Keir Starmer has written an op-ed for The Sun. Like most people who pay attention to such things, I can't say I'm surprised. Plenty of his subordinates have tested the water during the last year, so it was only a matter of time before the big cheese took the plunge. Readers recalling the 2020 leadership election will remember his politician's answer on this issue, saying he wouldn't be giving any interviews to The Sun during the course of the campaign. It was slippery but barely noticed then, but now he can shrug his shoulders and say he hasn't broken any promises. Which is more than can be said about his other leadership pledges.
The relationship between The Sun and the labour movement is a vexed one. Throughout the 1980s under Kelvin MacKenzie's leadership, they cheered on Thatcher's destruction of the living standards and ways of life of millions of its own readers, while pumping out powerful and persuasive propaganda. At this time a plurality of the paper's readers still voted Labour, but undoubtedly its toxic framing of issues, the lies it told, and the scare stories about town hall loony lefties were corrosive of the solidarities underpinning our movement. It changed some minds and therefore voting behaviour, but acted as a pacifier for even more. Its influence culminated in their infamous reporting of the Hillsborough tragedy, covering up police negligence and failure, and falsely claiming coppers and paramedics were urinated on by riotous Liverpool supporters. The led to a boycott on Merseyside that remains in place.
Where should Labour politicians stand on engaging with this hateful rag? Labour's history has, on the whole, been one of continued cooperation, if not chummy accommodation. Tony Blair, you will recall, grew so close to Rupert Murdoch that he was made a godparent to the media mogul's young daughter - going somewhat further than having to deal with his papers as a fact of political life. Gordon Brown tried carrying this on, with less success. And in 2010, all of the hopefuls in Labour's leadership contest, yes, even Diane Abbott, paraded themselves through The Sun's pages. Five years later, the left insurgency ruled The Sun out of bounds, not that it stopped the paper from (quietly, admittedly) backing Liz Kendall. Naturally, there was no relationship to speak of in Jeremy Corbyn's time. Nevertheless, the uncomfortable truth is that when Blair, Brown and their ministers were getting their articles published it appeared Labour did not lose votes and therefore seats. Not on Merseyside, not anywhere else.
On the question of should, I've often argued the left needs to be more instrumentalist in its thinking. There is a class interest we share, but too often recoil from, preferring to oppose values to interests as if the two are separate and one doesn't flow from the other. Does this mean Labour politicians should lobby The Sun for their column inches, as Starmer did for the sake of his 300 words? Absolutely not. By way of a demonstration, I turned down a half hour interview with Russia Today about the book. This wasn't just because RT is a mouthpiece for one of the world's greatest grotesques, but also a matter of context. RT is part of the Kremlin's strategy to undermine the feeble democratic institutions we have this country, not renew them, and is happy to platform fools and idiots peddling any old crap to achieve this aim. The argument made in the book is too important to be associated with RT's disinformation efforts, even if it meant selling a few copies extra.
A similar attitude should dictate the left's dealings with the rest of the bourgeois media, and by extension how Labour politicians engage with them too. Reading Starmer's article, he needn't have bothered. It's the usual managerial guff, muttering about "incompetence" and telling the government off for failing to "get a grip". For good measure, the prospect of a Christmas ruined by Boris Johnson is thrown in too. Utterly meaningless twaddle as forgettable as last week's weather forecasts. It won't have won over anyone and it won't have contributed to winning over someone in the longer term. It said nothing, offered nothing, and made the rookie error of saying Labour would happily support the government in dealing with the crisis. Incredible.
In other words, there is no justification for this article from our point of view, nor the banalities Wes Streeting and Bridget Phillipson have also written for them. Contrast this with Ken Livingstone's brief Sun column in the early 90s, where he was dubbed the 'voice from the left' and actually put forward views that challenged the paper's politics. A case could even be made for Rachel Reeves taking to its pages to defend her £28bn/year green infrastructure package because, differently and in their own ways, what Livingstone did and what Reeves might do was and would be in the interests of our people and our movement. This is what socialist instrumentalism looks like, a balance of legitimating an enemy versus using them for our purposes.
Sadly, and underlining the real nature of the Starmerist project, the objectives of his article had nothing to do with reaching out to Labour-curious Sun readers. It was, again, a red topped signal to this country's press barons that he's willing to play by their rules. He's showing the ruling class, and particularly the rich donors he's vainly courting, that the party is safe for their interests. And he's trolling the left knowing stunts of this sort have an attritional effect on its power and reach in the party. That it has the same consequences for party finances is an afterthought. Writing for The Sun then is a matter of evaluation, of balances of benefits and harms. Keir Starmer and his helpers care nothing for this, and shouldn't be shocked, when the time comes, to find millions couldn't care less about them either.
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11 comments:
RT
Refusing to engage with a media outlet because of the source of its funding and the function of its output is a tad lazy. We could call for the boycott of the BBC on the same grounds. Its money comes from the state, it’s function is to reinforce that state when push comes to shove; it has Farage and others of a similar ilk, and at one period it felt like daily. You will of course be familiar with the Bad News content analysis of TV news and many others of such ilk which followed. One example from a different researcher which I saw demonstrated was the rushes from Orgreave. It was plain that they didn’t tell a story. By 6pm, the rushes had been tailored into the account of the Yorkshire police, which eventually, was thrown out of court when it tried to press riot charges. No apology has been forthcoming for this. A more up to date example would be the refusal of the BBC to allow speakers to label Johnson as a liar. However, if you were invited onto a politics programme on this state funded channel, I assume that you would agree.
RT Is a kind of misnomer as it should really be called US today. Much of what I know about US homelessness, the opioid crisis and, I suspect shortly,the rise in US military suicides, is from their daily documentary strand, much of which is made by Americans. I’m guessing you might not like George Galloway on political grounds, but it was the only programme which mentioned, let alone interviewed Chris Bambery about his book on Catalonia. You might not think that this of interest but I believe Catalonia awarded him a decoration.
One strand is Ross Ashcroft’s slot, Renegade Inc. A consistently high class discussion programme of interest to anyone interested in ideas opposed to the dominant neo-liberal model of the last 40 years. Two favourites of mine are Michael Hudson, who writes on the history of debt. His back story is that his father was a Trotskyist Union organiser who was jailed in one of the periodic red scares in the USA. Hudson wryly remarks that the FBI files act as the FB diary which he never had. The other is the discussion of “desk-killer”, a formidable German compound noun. The author ends his comments with one day, a geologist who started work for an oil company who got promoted, will face charges about the execution of Nigerian activists even although a direct order was never issued.
A half hour interview sounds like plenty of time to for a decent discussion.
So, which programme was it?
https://renegadeinc.com/shows/renegade-inc/
You don't say much about what Starmer actually said in the article. If it was as bland as your limited remarks suggest, then that's a disaster, because it was an opportunity for a Labour leader to represent the party at the heart of a reactionary establishment. Not surprising, but if Starmer had delivered some sort of leftist perspective (albeit hypocritically) it would surely have been justifiable in terms of benefiting Labour's message. Regardless of what you think of Russia Today.
Although I agree with most of Phil's stance with regards to RT, I also think that Renegade Inc would, on usual form, give a good space for discussion of THE book. The people who appear on it have no apparent problem, and I refer to such luminaries as Michael Hudson and Steve Keen. It is totally different to the hourly news programme, which presents a regular display of fruit cakes from the right.
« We could call for the boycott of the BBC on the same grounds.»
Oh nooooo, there is a big difference! It is the same difference between our "freedom fighters" and their "terrorists". :-)
«RT Is a kind of misnomer as it should really be called US today.»
The old rule was listen to Radio Moscow to find out things about the USA, and to Radio America to find out things about the USSR.
Related from ex-COMECON countries: "What the communist party told us about communism was bullshit, what they told us about capitalism was right".
What papers like the Sun have done to the debasement of humanity is up there with the worst crimes in history as far as I am concerned.
Renegade inc is on of the greatest tv shows ever aired. The best critique ever put onto the screen. Thanks RT!
"RT is part of the Kremlin's strategy to undermine the feeble democratic institutions we have this country, not renew them,"
mmmm, this isn't paranoid at all is it. As if a news programme and a few twitters accounts can bring down institutions! Was it RT that oversaw the sharp decline of trade union membership and power? No, it was the centrists which you represent. RT actually ran a series of critical programmes detailing it!
"and is happy to platform fools and idiots peddling any old crap to achieve this aim."
So Prof Michael Hudson, Prof Richard Wolff, Prof Guy Standing, Prof Slavoj Zizek, Prof Howard Nicholas (who was on renegade inc this week incidentally), Prof Vijay Prashad, Grace Blakeley, James Meadway, Prof Danny Dorling, Prof Steve Keen, Prof Josh Ryan-Collins, frances coppola, Ann Pettifor, the late David Graeber, Jason Hickel etc etc are all useful idiots peddling crap are they?
I think we know who is the one peddling any old crap!
"The argument made in the book is too important to be associated with RT's disinformation efforts, even if it meant selling a few copies extra."
As Ken says, the only way to be in any way informed is to watch RT, as it covers important stories the mainstream media in the UK never ever go anywhere near, and does so in a very systematic and intelligent way. There are some outstanding and informative programmes on RT. If people only ever watch the mainstream UK media then those people can only be ill informed.
Therefore, the left should be recommending RT as essential viewing for anyone interested in a more rounded picture on current events, and anyone who is interested in a critical analysis of neo liberalism.
The fact that you repeat the same bullshit as the establishment critics of RT confirms everything I have thought about you. No wonder you have never bothered to cover Assange, no wonder you ignored the myriad of crimes committed by the US in Afghanistan and only weaped when they pulled out.
This is clearly all by design, I said this once before you have not strayed so far from the Tory boy you were in your youth. No wonder your first instinct was to support Yvette Cooper in the leadership election.
You are part of that centrists block, in other words the worst group of human beings ever to set foot on planet Earth.
I think the hire-and-fire antics at HQ are aimed at the same audience. Ignore the new deal for workers rhetoric. It will all be quietly dumped by Starmer's successor.
"The argument made in the book is too important to be associated with RT's disinformation efforts, even if it meant selling a few copies extra."
I've been reading this blog for a number of years and the above is the most incredible thing I've seen yet.
What can Phil have bee thinking of?
My neighbour who votes conservative and UKIP (Stoke on Trent) has said she will now vote for Keir 'give him a chance'. Will he now win? - for who? and what for what purpose?
So what does Keir stand for again? What did he do with the power given to him?
Your book is an excellent read BTW.
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