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26 November 2013updated 12 Oct 2023 10:12am

George Osborne and the risky politics of chutzpah

The Chancellor is right that people don't demand ideological consistency but they do like politicians to believe in something.

By Rafael Behr

The Chancellor’s position is clear enough. He doesn’t think it is the government’s job to meddle in markets except when he does. As my colleague George Eaton noted yesterday, George Osborne’s decision to cap payday loan charges sits in splendid contradiction with his objections to Ed Miliband’s proposal to freeze energy prices. When Labour wants to mandate lower prices, it’s Bolshevism; when Tories give in to the same impulse, it’s addressing the concerns of ordinary citizens.

The volte face has been greeted with scepticism across the political spectrum. Orthodox Thatcherites fear that the Chancellor is dabbling in anti-enterprise Milibandism, while Labour, cherishing a moment of intellectual vindication, are confident Osborne can never beat them in an arms race over the cost of living and responsible capitalism.

So, Left Populism 1 – 0 Market Fundamentalism? Not necessarily.

There isn’t anything particularly new about this ideological plasticity in the Chancellor. Help to Buy is a market intervention to buoy up house prices by stimulating demand with government guarantees. When Osborne’s deficit-reduction programme veered of course, he simply abandoned his targets. As I wrote earlier this year, the economy has been run to a plan A-minus (or B-plus) ever since the decision was made to let automatic fiscal stabilisers compensate for disappointing growth and to bring forward infrastructure spending to counteract the threat of perpetual stagnation. There is no doubt that Osborne’s economic instincts are deeply Conservative, but his political impulses are ruthlessly pragmatic. He would rather win an election by sacrificing a point of Thatcherite dogma here or there than gratify libertarian purists and lose. One of the Chancellor’s defining political traits is the embrace of chutzpah – that excellent Yiddish word to describe the bare-faced cheek of someone who combines offence with self-righteousness. (One way to understand chutzpah is to imagine a shoplifter taking his stolen item back to the store for a refund because it doesn’t work properly.)

Osborne’s lack of intellectual consistency naturally irritates the kind of people who admire doctrinal rigour. But does it really matter to anyone else? It matters to Labour, of course. That is partly because there is a habit of mind on the left that seeks an almost aesthetic gratification in theoretical coherence, but largely because exposing the Chancellor’s discreet capitulations to what Miliband has been saying all along strengthens the argument that he ought to be given a turn at running the country. A central part of the story that Miliband’s team wants to tell about his march on Downing Street is that he identified deep structural problems with the economy before anyone else and that the Tories, blinkered by their obsolete pro-market dogmas, are incapable of matching his perspicacity. (In this context, they like to recall that Osborne was accusing Labour of going back the 1970s when Gordon Brown intervened to rescue the entire banking system from collapse in 2008, so his antennae for what constitutes radical leftism are a bit warped.) In other words, Labour want the Chancellor’s economic flip-flops to be seen as much more than conventional flakiness. They want it to be a disqualification from holding the office he has at such a critical moment in the nation’s destiny.

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It is far from clear that voters are ready to see it that way. For one thing, only the kind of people who use “wedded to the neo-liberal paradigm” as a term of abuse will readily understand the argument and they are almost certainly voting Labour already. Miliband may be making progress in highlighting the way that the economy isn’t adequately trickling wealth down to households who feel a financial squeeze but that doesn’t mean he has persuaded the country that a drastic change of direction – and a return to Labour rule – is the remedy.

The Chancellor’s supporters, meanwhile, remain confident that Britain is still a very capitalist society; that if you hold it up to the light you see the watermark of pro-enterprise, aspirational Thatcherism. In that context, even if voters do feel that something has gone awry with some dysfunctional markets, they’d rather have them repaired by bona fide capitalists than the people who lost all the arguments in the 1980s, never got over it and are just waiting for a chance to turn the clock back. Osborne’s calculation is surely that he can feint a bit to the left when it comes to regulating the likes of Wonga precisely because there is a bedrock of confidence in the Tories not to get carried away in that direction. The argument would be that Conservatives regulate reluctantly, when they have to, while Labour regulates indiscriminately because that’s all it knows.

The danger for Osborne is probably not that millions of people will be aghast at his failure to uphold the purity of liberal market theory, nor even that they think he is cynically chasing Miliband’s agenda. There isn’t much evidence that unyielding intellectualism is a quality that is supremely prized by voters in their politicians. It certainly isn’t one they expect. On the contrary, properly spun, a bit of flexibility in the face of the facts is potentially quite appealing. The problems only begin when flexibility is coupled with a pre-existing reputation for lacking principle. This is where the Tories are in danger.

Only last week, David Cameron was reported to be trash-talking environmental policy as “green crap.” Naturally that doesn’t go down well with the very small number of people for whom ecological rectitude is the greatest asset to be hoped for in a Prime Minister. But it also goes down badly with anyone who remembers that Cameron once professed to care very deeply about greenery, which is anyone who was even half-paying attention to politics in the period 2005-2008. The issue itself is secondary to the casual abandonment of the commitment.

Osborne’s u-turn over pay-day lenders is not as flagrant in most people’s eyes as the butchery of Cameron’s once hugged huskies. But it stems from the same brand of cynicism. I doubt many people will be dismayed because the Chancellor appears to have changed – or even betrayed – his old beliefs. It is a problem when, over time, it becomes impossible to suppose that the Chancellor or the Prime Minister really believe in anything very much at all.

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