Len McCluskey writes:
You report that Peter Mandelson is accusing my
union, Unite, of "manipulating selection procedures" in the Labour
party, which "stores up danger for a future Labour government" (Labour warned on selection panel procedures, 13 May).
This does no service to Labour democracy or the
facts. I have no axe to grind with Lord Mandelson. His second stint at the
business department under the Labour government was marked by fresh thinking
about industrial policy, which I wish he had had the opportunity to develop;
and he seems more willing than some to acknowledge that the pre-2008 economic
model was flawed.
But now he appears rattled that Blairite true
believers are not winning every Labour nomination. Your report does not have
him alleging any breach of party rules or procedural abuses, perhaps because
there are none. Unite's aim is simple – to recruit members to the party
(welcome, I would have thought) and then encourage them to endorse union-supported
candidates in one member-one vote selections. A sinister construction is put on
this – "selections are being run by a cabal of union members",
according to your report. This is, to say the least, an irony. Many serving
Labour MPs were parachuted into constituencies at the request of leading
members of the last Labour cabinet, including Mandelson himself.
Dishing out seats on the basis of personal
connections bears a closer resemblance to the rotten borough system before 1832
than it does to modern democratic procedures, and it also helps keep politics
as the preserve of a socially restricted elite. Mandelson also appears
untroubled that Lord Sainsbury's vast wealth, channelled through the Progress
organisation, has been used to give particular candidates, invariably on the
right [but I'm in it now...], an advantage in Labour selections.
Mandelson argues, correctly, that it is
"wrong to conflate trade unionists and the working classes", although
the overlap is hard to miss. I don't conceal that I want to see more Labour MPs
supporting the sort of policies developed by Unite and other trade unions,
regardless of their personal backgrounds. But Labour MPs look less and less
like the people they seek to represent. The big strides made in securing more
women Labour MPs have also, unfortunately, been paralleled by a decline in
those from working-class backgrounds. Mandelson has no proposals to address
this.
This is really an argument about politics, not
procedure. Mandelson is probably intensely relaxed about cutting democratic corners
if it means more "New Labour" special advisers and the like on the
green benches, but utterly opposed to the normal workings of Labour democracy
if it means leftwing or trade union candidates being chosen.
Let's have the political debate instead. I am
confident that most potential Labour voters want to see both a more diverse
Labour party in parliament, and also a Labour government radically different
from the last one.
Finally, I object strongly to his insinuation
that union-backed MPs might be loyal not "to the party as a whole",
but "a section of it". Trade unionists have always been Labour
loyalists. Rightwing MPs, not unions, split Labour in 1931 and 1981, just as it
was New Labour parliamentarians who fuelled the debilitating Blair-Brown
factionalism that so weakened the most recent Labour government, as Mandelson
surely knows.
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