Leader: The government needs to know how afraid people are
We are being committed to radical, long-term policies for which no one voted.
By Rowan Williams Published 09 June 2011
I can imagine a New Statesman reader looking at the contents of this issue and mentally supplying: "That's enough coalition ministers (Ed)." After all, the NS has never exactly been a platform for the establishment to explain itself. But it seems worth encouraging the present government to clarify what it is aiming for in two or three key areas, in the hope of sparking a livelier debate about where we are going - and perhaps even todiscover what the left's big idea currently is.
The political debate in the UK at the moment feels pretty stuck. An idea whose roots are firmly in a particular strand of associational socialism has been adopted enthusiastically by the Conservatives. The widespread suspicion that this has been done for opportunistic or money-saving reasons allows many to dismiss what there is of a programme for "big society" initiatives; even the term has fast become painfully stale. But we are still waiting for a full and robust account of what the left would do differently and what a left-inspired version of localism might look like.
Digging a bit deeper, there are a good many on the left and right who sense that the tectonic plates of British - European? - politics are shifting. Managerial politics, attempting with shrinking success to negotiate life in the shadow of big finance, is not an attractive rallying point, whether it labels itself (New) Labour or Conservative. There is, in the middle of a lot of confusion, an increasingly audible plea for some basic thinking about democracy itself - and the urgency of this is underlined by what is happening in the Middle East and North Africa.
Incidentally, this casts some light on the bafflement and indignation that the present government is facing over its proposals for reform in health and education. With remarkable speed, we are being committed to radical, long-term policies for which no one voted. At the very least, there is an understandable anxiety about what democracy means in such a context. Not many people want government by plebiscite, certainly. But, for example, the comprehensive reworking of the Education Act 1944 that is now going forward might well be regarded as a proper matter for open probing in the context of election debates. The anxiety and anger have to do with the feeling that not enough has been exposed to proper public argument.
I don't think that the government's commitment to localism and devolved power is simply a cynical walking-away from the problem. But I do think that there is confusion about the means that have to be willed in order to achieve the end. If civil society organisations are going to have to pick up
responsibilities shed by government, the crucial questions are these. First, what services must have cast-iron guarantees of nationwide standards, parity and continuity? (Look at what is happening to youth services, surely a strategic priority.) Second, how, therefore, does national government underwrite these strategic "absolutes" so as to make sure that, even in a straitened financial climate, there is a continuing investment in the long term, a continuing response to what most would see as root issues: child poverty, poor literacy, the deficit in access to educational excellence, sustainable infrastructure in poorer communities (rural as well as urban), and so on? What is too important to be left to even the most resourceful localism?
Government badly needs to hear just how much plain fear there is around such questions at present. It isn't enough to respond with what sounds like a mixture of, "This is the last government's legacy," and, "We'd like to do more, but just wait until the economy recovers a bit." To acknowledge the reality of fear is not necessarily to collude with it. But not to recognise how pervasive it is risks making it worse. Equally, the task of opposition is not to collude in it, either, but to define some achievable alternatives. And, for that to happen, we need sharp-edged statements of where the disagreements lie.
The uncomfortable truth is that, while grass-roots initiatives and local mutualism are to be found flourishing in a great many places, they have been weakened by several decades of cultural fragmentation. The old syndicalist and co-operative traditions cannot be reinvented overnight and, in some areas, they have to be invented for the first time.
This is not helped by a quiet resurgence of the seductive language of "deserving" and "undeserving" poor, nor by the steady pressure to increase what look like punitive responses to alleged abuses of the system. If what is in view - as Iain Duncan Smith argues passionately on page 18 - is real empowerment for communities of marginal people, we need better communication about strategic imperatives, more positive messages about what cannot and will not be left to chance and - surely one of the most important things of all - a long-term education policy at every level that will deliver the critical tools for democratic involvement, not simply skills that serve the economy.
For someone like myself, there is an ironic satisfaction in the way several political thinkers today are quarrying theological traditions for ways forward. True, religious perspectives on these issues have often got bogged down in varieties of paternalism. But there is another theological strand to be retrieved that is not about "the poor" as objects of kindness but about the nature of sustainable community, seeing it as one in which what circulates - like the flow of blood - is the mutual creation of capacity, building the ability of the other person or group to become, in turn, a giver of life and responsibility. Perhaps surprisingly, this is what is at the heart of St Paul's ideas about community at its fullest; community, in his terms, as God wants to see it.
A democracy that would measure up to this sort of ideal - religious in its roots but not exclusive or confessional - would be one in which the central question about any policy would be: how far does it equip a person or group to engage generously and for the long term in building the resourcefulness and well-being of any other person or group, with the state seen as a "community of communities", to use a phrase popular among syndicalists of an earlier generation?
A democracy going beyond populism or majoritarianism but also beyond a Balkanised focus on the local that fixed in stone a variety of postcode lotteries; a democracy capable of real argument about shared needs and hopes and real generosity: any takers?
Dr Rowan Williams is the Archbishop of Canterbury
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347 comments
...a success in having as this weeks guest editor, I forgot to put in...
Money is the root of all evil. The rich man has as much chance of entering heaven as a camel passing through the eye of a needle. Greed is a mortal sin.... etc etc.
Christianity has much to say about the obsesssive pursuit of wealth - none of it positive. Yet this is the fundamental basis of our society and politics. Localism, the big society and the cynical guff about all of us being in it together is just window dressing. The High Pay Commission report, published only a few weeks ago, strips away all this hypocrisy with breathtaking clarity. The gap between the rich in our society and the poor is reaching levels not seen since the VICTORIAN era. The notion of the UK as a society based on Christian values is being dismantled in front of our eyes. We need Christian leaders to cast a light on this collapse of morality into a void of meaningless consumption, led by hopelessly corrupt fools who really believe they are worth 300 times the minimum wage.
Everyone knows you can't be a Christian and a Conservative
I hope that all the enthusiasts for the "free" schools policy, the Conservative Party's only one in 2010, are terribly pleased that it is endorsed by Tony Blair in today's Times. But then, like Andrew Lansley's abandoned health policy and like so many other things besides, it was in fact devised by Blair and by David Miliband. They just couldn't get these things past Gordon Brown, Ed Balls and Ed Miliband.
Blair won two General Elections that any Labour Leader would have won and a third at which any viable Opposition would have beaten him. In that last case, he lost Labour 100 seats that anyone else would have kept against the laughable rump of the Tories in 2005, his only ever contribution to the outcome of a General Election.
But no one is allowed to point this out. Hence the headless chicken reaction to the statements of the obvious by Rowan Williams. He has reminded the universally Blairite media that they did not get what they wanted and what they specifically instructed the mere voters to give them: a Cameron overall majority leading to a Cabinet with James Purnell restored to No Work and Hardly Any Pensions, with Andrew Adonis at Education, and with places for Peter Mandelson and Alan Milburn (and also for Stephen Byers, before his bit of trouble), all of which had been publicly announced months before the Election, and none of which would have resulted in any withdrawal of the Labour Whip in the Lords where they would all have sat, since the Leader of the "Opposition" would have been David Miliband, who would also have been an attendee at a Cameron Cabinet and bound by its collective responsibility, as would Tony Blair have been without his even having to have been a member of either House.
Ed Miliband should seize this opportunity and agree wholeheartedly with Dr Williams, thereby breaking once and for all with this wretched little junta as surely as with the closely connected one that we have instead, which, as he rightly points out, is not merely wrong but illegitimate, hence its enthusiastic endorsement by its real head, and now would-be directly "elected President of Europe", Tony Blair.
The Archbishop of Canterbury has made a valuable contribution to the bigger debate that surrounds the policies of the conservative lead coalition.
The majority of people are unsure how these policies will impact them in the longer term. As he statesthes epolicies are not discussed or indeed debated. What is clear is that these sweeping cuts are being replaced by further ideologically driven policies. Capitalist policies whose primary focus is to channel public money to private entities, further perpetuating the transfer of the state's resources to private and non-accountable entities.
The so called program of reforms and policy initiatives, big society, NHS, education et al is but a continuation of the ongoing process of privitising the state's core functions - defense, education, health, social programs, tax collection (tax free havens) where profit is represented by numbers on a balance sheet and not by direct benefits to the community not to mention the less tangible indirect benefits.
The recent economic melt down (private interests who socialised their losses to the public but kept all of their profits) are the same interests that are benefiting from the shock troop tactic of mass cut backs and ideologically driven privitisations. Once these have been enacted it is almost impossible to turn back the tide of these vested interests. Interests who are represented by armies of lawyers and accountants and so called experts that overrun increasingly cash strapped and poorly resourced and motivated civil servants and public watchdogs.
My only point about the Archbishop would be to shave the beard and make himself look more media friendly as I believe he is a man who has an important message to give society.
Well said Rowan!
Rowan is absolutely right to stress that the ConDems are implementing polices for which no one voted.
The Tories(both orange &blue varieties) are determined to melt the welfare state quicker than greenhouse gas emissions can melt the arctic ice!
This is their purpose - to replace our welfare state and public services by extreme right wing Friedman economic polices that seek to deliberately destroy the public sector and replace these services by profit motivated privatisation - that is why state education and heatlh provision are being targeted and deliberately obscured by the Big Con Trick - The Big Society nonsense!
The Archbishop is being attacked by the Political establishment because as the leader of the CoE he should be singing from the same Hymn book as Cameron & Clegg!
Well done Rowan for having the courage to write publicly distance yourself from the Tory ConDems!
If only more people in England had your views and didn't vote for Clegg to get Cameron!
In answer to:
Mick
09 June 2011 at 12:43
I have no problem with Dr Williams making these comments. He has just as much right to do so as anyone else. What I cannot fathom is why people consider his opinions any higher than anyone else's - i.e. why do the media put great emphasis on his thoughts? Bizarrely Alistair "we don't do God" Campbell even applauded his comments saying he has an important "moral leadership". He doesn't. Religious people are no better, more moral, wiser educated, taller, shorter than anyone else. They do not, in my opinion, deserve any greater influence or coverage than any other person.
I am an atheist and I consider myself to be equal to Dr Williams. Oh, except he believes in magic, fairytales, and wishes the world to run itself on the basis of some evidence-less storytelling
Are you an atheist in Neuman/Morgenstern/Nash sense? Are you an atheist - determinist or an atheist - indeterminist? Anyway, how do you explain, on you grounds that he has somehow more enticing social position that you seem to enjoy (although I can not know this for sure).
I we'd rather walked steadily towards a more cooperative society, than marched others into more competitive ones.
Thank God Dr Williams has had the courage to speak out. Many comments on here indicate people have not actually read the article.
I am disabled with an incurable condition. There are many like me. As the Archbishop said, we are living in fear. The welfare reforms are targeting the sick and disabled purely to save money. It has nothing to do with helping people find work. The public is being lied to to incite hatred so that no one will question these "reforms". If you cannot work you will be left to suffer and die. That is the reality in the UK today. Any doctor or nurse who works for ATOS performing these fake computer "medicals" should be ashamed and struck off by their professional bodies. I know of many disabled people who have been driven to the brink of suicide . Iain Duncan Smith is a devout Catholic. Does he think he can ignore the warnings from a bishop because he is protestant? I think Jesus' message was to help the sick not terminate them as useless to the economy. If the Archbishop is wrong, why has the DWP had to issue guidelines to Jobcentre staff on how to deal with suicidal claimants?Why are 3.5 million children living in desperate poverty? We do need a debate on democracy in this country because this is not it Funny how we keep being told there is no money, yet money always appears for things the government wants - 1 billion in Libya already, 3 billion for draft plans for trident,12 billion for overseas aid. It is way overdue that this country and others debated what kind of society we want to live in. We will all get sick and old one day so if you are not living in fear today, you may be tomorrow.
I am an ordinary woman and quite frankly, I am unable to understand a lot of the long words used in the New Statesman article, but I do get the gist of it.
Dr Williams is an intellectual and I think that the views he is expressing in his article, are based on the long outdated ideology of his youth, rather than any understanding of the reality of the present situation this country finds itself in.
If the coalition government were only able to act on the policies that were common to the manifestos of the two respective parties, there would be precious little that they would be able to achieve. As things stand the measures put in place have to withstand the scrutiny of the parliamentary process.
What alternatives do Rowan Williams and his fellow left wingers offer? More of the same policies that have brought this country to the brink of bankruptcy?
I see a country with large parts of the population languishing in a great trough of despondency. Of course, the poverty brought about by unemployment etc.cannot be ignored or dismissed. But equally worrying is the poverty of spirit we see in our communities. The benefit culture allowed to flourish under the last government has eroded the dignity, initiative and motivation of so many people. David Cameron is trying to address this with his "Big Society" and I think that is disgraceful of Rowan Williams to dismiss this initiative in this way. Surely, as a Christian, he should be encouraging anything that helps people to realise their worth and their full potential as human beings.
leveller, who voted for Rowan Williams as Archbishop of Canterbury? Do you know that he lives in palace and receives a huge salary paid by tenants of property owned by the Church of England that was stolen from monastic orders 500 years ago? Has he done a real days work in his whole life?
Did you know that although Christian teaching forbids polygamy, he supports the establishment of Islamic Sharia courts in the UK that allow polgamy, the payment of bride prices for wives and profoundly unequal divorce and property laws?
Did you know he opposes legal equality for LGBT people who are 5" of the UK population?
What a joke for this guy to put himself forward as a champion of equality and the poor!