Liam Young writes:
From the moment Jeremy Corbyn selected
John McDonnell to be his shadow chancellor there have been many rumblings both
inside and out of the Parliamentary Labour Party.
The press lambasted him as
even more left wing than the leader himself.
Vocal members of the PLP had
called on Jeremy to appoint Angela Eagle to the role so as to balance the
shadow cabinet both politically and by gender.
However the last week has
vindicated Jeremy’s decision.
McDonnell has not just outperformed expectations
held over him by the naysayers, but he has also begun to establish a vision for
a new British economy.
This run of form began on 18 January with the
announcement of ‘the new economics tour’.
The first talk took place last week
alongside Mariana Mazzucato who is a member of McDonnell’s economic advisory
board, also made up of heavyweight economists Thomas Piketty and
Joseph Stiglitz.
Not only did the announcement ensure some good news for
Labour’s economic credibility by showing the party backed by respected
economists, but it also showed some real direction.
McDonnell’s speech at the
Co-Operative conference confirmed this sense of direction.
In proposing a
‘right to own’ the Shadow Chancellor, all too aware of Labour’s previous
failure to form a coherent economic vision, began to stress core components of
his new economic approach.
However it is McDonnell’s handling of the on-going Google tax
fiasco that has proven his competence for the position not just of shadow
Chancellor, but Chancellor of the Exchequer.
At the weekend McDonnell published
his tax return as he had promised and asked Osborne to do the same.
I think it
is rather unlikely that the millionaire Tory chancellor will agree to the
request, but this only helps strengthen McDonnell’s point that the Tories are
detached from the economic reality that the average taxpayer is faced with.
Something that also supported this was the widely shared clip of George Osborne
giving advice on how to avoid Taxes live on the Daily Politics on 15 May 2003.
Dubbing him the ‘Banker’s Chancellor’ McDonnell has capitalised on the
Chancellor’s disappearance in recent days.
On the same day that the Tory bedroom tax was deemed illegal
by court judges, the Tories were forced to defend their links with the Google
deal.
It was later revealed that ministers had been briefing European MEPs to
vote so as to protect Google’s tax status in Bermuda.
McDonnell put it best
when he argued that the Tory mask ‘has finally slipped’.
On one hand the Prime
Minister was telling the British people that he wished to clamp down on tax
avoidance, but on the other he was asking his MEPs to oppose plans that would
have seen that happen.
The polls seem to show the British public backing the shadow
chancellor on his stance.
If Labour is ever to regain trust on the economy then
this is exactly what it must do; align itself with public concern about tax
evasion and avoidance.
McDonnell was right to relate this to the personal.
As
many people rushed to have their tax returns completed, Google was resting
assured of a greatly reduced rate and a government that was going to do nothing
about it.
McDonnell stated that George Osborne had spent the last week in
hiding. The shadow chancellor has been doing the opposite.
He has been out in
the open, making the argument for a new economy that works in the interest of
all.
As Osborne hides, his image as the banker’s chancellor is only further
entrenched.
In his absence, John McDonnell is primed to emerge as the people’s
chancellor, on the side of all hard-working individuals fighting for a level
playing field on tax.
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