, 15:23 GMT
Another UK-focussed/biased interpretation of NULab's performance! The election in Glasgow East was in Scotland and there is a Scottish Government in Edinburgh, a non-Labour Government. The Scottish dimension in Westminster elections north of the Border has increased and is becoming the dominant feature. World economic downturn was a factor , but the change in substance north of the Border in the last year since the advent of the non-westminsterite Scottish governing party has been a new dimension in Scottish politics. A change of Leader will not save the Labour party! Brown cannot change his spots and alter course. His outward sound bytes blether on about justice, fairness and his socialist roots, yet his government's actions and deeds are the opposite. The SNP government in Edinburgh has shown Scots a new approach to government by Scots for Scots and it is successful. We no longer need to be trammelled by Westminsterite carpetbaggers and Westminsterite parties.
Posted by John Edgar | 26.07.08, 14:13 GMT
1951 labour government defeated 3 terms in opposition,1979 labour government defeated 4 terms in opposition,2010 labour government defeated 5 terms in opposition or better still total anialation.
Posted by telboy | 26.07.08, 11:00 GMT
i think you are one of the people who are simpthathetic to brown.you are anaysising but there is no medicine.you can't bring yourself to admit that brown is a loser!!there is no time for comprehesion anymore.i, like evereyone else,steve have colncuded that you are a brownite.the time is up!!!
Posted by john small | 26.07.08, 09:07 GMT
God Knows wherer Ann has been living.New Labour has been a Tory party in everything but name. I havent voted for them since 1997 having been a member and trade union activist for many years. The have no political principles or philosophy to ground them in fact I believe Blair set out to destroy democratic socialism in this the UK. Thr Old Labour voters of which I am proud to be one have gone. Blair didnt want us. Brown has no chance of getting us back. People have short memories regarding th Tories but they will receive some sharp shocks in the coming years. as a pensioner i am thankfully out of danger bit I feel for the ordinary working persons future
Posted by stevem | 26.07.08, 08:43 GMT
15 Comments