Bryan Gould writes:
We have
the benefit – courtesy of The Guardian – of the advice offered by one of the
Labour Party’s grandees as to the response that should be made to the calamity
that has apparently now befallen the Party.
That calamity is of course the
election of Jeremy Corbyn as leader.
Lord Mandelson, we are told, has advised
that the new leader, elected just three weeks ago, should not be immediately “forced out” but that the
deposition should be delayed just a little while more people realise what a
disastrous mistake has been made.
We
are fortunate to have this advice, since it tells us so much about what has
gone wrong with the Party. Here is the authentic voice of those who have been
in charge of its fortunes for so long.
The decision as to whether, and – even more
importantly, when – the new leader should be deposed apparently rests in the
hands of those who have just been roundly rejected by the Party.
Lord Mandelson
seems confident that the natural order will soon be restored, not least one
assumes, because the energies of the defeated Blairites will now turn to
undermining the new leader.
Indeed, it could be argued that, in Lord
Mandelson’s unusual view of the world, his willingness to wait a full three
weeks before mapping the course that will, he believes, negate the Party’s democratic
decision means that his is really the voice of moderation.
That
confidence appears to rest on the sustained and focused assault delivered on
the new leader by the Tory press – an assault echoed not so sotto voce by
Lord Mandelson and his colleagues.
We expect nothing different from the Daily Mail –
and, sadly, not much better from Labour’s erstwhile leaders either.
The
most damaging aspect of Lord Mandelson’s initiative, however, is not what is
said, but what is not said.
Where is there, in his message to Party members,
any recognition of the support commanded by Jeremy Corbyn for what he did and
said during his leadership campaign?
Where is the understanding of why so many
responded so positively to the prospect of renouncing the craven “me-tooism” that has dominated
Labour for so long?
Most of all, where is the acknowledgement of
the task that now lies before the Party?
So quick are Corbyn’s defeated
opponents to rubbish him that they simply do not recognise the opportunity that
is now presented by Corbyn’s victory.
That opportunity can be turned to
advantage only if the Party unites to advance an analysis and a political
platform that reflects those aspects of Corbyn’s campaign that resonated with
so many.
That does not mean that the Party must endorse
everything that Corbyn has done and said over his long career on the
backbenches.
Like most 32 year-long veterans, there will be aspects of his past
– comments and links, attitudes and causes – that were defensible at the time,
but that may not seem so appropriate for a potential Prime Minister in 2015.
That will be particularly true of those
personal preferences and beliefs – his republicanism and his support for a
united Ireland, for example – that were no doubt his own business as a
backbencher, but that may place him at odds with a large number of actual and
potential Labour voters.
These will be matters that he has not had to
consider before. He will have to reach his own way of resolving them, now that
it is the Party’s interest and not merely his own that must be considered.
But
what matters is that neither he nor the party should lose sight of those issues
where he expressed, and committed to, ideas that were fresh and uplifting, that
gave new hope to millions of people.
These were not matters of personal
interest or preference, but statements of universal significance and appeal –
the re-assertion of enduring values, the need for fairnesss and sharing, the
rejection of inequality and the denunciation of growing poverty.
More importantly, they were not merely
repetitions of familiar mantras, but were backed up by hard, specific and
credible policy ideas – anathema no doubt to so many who bought the lie that
there is no alternative to austerity and the supposedly infallible market – but
backed up by growing numbers, including many informed experts and specialists
who understand that the time has come for a new start.
Jeremy Corbyn himself, in other words, has a
major task ahead of him.
He has to work out which of his wide range of
commitments, accumulated over 32 years, he is now ready to forego, for the sake
of focusing on the vitally important and central ideas that will enthuse
millions of potential voters and offer a better future to all.
He needs all the
help he can get to help him make those judgments. That is where Lord Mandelson should be looking
for challenge and inspiration.
The Party’s prime responsibility surely now is
to unite in engaging those millions who want change and hope, not trying to
focus on throttling that prospect at birth.
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