Read this, and only then check who wrote it and where it was published:
The backdrop to this year's Labour Party
conference is the drip-drip supply of statistics proclaiming the end of the
recession and the start of the recovery.
Only six months ago Chancellor George Osborne was
viewed as a political liability for David Cameron and the Tories.
Now he is being rehabilitated as the hero of the
hour, portrayed as staunchly lashed to the tiller, steering the country through
the storm of the recession with economic sunlight dawning on the horizon.
The problem for the Labour leadership is that
having allowed the Tories to blame them for causing the recession they now risk
being blamed for getting the recovery wrong as well.
That's why at this year's Labour Party conference
it's time for the Labour leadership to come off the fence and start fighting
back.
The reality behind the economic reports of
recovery is that what is emerging is a recovery for the rich and a continuing
recession for the rest.
This so-called recovery is non-existent for the
vast majority of the population.
The recovery for the rich has been paid for by
cuts in the living standards of ordinary working people, the impoverishment of
those forced to live on benefits - especially the disabled and children - and
the exploitation of workers on low pay with many forced onto zero-hours
contracts.
There are two distinct periods when there are
opportunities for people to see starkly how this economic system operates.
The first is when an economic crisis hits. It is
then that people search for an explanation of what is happening and why.
The Labour leadership missed this opportunity
largely because Labour in government, along with many other deregulating,
neoliberal governments, was deeply implicated in contributing to the causes of
the crisis.
In addition, during the critical period of the
initial public debate about the reasons for the crisis the Labour leadership
contest was in full flow.
Not only was there a vacuum of leadership but,
worse still, none of the Labour leadership candidates even scraped the surface
of explaining and challenging this crisis-ridden system.
The second opportunity for exposing the workings
of the capitalist system comes when the economic cycle hits rock bottom and
begins to bounce back.
There is a political breathing space in which
lessons can be learnt and change determined and demanded.
It is often thought that it is in the depths of
recession when people are hurting the most that they question and challenge the
system.
Experience has shown that it is when the economy
begins to recover and people feel that they are being excluded from that
recovery, their anger is often at its most intense and they are open to new
ideas and most motivated to fight back.
That is the period we are now in and the Labour
leadership has a tremendous opportunity to expose the scale of corruption and
unfairness of the current system and mobilise for an alternative.
But it needs the Labour Party to come off the
fence and signal whose side it's on in ensuring who benefits from any recovery.
A few basic policy commitments could send the
message that the fight was on to secure the recovery for the many not the few.
Labour could signal that it was ending the attack
on the most vulnerable by committing to scrapping the bedroom tax and benefit
cap, sacking Atos and abolishing its vicious disability assessments.
Labour could show it means business in making
work pay by making the minimum wage a living wage, restoring trade union rights
to protect wages and conditions of employment, ending zero-hours contracts and
restoring a commitment to full employment.
Labour could end rip-off Britain by ending
privatisation, bringing back into public ownership rail, water and energy and,
if it goes through, the Royal Mail.
Labour could give families the hope of a decent
home by laying out the plans for building half a million new council homes a
year, introducing rent controls and scrapping the buy to let landlord
subsidies.
Labour could pay for this investment in the
recovery for the many not by borrowing but by ensuring the rich and the
corporations pay their taxes and wealth is redistributed to modernise our
economic infrastructure and invest in our education, health, environment and
public services.
Put simply, Labour could use this conference to
show real leadership in giving people hope again.
The voice of Middle Britain.
The voice of Middle Britain.
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