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
I hope it's a habit he get's into.
great article man thanks a lot
Look we didn't vote for him. He doesn't have much stand in the UK. He just waltz in regardless of his position and carry on how ever he feels. Very overrated.
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@Richard Hill ... YES. Someone who thinks the same.
.... Ed Balls does Labour proud and gives lessons in making friends and influencing people:
http://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/31346/ed-balls-nazi-costum...
Nice guy.
Rowen Williams well said keep speaking up the sick and disabled need you
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It is about time the Church spoke out and it has everything to do with them, afterall we are supposed to be a Christian country!! How can anyone who purports to be a Christian sit back and do nothing as this unelected government attacks the genuine disabled, unemployed, children, women, education, health and the elderly?? This government cares only about money and sees everything in terms of cash and puts profit before the lives of the people of the UK. Tragedy is you all sit there and take it and slag off people such as the Archbishop who have the guts to stand up and be counted!! A christian country?? Hypocrits sitting back and beleiving the crap in the media is what this country is made up of!!!!
I'm quite happy for the church to come out and join public debate, in fact stir it. I have a great deal of respect for people who leave themselves open to criticism. Good on ya RW even though you've said a lot but managed to stay on the fence. I'd have even greater respect if you told us what you really thought of those thieves in Westminster. Take them out and show them the consequencies of their policies. Rub their faces in the shi... that they bring about just like that fella Jesus did in the temple.
Mr Williams thank you for having the faith to speak out against the coalition government, which is really an extension to Margaret Thatcher policies which does not care about the poor and only serves to increase the north and south divide. Of which Labour worked so hard to reverse with its equality bill. Let’s face it the Coalition have duped us all, and they themselves are now seemingly having to review their ill thought-out policies like education and health. So I have no faith in them and thank God for you speaking out we need more support from the clergy because this is going to be a ethical dilemma if it’s not already
It's about time the Archbishop spoke out. I hope it's a habit he get's into.