Andy Walton writes:
When is
a conservative not a conservative?
It's not a joke, or a trick. It's one of the most
pressing political questions in the US and the UK.
It's been brought into focus this week by the possible
closure of the Tata Steel plant in Port Talbot, South Wales.
The multinational
company Tata said it was going to sell
its UK operation and there's a real possibility that this will
mean the loss of thousands of jobs and real devastation for the community.
There
are loud calls for the UK government to step in and, if necessary, temporarily
nationalise the Port Talbot plant to ensure the skilled jobs aren't lost and
the knock-on effects for the local economy and community are mitigated.
But
these calls have so far heeded little. Right-leaning opinion formers say the
plant must be allowed to die. That it would be 'inefficient' to do otherwise,
that the market has decided and that's all there is to it.
The executive
director of free market think tank the Adam Smith Institute said, "The only justification for nationalisation is if
we're prepared to say there is nothing that the people of Port Talbot could
conceivably do productively... To be fair, there may be a grain of truth in
that."
It's a pattern we've been used to over the last 50 years
in the UK and the US. Deindustrialisation on a massive scale has seen places
like Port Talbot abandoned to their fate.
Whole swathes of blue collar Britain
and America have been abandoned by what one commentator described
as, "a perfect storm of automation, declining union power, and
free-trade agreements."
That this process has taken place is undeniable. From
Port Talbot to Detroit, the story is the same. Once mighty industrial areas
have had the heart ripped out of them.
In the words of Bruce Springsteen's 2012
song Death To My Home Town, "They destroyed our families, factories, and
they took our homes... The greedy thieves who came around and ate the flesh of
everything they found."
What is surprising is that this destruction began and has
taken place under the watch of 'conservative' politicians on both sides of the
Atlantic.
When Margaret Thatcher's election as Prime Minister in 1979 in the UK
was followed by Ronald Reagan's victory over Jimmy Carter, suddenly, there was
a dramatic new dawn.
The New Deal was dead. The post-war consensus over.
Instead, these two politicians, whose supporters still
lionise them as conservative heroes, set about a radical programme of change.
Taxes were cut, regulations were slashed, monetary policy was paramount and
privatisation of public institutions was rapid.
As Mrs Thatcher proclaimed,
this was more than merely a set of budgetary measures. "Economics are the
method: the object is to change the soul," she proclaimed.
Thus the pattern was set for the next 35 years.
The
astonishing popularity and electoral success of Reagan and Thatcher (and to a
lesser extent Bush and Major) meant that the new consensus was never really
broken by the Democrats or Labour.
These new economic orthodoxies drove almost everything
that these giants of conservative politics did. Yet the effects of their new
agenda were anything but conservative.
Those communities which had passed down
jobs from generation to generation were ripped apart. Wealth was accrued by the
elites of Wall Street and the City of London.
Mutuals, symbols of community and
reciprocity for generations, were dismantled. Social Housing was privitised
and not replaced, leading to the current housing crisis we
find ourselves in.
As Maurice Glasman said, "We had this mad market fundamentalism
under Margaret Thatcher, the abandonment of any conception of the common good,
the enormous transfer of wealth from poor to rich - it was horrible."
The
concept of the common good, which is drawn from Christian social teaching,
isn't just the preserve of the left.
The whole point is that conservatives
should (and many do) care about the wellbeing of all, rather than just
slavishly following the diktats of the market.
This
abandonment of the common good, the sacrifice
of local communities to the vicissitudes of the gods of 'the market',
prioritising of the financial over all other spheres of life should be anathema
to true conservatives.
The clue is in the name. Conservatives value family,
community, the local, heritage, tradition, institutions. All of these were
ripped up by Thatcher and Reagan's economic fundamentalism.
Instead of the true conservatism championed by giants
like Michael Oakeshott and Edmund Burke, the last four decades of conservative
rule in the UK and US has led to the triumph of global mega corporations over
everyday life and our local communities.
As Tory MP Jesse Norman has written, Burke warned of the dangers of
allowing big business to dictate our lives.
"In his own time, Burke
regarded as his greatest achievement his campaign to restrain the crony
capitalism of the East India Company, and to insist on the accountability of
private power to public authority."
In other words, the father of conservative thought took
on a global corporation and helped to bring it to heal.
Compare and contrast
that with the government's weak response to the steel crisis in Port Talbot.
Watch this video and tell me it's
'conservative' to shut down the steel plant.
In the face of the potential devastation of the local
community, we get little but platitudes from the 'conservative' government.
Time and again, contemporary 'conservatives' show their contempt for values of
restraint, respect for institutions, family, faith and community.
From the
devastating economics of Reagan and Thatcher, to the contempt for those
campaigning to keep Sunday Special, to the current crisis in the steel works of
Port Talbot, so many of the policies of our modern conservative governments are
deeply, bafflingly, unconservative.
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