George Eaton writes:
Jon Cruddas's speech
to the Resolution Foundation last night on "earning and belonging"
was, in common with all of his addresses, thoughtful, intellectually rich
and imbued with a rare sense of history. But anyone hoping for specifics
from the head of Labour's policy review would have left disappointed.
Cruddas described the review as being in its "first phase" and
promised that over the next 12 months major pieces of work would be completed
on "childhood, the Condition of Britain [Cruddas will deliver an IPPR lecture on this subject next Thursday],
a British Investment Bank, infrastructure and voctional education". After
the 2013 conference, he added, the review would enter a "second
phase" before the policies "distil
into a manifesto and pledge cards" after the 2014 conference.
There were, however, several important hints of
Labour's priorities. In one of the most memorable passages, Cruddas lamented
that while the government spends £1.2bn on housebuilding, it spends twenty
times that amount on "rental payments to landlords". Not only was
this a good example of how Labour is seeking to reframe the debate around
welfare policy (Cruddas referred to "rent payments", rather than
housing benefit), it also suggested that one of the party's key pledges will be
a mass programme of housebuilding.
In another intriguing section of the speech,
Cruddas spoke of how Labour was exploring new ways of holding "our public
institutions" to account and generating "a sense of ownership and
responsibility". He cited the BBC, the police, Parliament and the
City of London. Tessa Jowell's recent piece for the Telegraph calling for
the BBC to be turned into "the country’s biggest mutual, with 26.8 million
licence-fee payers as its shareholders", is a good example of the form
this could take in practice.
The line that has attracted the most attention is Cruddas's warning that
"simply opposing the cuts without an alternative is no good." (He
added: "It fails to offer reasonable hope. The stakes are high because
when hope is not reasonable despair becomes real.")
On one level this is a statement of the obvious.
But it also points to a significant divide in Labour between those who believe
there is nothing wrong with the economy that a bit of Keynesian stimulus won't
fix and those who believe that capitalism needs to be fundamentally
remade (Raf has neatly characterised this as a battle between Brown
Labour and Blue). Cruddas's words made it clear that he intends to position
Labour on the latter half of this divide.
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