Labour currently faces a period of challenging
redefinition. New Labour is emphatically over and done. But as New Labour
recedes into the past, it is possible to speak of a road not taken – the ‘New
Labour That Wasn’t? And what relevance does it have for Labour today?
The New Labour That Wasn’t found expression in a
number of important works from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s. Perhaps the key
early contribution was David Marquand’s The Unprincipled Society,
followed by Paul Hirst’s After Thatcher and Associative Democracy.
Will Hutton’s The State We’re In (1995) arguably pulled the ideas
together in the way that had the biggest impact. Another important feature of
the context was the rise, from 1988, of Charter 88 as a pressure group and
wider political movement arguing the case for comprehensive constitutional
reform.
The New Labour That Wasn’t argued that the UK’s
economic problems had deep institutional roots. In The State We’re In,
Hutton argued that the UK’s competitiveness in manufacturing had been
undermined historically by the short-termism of the City, making for an
excessively high cost of capital and consequent underinvestment.
German
capitalism, he argued, offered an alternative model based on long-term,
‘patient’ industrial banking. It also illustrated the benefits of structures of
governance of the firm that incorporate not only long-term investors but also
labour as long-term partners – ‘stakeholders’ – in enterprise management.
For Paul Hirst, the UK’s economic revival
depended on manufacturing renewal in particular. At its heart would be small
and medium-sized firms adapted to the production of high-quality goods,
targeted to the needs of varied customers, on the basis of highly and broadly
skilled workforce.
Institutionally, Hirst argued, this kind of production is
supported by ‘corporatist’ arrangements that facilitate collaboration between
labour and capital, as well as a strong regional dimension to economic growth
strategy.
The second key plank of the New Labour That
Wasn’t was the advocacy of a pluralist polity: Charter 88’s platform of
devolution, a UK Bill of Rights for the UK, electoral and House of Lords reform
and freedom of information.
Pluralism here also entails an idea of cohesion and
the common good. The individual citizen should be able to argue their case in
dialogue with other citizens both in the workplace and in the wider public
sphere.
The third key element of The New Labour That
Wasn't lies in the claim that economic and political reform are necessarily
connected. Power is shared across parties: industry and finance, labour and
capital. But it is difficult to create the framework for this kind of pluralism
to flourish when the state itself is so centralised and majoritarian.
Actual New Labour was partly inspired by this
current of thought. But it was also defined, in some important ways, by a
strong rejection of it. On the economy, New Labour briefly, and somewhat
superficially, adopted the language of stakeholding.
However, Hutton's
relational idea of stakeholding gave way to a much more individualistic
understanding of the term, a matter of individuals holding assets which
increase their options in the marketplace. This reflected a key strategic
decision on Labour's part to accept the existing financial system and (to a
large extent) the rules of corporate governance.
While New Labour took a much weaker line on
reforming the economy, on the side of political reform, New Labour of course
adopted and delivered on a number of the pluralists' commitments. There were,
however, also some major elements of the pluralists' agenda that Labour did not
deliver on: while most hereditary peers were removed from the House of Lords,
Labour did not go further in reform of the second chamber.
The Jenkins
Commission on the voting system reported in 1998 only to be politely but
emphatically shelved. This was not accidental. Labour’s attitude to Charter 88
was marked at the outset by wariness and a degree of hostility.
The pluralist
republicans saw political process not simply as a means to an end but as
valuable in itself. By contrast, New Labour adopted a decidedly more
instrumentalist view, and took a significantly more managerialist approach.
This offers an interesting way of looking at the
emerging perspective of ‘one nation’ Labour. On the one hand, there are some
clear similarities between one nation Labour and the New Labour That Wasn’t.
This is particularly true around the economy.
First, there is the judgment that
economic revival must involve industrial renewal. Second, there is an interest
in exploring what lessons the German and Nordic economies might have for
achieving industrial renewal. But the similarities are much less marked with
the political pluralist dimension of the New Labour That Wasn’t.
There are,
however, important ways in which Labour’s politics could be usefully informed
by this spirit. For example, if Labour is serious about radical economic change
then it needs to consider how it can build an alliance of social and political
forces to support it. Of course it will call on people to join and vote Labour.
But it must recognise that many people whose support and energy it needs will
belong to other parties or to none.
Positive economic change requires a broad
movement and Labour cannot credibly claim simply to be this movement. Nor can
it just demand that others follow. It must try to earn leadership through
argument in open debate with others – including trade unions, religious groups,
community organising initiatives and anti-cuts campaigners.
It is encouraging to
see that Labour is starting to grapple with the need for serious economic
reform. But if there is a lesson to be learned from turning back to the
insights of New Labour’s road not taken, it is in seeing that economic reform
and political reform are closely intertwined.
Lord Maurice Glasman has today ripped apart your claim that Blue Labour is a dominant force under Miliband.
ReplyDeleteIn a video "Maurice Glasman and the Place of Faith" interview, Lord Glasman laughed, when asked how his Blue Labour project was going and said :
"People tell me that we're winning, but it certainly doesn't feel like that...An editorial in the New Statesman this week talked of Blue Labour as being the intellectual dominant force in the Labour Party...but I don't sense that at all".
It seems this is a delusion of yours, Mr Lindsay, which certainly isn't shared by the founder of Blue Labour.
Oh, that's just Maurice. If you'd ever met him...
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