The selection did threaten to descend into farce, however, when Unite stumped up evidence of Sakina's alleged involvement with Take Back the City, a campaign group who stood candidates for last year's London Assembly elections. Immediately she was suspended and within minutes put back on the selection shortlist. What a farce. Not at all coincidentally, Unite had endorsed Claudia for the seat and so sat on this information, which was not disclosed to the NEC's shortlisting panel, before springing it at the last possible moment.
Unfortunately, Unite have form for what you might call bureaucratic bulldozering. As the largest affiliate to Labour, the role the union has played in clearing out Labour First's administrative power base in the West Midlands, and its bastions of power inside and around the leader's office, Unite has a certain weight, and it's not averse to using this to get its way. Having got the union's fingers burned in the particularly clumsy intervention in Falkirk a million years ago (remember that?), its seems the Unite's respect for subtlety has not grown alongside its clout. Replacing politics with administrative activism, to give it a euphemism, is the wrong approach to take. Corbynism will not succeed if it's merely an exercise in replacing a right wing bureaucracy with a left wing one. But quite apart from what Corbynism and the Labour Party might become, it's embarrassing and makes Labour look like some tin pot outfit as opposed to a party serious about government.
More worryingly, there's an element of recklessness here. The right in Unite got a right old clobbering after Gerard Coyne's failed run for general secretary. And rightly so. He ran a disgraceful campaign. Readers who have followed the saga since will note Coyne and his band of ne'er-do-wells have petitioned to overturn Len McCluskey's victory by going on about process and procedure, not that they ever bothered his campaign while the election was on. I digress. But just ask yourselves this. If you're going to be in and out of court over the next year against an opponent seeking to rubbish you and the structures of your union and for whom bureaucratic abuses is part of his case, is it smart politics to be seen publicly, in the full glare of the anti-Corbyn and, yes, anti-Unite media, to be pulling off egregious dirty tricks and attempted stitch ups?
No. Let Lewisham East be the end. The new politics can never be victorious if they rely on the old ways.
A very public sociologist 4 PM.
ReplyDeleteThere, I said it.
Yeah nice try Phil, but I can see straight through your spin
ReplyDeleteYou're going to have to explain.
ReplyDeleteLet's keep it simple. Janet entered a week-long race as a known local quantity who supported Corbyn in 2015 and during the #chickencoup in 2016. Crucially, she came out unequivocally in favour of the SM and CU in a strongly Remain constituency (which supported Liz Kendall's otherwise Gammon-lite campaign in 2015).
ReplyDeleteSakina had a lot of ground to make up, and didn't make any attempt to flex her constructively ambiguous line on Brexit; and a win for Claudia would have let another Blairite back into the NEC through the back door. With hindsight, it's not difficult to understand why the members voted as they did.
No problem here at all.
ReplyDeleteThe CLP chose the candidate they wanted to represent them. They felt that she was the right person to contest the seat and become their MP. Her anti Brexit stance would have helped no doubt, but she seems to be a genuinely likeable and capable person who will be a very fine MP.
Strikes me the outcome is precisely what we would want to see in every seat: the best person being selected to contest it.
Steve