Regardless of the outcome of this election, Peter Mandelson is already trying to spin his way out of defeat. Here’s what the silver-tongued First Secretary recently told the NS editor, Jason Cowley:
The point about the Conservatives is that they believe they cannot win an election by running against New Labour. They are for the political landscape that we have created.
The whole point of Cameron’s Conservatives is to market his party in a way that leads people to believe they’ve put their past behind them, that they’re a continuum of New Labour.
They are not, as it happens. But the fact that they feel they can only win power by marketing themselves in that way says a lot about the strength of New Labour.
You’ll be able to read more from Mandelson in Jason’s interview with Gordon Brown for this week’s magazine (out tomorrow).
As he writes, it does seem like an attempt by Mandelson “to claim a kind of victory even in defeat”. He speaks with the pride of a teacher whose textbook (The Blair Revolution Revisited) has been eagerly devoured, even if not all of the lessons have been learned.
Yet key figures on Labour’s centre left, such as Jon Cruddas, argue that the similarities between Cameron’s Conservatives and New Labour represent a defeat, not a victory for the party. It is because Labour has been insufficiently bold that the Tories have succeeded in masquerading as progressive, even while pledging to cut taxes for millionaires.
We can expect this division, between those who feel flattered and those who feel enraged by Cameron’s rise, to be at the centre of any future Labour leadership contest.
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