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
"The point is, we didnt elect him....So why does he have the platform on whcih to comment on political decisions?"
I hope you'll remember your own words on the next occasion that Prince Charles opens his stupid fat trap on a subject he knows nothing about.
http://cuttingedgeuk.proboards.com/index.cgi
'At the time Christians claimed that the Mithraists' saviour was the anti-christ.'
Evidence?
'You'll be telling me next that the 25th of December was not a Mithraist holy day and that Christians didn't take over 'pagan' festivals and holidays.'
'Christmas' is not Christian, though.
'You really should study history.'
I look forward to your learned contribution on the subject of early Mithraism.
The Vatican had their tongues tied through Mussolini, Ethiopia and on to 1945. Thankfully the C of E can say whatever they wish, if they believe future social conditions are being planned to be compromised unfairly. And thankfully too - how would history judge Rowan if he did not speak out now, before we, seemed to be, enter some sort of "valley of darkness"?
Old Vince and the rest of the political classes just dont get it....this is a cobbled up government in order to get a working parliamentary majority...fair enough. But would they have got enough votes at the election if they had stood on the policies that they are now implementing...I think not, and the voters were hoodwinked.
Christians, the shepherd and the sheep was not meant literally!
The bishop proposes a party today and passing the cost to future generations. Not very good samaritan?
After each rant whether at the last Labour Gov or This Coalition he then parties at celebrity filled evenings and baths in his fame. Was vanity a core Christian goal?
The debt that he conveniently ignores has cost the lives of hundreds of thousands in the third world, the lack of available credit for them was spent by a rich country that doesn't want to stop the party including Rowan. Was sod them a Christian value?
You can be sheep and follow a vain individual or you can get a brain and follow the teachings instead.
Read what he says in his speaches, full of contradiction and without any direction. Just filled with contradictory criticisms in the desire it feeds his need for self importance and fame.
"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".
A. The left's version would be exactly the same, that's why the general public don't bother voting.
Why do we automatically think that bigger cities deliver better value for money? The larger the city, the more police, crime etc. The smaller the city the bigger the community spirit. We have over the years traded happiness and security for prosperity and insecurity.
I was so relieved that someone of Dr Rowan's social stature at last spoke out. His comments about
' 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. ' is what so many of us feel. And yes i feel fear, great fear. No one has talked about this before. And now, I do feel pretty near total distrust and saddness about this so called democratic model. Devastating. This isn't the county I was born in to...it feels as if there is no-one speaking for the likes of me any more...and this has been around in varying degrees for a long time. Have we ever recovered from the moniterism of Thatcher's politics?
I was so relieved that someone of Dr Rowan's social stature at last spoke out. His comments about
' 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. ' is what so many of us feel. And yes i feel fear, great fear. No one has talked about this before. And now, I do feel pretty near total distrust and saddness about this so called democratic model. Devastating. This isn't the county I was born in to...it feels as if there is no-one speaking for the likes of me any more...and this has been around in varying degrees for a long time. Have we ever recovered from the moniterism of Thatcher's politics?
Whatever the many failings of any organised religion, in these demoralising times I am glad that a person of Dr Williams' standing is speaking out so clearly. He takes both Government and Opposition to task; and I look to many more opinion leaders to do the same. However, if we criticise we must offer alternative ideas: and I am very afraid that nobody in authority or finance *anywhere* has a clue what to do, to solve our problems. I do know that, in Gloucestershire, people with the hardest lives will have less and less access to free books and education - as half our libraries are shutting as I type; that our best council managers are losing their jobs, replaced by gormlessly obedient pen-pushers; that I might as well try to fly off Clifton Suspension Bridge as try to earn a living from being moderately intelligent and creative. Indeed I'm beginning to feel that mass suicide is probably the only real answer: it would cut hospital waiting lists and the prison population...! The brutal facts are that our politicians do not represent us; they don't care what happens to any of us; and life is looking less and less worth living.
"the Queen has the common sense to stay out of politics or she would lose her legitimacy"
Are you kidding? When ex-PMs Thatcher and Major were invited to the royal wedding - along with scum such as the Crown Prince of Bahrain and King Mswati III of Swaziland - but not Blair and Brown?