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Tony Robinson's warning to Labour

Tony Robinson

Published 07 December 2007

Unless we cleanse the Augean stables, and that will involve a root and branch transformation of the Party, we won’t deserve another election victory

For a decade New Labour has prided itself on being a modernising party. It has modernised the NHS, it has modernised Britain’s universities, it has even modernised the Party structure, but its fatal flaw has been that it has neglected to modernise its own culture, which at times still resembles a scene from one of those 1960s’ smoke-filled rooms where members of the Party machine blustered and bullied, determined to assert their will at all costs.

The latest funding scandal has been portrayed even by its fiercest party critics as an aberration, a cock-up bound to happen, brought about by an inexperienced general secretary and government ministers who failed to manage him properly.

Nothing could be further from the truth. Peter Watt is a gentle and thoughtful man, but a skilled operator. He honed his talents serving the present-day party machine, and was the machine’s candidate for general secretary. He is the apotheosis of the political apparatchik, entirely a New Labour creation, even though he may now be its nemesis.

The search by party officials like Peter for loopholes in an act of parliament Labour itself introduced in order to appear whiter than white isn’t an isolated event; nor is it merely a reaction to the Tories' apparently effortless ability to dance round the Act’s regulations (though there is no doubt that this has indeed been a big problem for New Labour).

The "misinterpretation" of the Act by Labour Party officials is entirely predictable, at one with the catalogue of black farces that has emanated from Labour HQ over the past decade; the ejection of Walter Wolfgang from Conference, the clumsy attempts to prevent Rhodri Morgan becoming Welsh First Minister, the parachuting of favourite sons into parliamentary seats, the fixing and stitching of internal party elections.

They are all the product of the same political culture; indeed it's often been the same people who have orchestrated them, moving silently through the background like the shadowy figures in the back row of the mass ranks of the Politburo. It's not surprising that they act like Hugh Scanlon's boys - they are his direct heirs.

In the 1980s those who went on to create New Labour were a tiny faction, a handful of intellectuals who recognised that if the Party was ever going to regain power they would have to roll up their sleeves, get their hands dirty and oust Militant. But they had neither the skills nor the organisational ability to do this on their own. Instead they relied on the army of dedicated fighters within the big right-wing unions, tough combatants, many of them ex-communists, all too familiar with the practice of using communist methods to thwart the Stalinists and latterly the Trotskyites.

This may seem like ancient history, but in 1997 when Tony Blair swept to power, he had virtually no power base within the party. Though initially supported by soft-left progressives, it was his friends among the right-wing street fighters whom he turned to for assistance, and it was they who provided the know-how whereby the Labour Party was transformed into a machine specifically designed to enact the will of Downing Street.

There is no better example of the brutal confidence with which they approached the job than the coup de gras applied by Ken Jackson's AEEU when he deployed his union’s entire bloc vote against Ken Livingstone’s mayoral candidacy, even though his membership hadn’t been consulted.

Most of this behaviour hasn’t been corrupt like the corruption of those Tories who used their position to advance their own financial ends.

New Labour has always been a deeply ideological construction. It believes passionately in freeing the British people from poverty, making their streets safe and unshackling the markets that constrain their purchasing power.

But it believes just as passionately that every action it undertakes is right, and anything that gets in its way is wrong and needs to be neutralised, regardless of whether such neutralisation is fair, legal or in the rule book.

This ideology became clearly visible in the events surrounding the Iraq war, but it’s a phenomenon that has constantly bubbled away under the surface for more than a decade, and even after the shambles of the last few months it’s as prevalent as ever.

Over the past few weeks I’ve heard many senior party figures argue that however embarrassing the current debacle might be, it's an irritant that needs to managed efficiently so we can move on swiftly and build towards a fourth term of office. This seems to me not only naive but profoundly wrong.

It's naive because nowadays the activities of any large organisation are so ruthlessly scrutinised that if it behaves improperly it will eventually be found out. And it's wrong because to deliberately break or attempt to by-pass the law while demanding that every other citizen should uphold it, is an unsustainable position.

The challenge that Gordon Brown and his team face in confronting this dysfunctional culture both within themselves and within those who surround them is monumental. While Tony Blair was in power his Willy Wonka talents and speed of operation obscured the depth of the ideological malaise within the party. But Gordon's modus operandum is the exact opposite, and in a way it's his caution and lack of pizzazz that have exposed these defects so swiftly.

Is he prepared to address this crisis in an open and honest way, rather than simply deploying the vocabulary of 'openness' and 'honesty', a strategy the Party used repeatedly under Tony Blair?

Will he for instance open all its finances to the National Executive for thorough and constant scrutiny?

It may seem unbelievable in today’s world that the treasurer of the governing party in a major western democracy should protest that he knows nothing of that party’s loan arrangements. But on many occasions during my time on the NEC I sat opposite polite but stony-faced party officials who refused to divulge such information, and I find Jack Dromey’s protestations completely plausible.

I believe we can win a fourth term in office, and despite the unacceptable behaviour so vividly displayed recently, I earnestly hope we do, because it’ll be the poor, the sick and the old who will suffer if we don’t. But unless we cleanse the Augean stables, and that will involve a root and branch transformation of the Party and its relationship with the professional political class, we won’t deserve the luxury of basking in yet another election victory.

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13 comments from readers

Frank
08 December 2007 at 08:40

Unfortunately Gordon Brown will always be tainted. This is the man who destroyed the pension prospects of many millions of present a future pensioners in the private sector.

npgdavies
08 December 2007 at 10:55

"For a decade New Labour has prided itself on being a modernising party."

New Labour has not successfully modernised anything. For a decade it has got in PR spivs who produce glossy brochures. In the same decade it has closed down hospital beds, reduced access to many services, and actively hindered real workers (doctors, teachers, police, soldiers, and nurses) from doing their jobs.

I want to fully support the choice agenda (a different government please) and to commission a new service (that actually delivers something) If its payment by results you're after this government gets £0.

The Wizard of Oz (Blair) has gone and we now see reality breaking in over the appearances new Labour tried so valiantly to maintain.

Events have now caught up with new Labour, and it is left wallowing in self pity and sleaze.

tomfrom66
08 December 2007 at 11:48

Terence Blacker's article in yesterday's Indie - "Institutional dishonesty has become the norm" - paints a sad and dispiriting picture of the UK after 28 years of Blatcherism.

New Labour- Old Tory: where's the difference, where's the choice?

It's all a catastrophe.

gnuneo
08 December 2007 at 13:48

we are talking - but are they listening?

or is it just MI5 and the corporate bosses who are listening?

Observer
08 December 2007 at 17:36

There is another scandal going on in Scotland, Wendygate, and if anyone is interested they have well and truly blown it. They are now fighting with each other like ferrets in a sack, a very unedifying spectacle. Manna from Heaven for the SNP.

Roland Baker
08 December 2007 at 17:38

This cleansing of the Augean stables could start with declaring the Labour Party Deputy Leadership Election null and void. Elsewhere in the 10.12.07 dated NS John Cruddas sets out his Deputy Leadership manifesto again.

It transpires that the winner of the election had illegal funding and undeclared loans. The winner of the election, a former Solicitor General and QC who does not understand the law in which she is Learned even when she wrote it, presented a manifesto designed to disenfranchise male members of the party and refused to state her position on 90 days. What is her position now on 42 days?

John Cruddas had to battle against this and another candidate with illegal funding so he was at an unfair disadvantage. If the election were fought again with candidates who broke electoral law disqualified, John Cruddas would be the man to do what Tony Robinson suggests.

Croslandite
08 December 2007 at 17:48

I'm afraid sorting out the organisational culture won't tackle the difficulties that the Labour Party now faces. Jon Trickett and Jon Cruddas article puts forward a critical but positive way forward. I am afraid I have given up on the Labour Party as the mechanism for social democratic politics.

Tony Robinson is wrong, the Labour government does not believe passionately in transforming society. The government has accepted the Thatcherite neo liberal consensus. Labour's whole ideological premise needs reviewing.

grayee
08 December 2007 at 19:46

http://lukeakehurst.blogspot.com/2007/12/more-nonsense-from-...

Assegai
08 December 2007 at 20:38

Written by a man who cannot possibly empathise with "the old, the sick and the poor."

As someone earning the min wage and without dependent children I've seen my council tax go up by over 100% since Labour came to power, my income tax bill will rise by £713 next year due to Brown's axeing of the 10% band, and my wage suppressed due to the extra supply of imported labour caused by EU expansion (Blair put no constraints on the new EU countries accessing our labour markets unlike most other established EU countries).

As for modernising our NHS and universities this doesn't mean improving them despite the extra money thrown at them. GPs are paid a lot more for doing less under the latest contracts . And young people urged to go to university (and get in debt) although there aren’t enough graduate jobs in the economy to satisfy demand.

taghioff.info
09 December 2007 at 18:39

My god the British hate themselves. I didn't see it till I came to work here in India as a researcher. The UK has many, many problems, the corrupting power of business to politician relationships amongst them. But the UK is not alone in this respect.

The power of business to corrupt politics is now a truly global phenomenon, look at the privatisation of water causing riots in South America. New Labours ideas were nicked from the UNDP Human Development Report, in other words they were not really ever an expression of national politics.

What this implies is that if you are looking for a renewal in left wing politics, or in New Labour, then you are probably needing to reign in the power of business at an international level, by having a stronger legal regime around international financial activity.

New Labour's hubris is a direct by product of their belief in the unstoppable power of business, which they call globalization. There is a kind of manifest destiny idea implied in this. We need to go back to our left wing routes, and remember that it is men who make history. We can make our global polity also, and maybe that can help keep politicians honest.

Mike
10 December 2007 at 14:21

An excellent analysis of all whats wrong with New Labour, but a fourth term, no thanks. In a country where the democratic process is now corrupt to the core the only way to try and make the politicos toe the line is to eject them every few years. Ten years seems about the maximum that a party can stay in power before it gets incompetent (Tory & Labour), tainted in sleaze (Both Parties) or outright corrupt (Labour). Firstly the whip system is a corrupt process and if it were employed in business would actually be illegal. People want to vote a person into power but not necessarily a particular party. Many times in America a Democrat will vote for a Republican (or Visa-Versa) because he/she is looking after the interests of his constituency first and foremost. The Westminster whip system prevents this happening in UK politics and is an inherently corrupt practice. Creative counting & block voting by Unions is another corrupt practice and one which is giving Brown a difficult time in trying to change the donation rules. Because of Labours debt mountain both in the party and the country as a whole, any changes here will hurt them far more than the Tories. However, the real issue with New Labour is they are a strange mix of modern day greed at the top mixed in with a Stalinist control freakery for the rank and file members. Far too many rights have been stripped from UK citizens under the pretense its for the greater good when its really for the good of the New Labour ruling class and probably the biggest question most in the country have, is whats happened to all those extras taxes that Gordon Brown imposed. We know that 30-40 billion went on Northern Rock to sweeten Labours stronghold in the north, but long before that fiasco the poor have been getting poorer whilst middle england has been getting taxed higher as well as getting poorer. Brown has created the biggest black hole in a UK economy since records began as tens of billions disappear never to see the light of day. No system of government is perfect but the birthplace of democracy is now more akin to a banana republic run by a dictator and employing their own goon squad to keep the people in line.

amanfromMars
11 December 2007 at 06:12

Until such times as someone steps up to the plate to declare and articulate "I have a viable global dream" you will be following a sub-prime nightmare which has the Profit Capitalist System, which by default make everything always more and more expensive because everything is sold for more than it costs creating a money for nothing situation and societies built upon its vapourware/unsustainable and toxic dream, being the architect of its own inevitable downfall. And as the denial of the systemic problem creates ever more anomalies in its ranks proving the Chaos and Mismanagement rather than Sharing any Order, so will confidence and credibility in the System be lost and its proponents and dogged nihilists rendered as pariahs.

The ONLY course of action open to them which will not see the System destroy itself and its keepers persona non grata globally.... for it is delusional in the extreme to blame anyone other than themselves for any self serving, self preserving maintenance of a fundamentally flawed System .... is to make a radical change themselves to be seen as necessarily contrite and worthy successors well able to be trusted with a New System/World Order.

The alternative is more pain and someone else stepping up to the plate to take over at the helm for until such times will any and all spin in a false tale be mercilessly researched for its truth and that is always only a simple matter of asking simple questions and listening to the answers which nowadays go around the world in an instant, allowing anyone with conflicting information which cannot be plausibly denied, to render the credibility of supposed impeccable source, just so much junk/a purveyor of nonsense servering nothing more than an impossible dream.

And Labour and Brown have no possible dream to offer which is why the country was not given the chance to accept their vision/lead via an election. They are as cuckoos and charlatans in a feathered nest and quite why they are not kicked out into the street is a weakness perpetrated by a lack of Intelligence and its Services. The Government doesn't lead a country, its Intelligence [Services] should with the Members of Parliament serving that Intelligence.

And that is quite rational too because if any System requires Change and quite obviously, with the catastrophic meltdown in the money markets because of dodgy practices for profit, that sector needs wholesale change, then everything else will also be subject to Change .... by the ripple rule of Cause and Effect.

And Intelligence today is Spun with InterNetworking Media so that Governments can read and see and hear what is required of them by the People for the People.

That is amfM HyperRadioProActivity and an AI Programming Algorithm freely available to All.

SapphireRose
16 December 2007 at 14:39

If Labour seeks a fourth term then Gordon Brown will have to be kicked out as leader, he does not have the vision, charisma, intelligence or strength as a leader to keep Labour on a winning path. Recent events such as the poor handling of the announcement of a general election, the donations, the argument with Russia over poisonings, the loss of personal data all shows a serious problem with the present Labour leadership.

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