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Steve Richards: It's the crisis of identity that needs to be addressed – not a change of leadership

Since Brown's self-confidence collapsed, he has clung to the comfort zone of populist Blairism

Tuesday, 27 May 2008

At different times, Gordon Brown and David Cameron have claimed ownership of the most potent word in British politics: they seek to be agents of "change". Brown spoke of change repeatedly during his brief honeymoon, a distant fuzzy era that seems to have taken place at least a century ago. After the Conservative Party's triumph in last week's Crewe and Nantwich by-election, Cameron declared with a showman's flourish that the spectacular result was a vote for change.

Change is an inspiring and conveniently imprecise concept. As David Bowie recognised when he built an entire career on being an elusive chameleon, and wrote a brilliant song on the theme, we are all in favour of "Changes". The prospect of a switch from one thing to another is exciting and intoxicating. Vague promises of leaps from the present can also be an illusion. Their deceptive nature take us to the heart of the near-terminal crisis tormenting Labour and which might, at a later period, become a crisis for the Conservatives too. The illusion is exposed when we seek to grab this elusive concept, to hold it for a second or two and ask what is meant by uplifting proclamations of change.

Take a close look and it is clear that Brown and Cameron are trapped for different reasons in the status quo of the Blair era. Neither represents a dramatic leap in new directions. They talk of changes but there is no transformation that compares with Bowie moving from Ziggy Stardust to Aladdin Sane and on to his bleak Berlin period, although the chillingly bleak albums produced in Germany during the mid-1970s would be an appropriate soundtrack for the Prime Minister as he contemplates his current political nightmare.

Brown has failed to personify significant change for several complicated reasons. He cannot disown overtly his predecessor's agenda, which he supported at least in public and in votes in the Commons. He is even more reluctant to do so when the Tories adopt much of the Blairite approach, worried that he will be accused of moving leftwards into vote losing territory. Since the collapse of his self-confidence, Brown is tempted more often to cling to the unchallenging comfort zone of populist Blairism, pretending that choice for all in public services is possible without spending a fortune, building more prisons when the prison population is already too high, hailing identity cards as a way of tackling immigration, boasting that he has fulfilled Margaret Thatcher's dream of cutting the basic rate of income tax to 20p.

There are many progressive policies that Brown pursues behind the scenes, but the chosen public narrative – the items where political capital is being used up – have echoes with the late Blair era. The changes are not obvious, staring in front of our eyes. Brown has not changed into a strikingly new costume.

Nor has David Cameron, the apparent personification of change. His genius was to have an insight that was almost the exact opposite of change. He recognised that, far from being a threat to the existence of the Tories, Blair endorsed much of what they believed. In 1997, voters might have turned away from Thatcherism. On several fronts, Blair brought it back to life.

As they have argued, Cameron and George Osborne are the heirs to Blair. Some Shadow Cabinet members tell me without irony, awkwardness or a hint of mischievousness that they became Blairites during Labour's second term. Far from being agents of change, they support more "choice", possibly with even less public investment, and put the case against the state with a similar passion to Blair. They place the same faith in the increasingly romanticised voluntary sector, probably without offering the necessary funding, and like their hero will place the alliance with the US at the centre of foreign policy. Unlike with Blair, the alliance will be deepened by hostility to the EU.

But here is the twist: late Blairism was not popular. The more he moved into his own comfort zone, with the keen backing of Rupert Murdoch and Conservative-supporting columnists, he and Labour slumped in the polls. This was not because he was taking the tough decisions but the easy ones, standing "shoulder to shoulder" with President Bush, declaring the end of the permissive 1960s and the rest of it. Polls suggested at the time that voters wanted a change from all of these echoes from the 1980s. Now they get another dosage from leaders who claim, as if by magic, to also offer change.

The choreography of Labour's crisis is utterly gripping and yet is the easiest bit for the political players to handle. David Miliband lets it be known that this time he is ready to stand if a vacancy arises. The ultra-Blairites opt for public silence as a calculated political act. Other Cabinet ministers are publicly loyal, while in private they agonise and scheme vaguely. This is an absorbing drama. Yet largely absent from the script, with notable exceptions such as Jon Cruddas, writing below, is a coherent agenda for change from the still overcrowded terrain marked "Blair".

For sensible ideological and tactical reasons, Cameron will not be the change. He will follow Blair, who paid homage to Thatcher. Ironically, Brown could have been the change. During Labour's second term, he delivered a brilliant lecture on the limits of markets in delivering public services but he rarely refers to those words now. Brown also has a clear sense of political purpose in ways which mark a step forward, with his attempts to turn the challenges of the global market into an opportunity for individuals to fulfil their potential. Partly because of his much discussed strategic mistakes, a caution that makes actual change more difficult, a large dollop of misfortune and the media turning away, he has lost his audience.

Yet with the credit crisis caused by too little regulation rather than too much, a newly fashionable interest in inequality arising from the abolition of the 10p tax rate, the challenges of global warming, the improved but still mediocre public services, there is space out there for a post-Blair agenda-maker, a genuine agent of change who could make Cameron seem like the champion of an outdated status quo. The shaping of that agenda matters more than the political theatre that will be played out over the next few months. In itself, a change in leadership for Labour will not mark a break with the recent past. Changes are more complicated than that.

s.richards@independent.co.uk

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Comments

19 Comments

You just don't get it. The fundamental difference is that Brown wants the State to interfere in everyone's life, and Cameron focuses on Society not being the same as the State. So Brown clobbers mariage, Cameron supports it. Brown focuses on Statistics, Cameron on trust, etc..

Posted by NBeale | 28.05.08, 07:45 GMT

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You fail to provide any convincing examination of your premise that change is necessarily desirable, or any exposition of what that change would be.

But I don't think you ought to bother. Most people are calling for a restoration of sound finance, of competent government, and of our liberties.

Now that would be a change.

Posted by Ben Elford | 27.05.08, 22:07 GMT

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"This country needs a leader with intellgence and mental strength who never breaks and keeps working" - the same 'leader' who dithers, u-turns, and makes statistics up? He seriously lies all the time, and yet no-one picks up 'our glorious leader' for the lies he tells. He is a disgrace, he has taxed us to the limit, and now you are telling me that because he has improved the 'public pensions' whilst completely wrecking everybody else's, I should be grateful!! Get a grip on reality, or are you just another career politician? Those that can do, those that can't become Labour politicians...

Posted by Chris | 27.05.08, 17:59 GMT

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Lbaour has done more than some critics claim. We have had 11 years of economic growth and improvement in the NHS, police services, the public pensions, and the education servies, plus great work on ending child poverty.

Posted by Dirty European Socialist | 27.05.08, 15:56 GMT

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We're the ones who'll need enormous mental strength in order to survive everything that he's put in OUR way...

Posted by Richard Dean | 27.05.08, 15:51 GMT

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Well it might be the Labour voters who demand change and if we do not get it, goodbye labour.

Posted by robert | 27.05.08, 15:35 GMT

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He did meet the Dalai Lama. All political leaders have to meet the Chinese leaders. They are a economic superpower. How can any serious political leader stick two fingers up to China and expect this country to benefit. I hate the Chinese government but a pol;itcal leader has to be diplomatic. It is this country who would suffer if he was not dimploamtic to the Chinese.
Who cares if the throws ash trays around, so does the Man Utd boss. If you want to make allegations about the PM go ahead. But I doubt you have ever even met him. Blair' spin doctors spread gay rumours about the present PM, which is why they hate eachother guts. If someone went around claiming you were gay would you not hate that bloke back. He has enormous mental strength to overcome what was put in his way.

Posted by Rick Bean | 27.05.08, 15:30 GMT

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The choreography of Labour's crisis may be gripping to you, Steve, but to this Tory voter it's hilarious.

Too much Labour stuff in the paper today. Where's the balancing Tory and LibDem stuff?

I hope the Indy won't continue with this self-pitying self-flagellating agony over Labour. As can be seen from reader comments, most people seem to think Labour deserves to suffer.

Posted by R.W. | 27.05.08, 14:25 GMT

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And what exactly do you suggest this change incorporates Steve? Higher taxes (1970’s), more comprehensive education (1960’s and ‘70’s,) abolition of Trident (very 1980’s), promotion of alternative family structures (1960’s & 1980’S again).

There’s a problem here isn’t there? THAT THE ABOVE HAVE ALL BEEN TRIED AND FAILED ABYSMALLY.

WAKE UP AND SMELL THE COFFEE STEVE. YOUR ‘ALTERNATIVE AGENDA FOR CHANGE IS NOTHING OF THE KIND. MERELY A RETRO-REHASH OF PREVIOUSLY DISGRACED POLICIES.

IT’S OVER.

Posted by Ben | 27.05.08, 14:20 GMT

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The evidence of Brown’s “mental strength”, like the evidence for his “intelligence” may be found where, exactly? Was it shown when he bottled the election? Or when he lied to us about the European Constitution (sorry, the “Lisbon Treaty”)? Was he mentally tough when he wouldn’t meet the Dalai Lama in Downing St, although he was all smiles for those Chinese security goons (but he didn’t touch the Olympic torch himself, so that made it okay)? Or How about when he offered us a £2.7 billion bribe of our own money to put Tamsin Dunwoody in Parliament? Or when he sold off half the nation’s gold reserves at rock bottom prices? Or when he wrecked the pensions system? Are all those temper tantrums, chucked ashtrays, flung telephones and emails at 3.30 in the morning more evidence of his mental toughness? Why is it that so many people who have worked with Brown hate his guts – is it because he’s so mentally tough? Must be – there can’t be any other reason. Its not like he’s an unstable bully and coward who’s stuck in an authoritarian, top down, tax and squander 1970s time-warp, like the dwindling and soon-to-be-bankrupt Party he “leads”. No, he’s just misunderstood, that’s all.

Posted by Richard Dean | 27.05.08, 13:48 GMT

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