Demonstrating that of the three (or four, if you must), Labour is now the best fit for a sympathetic biographer of Patrick Buchanan, Tim Stanley writes:
My mum’s a classic Labour voter: ie she didn’t
bother to vote yesterday. I don’t write that in a snobby way – it’s a sad
statement of fact. Back when I was a Labour stooge, we had terrible trouble
trying to get our people out to the polling booths and we wasted hours
conjuring up messages bright and bold enough to motivate them to abandon the
sofa and do the decent thing. It was a lesson in the political importance of
excitement.
And that’s why Ukip’s rise is such a problem for
Ed Miliband. Yes, he won a lot a seats in the local elections and easily held
South Shields. But, as
Dan Hodges writes, the headlines are all about Ukip and the excitement is
entirely on the Right of the political spectrum. For the Left, this situation
is counter-intuitive. They thought that the Credit Crunch would ruin the
reputation of the free market and revive Keynesianism. But they didn’t realise
that while people do broadly despise banksters and the vampiric rich, they have
equal contempt for the state and its managerial class. The Credit Crunch bred
not socialism but nihilism. We don’t trust anyone anymore.
Ergo, Labour’s drift to social democracy hasn’t
helped it. The politics of “nationalise the railways [a hugely popular, and fiscally prudent, policy], school milk and free
pottery classes for everyone” is out of date and out of touch. Not only does it
overlook how much the ordinary Joe is getting stiffed by taxes and rising
prices (don’t live in Britain if you want to smoke or drive a car) but it
skirts the issues that really boil the blood: violent crime, the despoiling of
the countryside, old people left to die in careless NHS hospitals, and the
price tag of mass immigration. Miliband is focusing his attention on the wrong
side of the political debate, sewing up a Left-wing vote that is shrinking
fast.
Labour cannot afford to dismiss the rise of Ukip
as a fratricidal war on the Right: it has to compete for the same level of
excitement and public interest. It has to define itself as a responsible
alternative to both Cameron and Farage for those seeking substantial change.
Most of all, it has to reconnect with the kind of Labour voters who are tempted
go Ukip for the sake of protest – and those folks do exist. A great deal of the
Ukip vote in the Eastleigh by-election came from C2 working-class voters, as
The Guardian’s post-poll interviews showed.
Peter Woodhouse, a train
driver: “One of the reasons I voted for Ukip is immigration. I'm worried about
the dropping of the barrier in January. I fully expect 2-4 million Bulgarians
and Romanians to come over. What's it going to be like? We're a small island.”
Geoff Bulleyment, retired solider and cleaner: “The big local issue around here
is lack of jobs. We don't seem to be able to find jobs for our younger people …
I'm worried about crime as well. Come here on a Friday night, Saturday night,
it's terrible when the pubs are turning out.” Sarah Holt, shopworker: “There's
going to be more and more foreigners coming in and taking everything from us.
It's diabolical. They come and get this and that. We couldn't go to their
country.”
It’s tempting to conclude that The Guardian went
searching for the most anti-immigration interviewees it could find to bolster
the claim that the Ukip vote is a racist vote. But, in fact, all of those
complaints are commonly found among voters for all parties. There’s a tangible
sense in many working and middle-class communities that the quality of life is
in sharp decline, that politicians aren’t putting their own people first, that
no one cares about us anymore. Rightly or wrong, consciously or accidentally,
Ukip has become their way of getting heard. And Labour needs to listen.
Labour doesn’t have to abandon its progressive
ideals, it just needs to reconnect with the people it exists to help. One way
would be to revive the Blue Labour project with its twin concerns for
patriotism and cultural conservatism. Patriotism might mean recognising that
British people should have first dibs on Britain’s dwindling stock of
resources. Cultural conservatism means tapping into the religious and
communitarian history of the Labour movement – a movement that wasn’t birthed
by European Marxism but instead shaped by non-conformism and the trades-unions.
Most of all, Labour needs to rediscover its roots as a protectionist entity (as
per Roger Scruton’s definition of it). It should resist homogenisation and
globalisation, defend the high street against brand invasion, revel in the
beauty of the countryside, define dignity by a right to work as sacrosanct as
the right to vote, and speak of Britain not as a rainbow of individuals but as
one nation. A little of that spirit was captured at the Olympic Games or even
the Diamond Jubilee – events unencumbered by class war or capitalist
exploitation that simply stated, “This is what we are and what we will forever
be.” A family.
If he fails to hunt where the zeitgeist is, Ed
Miliband will find himself further and further alienated from the mood of the
British people. That’s bad for him and bad for us, for without a dynamic centre
capable of exciting the voters, darker forces will prosper.
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