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Sunday, 8 April 2018

The Centre Party Delusion

When your idea is universally pooh-poohed, chances are it isn't a very good one. Such is the announcement of the imminent (still) birth of yet another centrist party, vying for the mantle of mild social democracy while being for "entrepreneurship" and "immigration controls". Sounds pretty much like the Labour Party under Ed Miliband, and we all know how that turned out.

In theory. at least according to the venerable Andrew Rawnsley, he opines that there is what you might call an "objective" constituency for such a party. Polls show high numbers of 'don't knows' when asked to pick between Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn. Apparently, 45% of people think there needs to be a new centre party, and some 56% believe existing parties don't represent them. Rather than auguring the dawn for a rejuvenated centre, these can mean all kinds of things. After seeing the collapse of the Liberal Democrats over the course of the coalition government, it is quite possible large numbers of people *did* see the need for a new centre party (this figure is from 2015) once the existing one became a busted flush. That doesn't suppose they would be prepared to support it. Likewise, poll after poll shows that the majority of the electorate define themselves as being in the political centre. Not because they identify with Labour melts and Tory wets but, sadly, not a great many people are au fait with the difference between left and right and so identifying yourself as centre is non-committal and sensible without letting on your ignorance. Face it, if you were uninterested in politics would you take the time to understand the gradations of difference between left and right?

And then we have the issue of representation itself. There are large numbers of people who believe there isn't a party for them because none 100% agree with them, and/or do not talk about the things they believe are important. Here is why the pull of Nigel Farage and Jeremy Corbyn has proven so powerful, because they articulate outlooks that were/are excluded from the political mainstream. Thinking about exclusion now, in 2018, Corbynism has pulled in large numbers hitherto outside the mainstream politics game, while the collapse of UKIP into the inconsequential has taken one party identity away from millions of voters. Yes, they might find succour with the Tories, but that doesn't mean they identify with them. As Paula Surridge points out, it's the "authoritarian" voters (particularly those who are left wing, economically speaking) who are under-represented. Think they're game for a touchy-feely/immigration-bad/free-market-good "centre" party?

When you're in Westminster, or at the top of the business/third sector tree like our network of guilded centrists with £50m to burn, it can appear as if the only politics that matters is what happens in the chamber, the committee room, the lobby, the editorial offices, the broadcast studios and the think tanks. Indeed, this is why the post-Brexit coup against Jeremy Corbyn failed - because the PLP majority bought into the illusion that only they mattered, while his base was in the wider party: the membership and the trade unions. From this point of view, having sympathetic MPs, journos and think tankers on side, a policy platform, full-time "researchers" and cash in the kitty, this simulacrum of a party can appear a real goer to its wealthy backers.

What they don't understand, what most in and around politics fail to understand is that politics is a social phenomena, it'd about relationships and interests. Parties are machines, but they cannot simply be called into existence as per one's accountant conjuring up a shell company when taxes are due. Parties become successful because they articulate demands that chime with the experiences of large numbers of people, and they don't do it just the once, it has to be repeated day in, day out. The Conservatives and Labour are the top political dogs in Britain because of their roots in the most salient relationships in which a society like our depends: the wage relationship, and what they have to say speaks in a variety of ways to the collective experiences of millions. When Labour and Social Democratic parties "forget" where they're from, they begin actively disorganising the class base they organised in the first place, and more often than not fall apart. PASOK, Scottish Labour, the French Socialist Party, the Dutch Labour Party, the SPD - how many more dead and dying parties will it take before self-described centre lefts notice how common actions have common consequences?

Talk of new centre parties are among Westminster's most frequently indulged fantasies, because self-described centrists have nowhere to go and no strategy to get them out of their hole. The LibDems are barely viable, May panders to her cracked hard right, and now members expect more of MPs and expect them to be accountable, life inside Labour is chafing. If only centrists could have the politics they deserve! In the unlikely event of a new outfit attracting big names, it will be shortly before the next general election and will launch with the express purpose of grabbing enough votes from Labour to prevent it from forming a government. Fancy the sound of such a scenario? I pity you. If this is where your bewilderment toward and hate of the resurgent left is taking you, why not do the honourable thing.

6 comments:

  1. I do wonder how many Labour MPs would be stupid enough to do this. There are many who already want rid of Corbyn, how many do we think would want to bring down a Labour govt?

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  2. We will both, from our knowledge of "The Tendency", be familiar with the formulation that capitalism needs a reliable "second eleven" for when the Tories balls things up. Labour is no longer that, hence the need to conjure up new centre parties. As you say, they don't need to succeed, they just need to prevent a Labour government.

    Incidentally, I believe they are more scared of a Labour government verging on the non-aligned with respect to foreign policy, than they are of a bit of moderate redistribution of profits towards wages.

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  3. This will be an interesting test for the self-styled moderates. The chances are the party will fail to do more than wreck the outcome of the next election and then whither, as you say. Is there anyone as vain as David Owen or as stupid as Shirley Williams who will see it as a career move? Chuka Umunna must be a candidate. Yvette Cooper? Kiz Kendall? I'm off to the bookies to check the odds.

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  4. "What they don't understand, what most in and around politics fail to understand is that politics is a social phenomena, it'd about relationships and interests. Parties are machines, but they cannot simply be called into existence as per one's accountant conjuring up a shell company when taxes are due."

    Quite right, which is why I found Borgen so ridiculous, but no doubt why Stephen Kinnock found it enthralling and true to real life!

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  5. «not a great many people are au fait with the difference between left and right»

    The immortal author of "Doonesbury" expressed well "triangulation" and its ambiguities in an usian context:

    http://doonesbury.washingtonpost.com/strip/archive/1996/11/23

    «more scared of a Labour government verging on the non-aligned with respect to foreign policy»

    The neocons/likudniks seem to have decided that the next big thing is "bomb bomb bomb bomb Syria", including killing lots of the russian military people there, and that J Corbyn will never support an invasion of Syria:

    https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/apr/09/douma-syria-regime-bashar-al-assad-murder-civilians
    «It’s time for Britain and its allies to take concerted, sustained military action to curb Bashar al-Assad’s ability to murder Syria’s citizens at will.»
    ««When Assad used illegal chemical weapons in the past, most notoriously in eastern Ghouta where up to 1,700 people died in a 2013 sarin nerve gas attack, the US failed to enforce what Barack Obama called a red line. Obama was undoubtedly influenced by the British parliament’s vote against military action in August that year.»

    The message is loud and clear, and most columnists of "The Guardian" are always rigorously on-message.

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  6. On the centre party issue, I have just noticed what looks like a roll-call here:

    https://www.parliament.uk/edm/2017-19/1071
    «Early day motion 1071
    RUSSIA'S POISONING OF SERGEI AND YULIA SKRIPAL
    Session: 2017-19
    Date tabled: 14.03.2018
    Primary sponsor: Woodcock, John
    Sponsors: Streeting, Wes Creasy, Stella Doughty, Stephen Umunna, Chuka Coffey, Ann

    That this House unequivocally accepts the Russian state's culpability for the poisoning of Yulia and Sergei Skripal in Salisbury using the illegal novichok nerve agent which has also led to the serious illness of Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey who went to their rescue, and to the possible poisoning of other members of the emergency services and public as yet unknown;»

    The page has the full list of the 50 co-signatories:

    * 1 DUP
    * 1 Conservative
    * 9 LibDems
    * 3 SNP
    * 36 [New] Labour (among them G Snell from Stoke Central)

    Also interesting that most [New] Labour signatures were on the 14th of March, and the signatories from other parties happened in the following days, I guess as they realized that it was a "let's be counted" moment. It is also quite interesting that 9 out of 12 LibDem MPs supported the EDM, including Tim Farron, but not all of them, with the notable absence of Vince Cable.

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