The left - the far left in particular - are often criticised for their commitment to certain shibboleths. These can take a variety of forms, such as how China today is some sort of workers' state, that the crisis of our times can be reduced to the problem of proletarian leadership, and that Labour at the height of Jeremy Corbyn's leadership remained a "bourgeois party" no different in quality and kind from the Tories and Liberal Democrats. But the grown-ups of so-called centrism have their own as well. Like believing that beating up your own party wins votes. That defending tuition fees and hospital car parking charges are very good actually. How the NHS could do with more private involvement. Last and, by no means least, public services need one thing more than money: reform.
Which brings us to Keir Starmer's Sunday interview with The Observer. While the headline goes with "I’ll be bolder than Blair on public service reform", not much is given away as the article concentrates on other things. But on public services themselves, Starmer said his government would be a "reforming government ready to go from day one, further than Blair on public services, further than the Tories in the private sector", noting that "“I think we can go beyond what the Blair government did on public services … because I think there is unfinished business there.” That doesn't sound particularly heart warming.
Casting our minds back to the Blair years, it is true to say New Labour did renovate public services, expanded them, and improved them with great wodges of cash. One of the ironies of the early period of the Tory-led Coalition was how many of these services were subsequently defended by leftists who'd spent the previous decade attacking Blair for being no better than a Tory. I was one of these people. But, as ever, the detail is where the Devil resides. Blair accomplished this by forcing public sector bodies to take up costly PFI schemes to refurbish or rebuild their physical infrastructure. There was the imposition of targets and competition between state bodies, a scheme carried over from John Major's Citizen's Charter (more in the book), and the bedding down of "choice" agendas designed to make the public sector more "responsive", as if local community centres were branches of New Look. It still jars with me how local authorities refer to its service users as "customers". Blair's plan was to take this even further with more markets, more outsourcing and privatisation, and more attacks on the people Labour is supposed to represent. And, reportedly, that he wasn't able to see this through was his one regret upon leaving office.
You can see why Starmer's comments on public services are enough to give any labour movement person pause. Mindful of what went on 20 years ago, the Labour leader was quick to add that this did not mean the expansion of private provision but repositioning services so they meet current needs, and with an accent on prevention. Let's pretend we trust Keir Starmer for a moment. It sounds innocuous enough. As is well documented, the Tories have been running public services into the ground. In the NHS, the refusal to pay nurses and junior doctors the market rate for their services has nothing to do with the struggle against inflation and everything to do with their efforts at residualising the health service. Management have been given carte blanche to run down the semi-privatised Royal Mail. Local authorities struggle to deliver statutory services. Dental deserts are common. Even getting a passport these days is a slog. Wanting to make sure these services work properly, as Starmer appears to, is like pushing at an open door. It's a concern that chimes with the experiences of millions of people.
We know what the problem is: the withholding of monies. And quite deliberate it is too. When this is obvious, are we right to be worried that the Labour leader goes on about reform instead of funding? The more credulous Starmerites might think this is more clever-clever politics, or "hard ball" as they call it these days, whereby promising nothing is smart politics because if you don't stand for anything then the Tories will have a problem nailing you down. Good luck with that. Or you might believe in the equally preposterous notion that all the reactionary rubbish pushed by Starmer so far is establishing "permission" to be heard so the bag of goodies he's itching to open won't frighten former Tory voters.
It's better to be realistic about such things. In as far as a coherent Starmerism exists, it's a programme of state modernisation. To be a little bit more sociological, in terms of bourgeois politics it's the collective effort of bureaucrats and technocrats to take the state back from the show boaters, wreckers, and placemen that have run it into the ground over 13 years of Tory government. This is also an authoritarian politics. You don't need to look at Labour's equivocations over spy cops and war crimes legislation, Starmer's approving comments about locking Just Stop Oil protesters up, and the heavy handed way he policies the Labour Party (with extreme hypocritical prejudice) for clues. It's been there in the DNA of his politics all along, and one with deep roots in the Labour and Fabian traditions. I.e. Vote us in, we'll look after the politics, and you only need bother about this stuff in another four or five years' time. The flip side of this is, of course, do as I say not as I do, and treating promises instrumentally. I.e. Sticking to them for as long as the expedience is there.
I have no doubt Starmer wants to reform the state and make it work, and how it plays out in his project involves two things. Subordinating everything to economic growth, which is restated as the driving principle of his government and legitimating essence of everything he does. As per the recent embrace of decentralisation and devolution. And modernising the state also means repositioning the British people. In recent years, too many have become an angry, unruly, and irreverent (elderly) mob motivated by Brexit and other right wing hobby horses. Even worse, more have been actively politicised in the other direction. First Corbynism, and now millions of workers are participating in industrial action of some description, exacerbated by the Tories' abrogation of responsibility and refusal to negotiate. Starmerism wants to put a lid on this by partially re-institutionalising the labour movement in state structures. Second, whatever reform comes forward from Starmer-friendly think tanks and the Fabians' policy pamphlets, finding other ways of gifting state money to business is only secondary. What matters is getting the state running and offering new and improved public services so millions have a stake in it again (which Labour can reap the election benefits of), and so millions more people relate to it as service users. This repairs the authority of state institutions, which have taken a battering, the legitimacy of the state itself, and recasts politics around the Starmerist/Fabian model. In short, it's a depoliticisation strategy. Depleting the state is the Tories' not-very-successful attempt at the same, whereas Starmer's approach - gleaned from everything said and promised so far - is suggestive of a politics marked by redrawing the boundary between lay people and experts, reconstituting a consumerist relationship to state services (perhaps with some funky "co-designing" going on), and letting the technocrats and high foreheads get on with the business of government.
A bit speculative, perhaps, but this is what drives Starmer's preoccupation with public sector reform: the definition of politics and what the limits of acceptable discourse under his government are going to be.
Image Credit
Difficult to tell what Starmer means, or what he understands. But I read about the propositions for public sector reform on Demos. One stand out element is the complete repudiation of New Public Management and marketization, which is a good thing, from my perspective. The policy wonks also say that the reform requires investment, so not a cop out on spending. The problem is that I have no faith in the Labour party.
ReplyDeleteAlso, policy Starmer refers to does not position citizens as service users. From https://demos.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/the-preventative-state.pdf
ReplyDelete"communities are
given greater control over the way that services
are delivered and users are treated as citizens, with
something to offer and contribute to resolving the
challenges they face."
It's worth reading, and supporting, because if Labour actually does enact the current policy proposals, I think it will open a useful wedge for the left. It could create the perfect setting for grassroots organizing (unintentionally). I'm not sure the policy creators see it that way, and thus Labour MPs won't see it either.
I'm still in the dark, Phil as to what you think Starmer and co's 'modernisation' of public services would actually amount to. You ascribe an ambition to the Labour neoliberal 'briefcase' Right of 'wanting to make the UK public sector work again' after 13 years of Tory brigandage .
ReplyDeleteBut , as your article does clearly say, the one concrete thing that rescuing all the public services requires as a matter of urgency is great shed loads of extra MONEY (only available via taxing the rich and corporations and/or huge borrowing) . Without this transfusion , mere Nulabour gimmickry, will not prevent the NHS becoming ever more a two tier , insurance-based, service - with a rubbish minimalist remaining free bit - with two year waits for hip operations, etc. And local government services have now reached a fundamental tipping point to collapse and bankruptcy in many, many, areas. That so many of our hospitals have roofs now held up by temporary props pretty much says it all for our now collapsing civil society infrastructure.
Blair and Brown had a strategy to rebuild the NHS after Thatcher/Major's malign reign of neglect , but as you say, this involved the long term disaster of PFI, continuing privatisation of state assets, unprecedented mass immigration to keep wages down, and the wider disaster of freeing up the financial sector to run riot - and sharing in that short term economic bounty to pump load of cash into public services . BUT this blew up the economy as part of the global financial crisis in 2008, and saddled public services with huge PFI debt.
I simply do not see today's Labour Right as having even a Blair/Brown type 'plan' which will both pander to the needs of Big Business, and give the rest of us a few crumbs from the table. I think the next Labour government will be entirely a creature of the hedge funds and the billionaire funded mass media , with no alternative agenda to help the rest of us at all , with no ambition other than to ensure that the rich don't have to pay any more tax, and trades union rights continue to be suppressed, and privatisation will proceed unabated. The Starmerites are in no way 'modernisers' or 'politicians with a mission to make things work'. They are simply paid-for venal lying creatures of their capitalist paymasters,. That's it - nothing more. They are more akin to the collaborator politicians in occupied countries , working at the behest of the occupying power, than any sort of labour politicians we have seen before. These creatures really think it is OK for all UK citizens (Loyal Subjects that is) next weekend to swear unconditional fealty and submission to a hereditary monarch and wish him eternal life ! The Starmerite Labour Party is now a totally degenerated caricature of any sort of social democratic party of old - a mere Tory Party2 reserve party , with nothing to offer us all but continued mass privation, authoritarianism, and eventually, mass riots and civil unrest - which Labour will put down with the same enthusiasm as the treacherous German SPD government in the revolutionary post WW1 period..
Quite where the sums of money will be required will be produced from, given the “commitment” to “fiscal responsibility”, I’ve no idea about what they propose, whether wealth taxes, fossil fuel taxes, a people’s QE, or ISAs for the NHS.
ReplyDeleteHowever, whenever I hear “reform” in conjunction with public services, I want to reach for my revolver.
(What Goering, or, whoever is thought to have said this, he might have used the original quote, which is thought to be , “.. I reach for my Browning”, although I don’t think poetry will help us here.)
The real mammoth in the room is the failure to understand that everything about our society depends on a plentiful supply of cheap energy. The politics is a veneer built on 150 years of coal, then oil, then gas being easily available to power the industrial and social revolution that took us from an agrarian, peasant world, to an electronic, digital, networked one.
ReplyDeleteThe underlying reason we see economic stagnation, stalled productivity, falling wages, rising costs and failing services is as much down to the inexorable rise of the energy cost of energy (i.e. how much energy it takes to extract more oil/gas/coal) as any political direction. Renewables are just as dependent on this (it needs steel, carbon fibre, glass etc to produce, and this requires fossil fuels). So the surplus energy available has been declining since the 1990s. It is now about half what it was in the 80s.
As a consequence, we can't carry on as before, with a small parasitic class taking all the profit while the rest are thrown the crumbs, because those crumbs are shrinking. Eventually, either we all become much poorer (including BoE managers and hedge funders) or we change. The main political parties represent the politics of a past age. They still belong, mentally and ideologically, to the age of surplus energy. Until the realisation hits, and that will only happen when events make it obvious, this sort of pathetic nonsense we see from Starmer will be all we are offered.