Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Labourism and Social Conservatism

"Social conservatism has always been part of Labour!", so wrote Connor Naismith last week. Seeing that Labour suffered humiliation in Manchester, he argues that there are "voices" who are laying the blame for the defeat on Blue Labour. "Traditional values", they say, need junking if Labour is going to dust itself off and return to winning ways. As a self-identifying supporter of this trend, Naismith has gone into print to defend it.

There are two parts to his argument. Firstly, social conservatism is embedded in Labourism. The party's forward march and its reformist zeal was driven by the need to protect what he calls "the moral economy". That is taking home a wage enough for a family to live on, the sustenance of "communal discipline" (i.e. solidarity), and localism. Social conservatism is social glue, and every radical programme needs that if it's going to succeed. Speaking of the 1945 Labour government, he says "They built the NHS and the welfare state not to dismantle the British way of life, but to fortify it. They were radical in their means because they were conservative in their ends: the health, dignity, and stability of British families."

Therefore, purging social conservatism is like amputating a limb. Labour and Labourism are radical because they are conservative. Social conservatism respects people where they are, imbues places with meaning, and gives relationships substance. It is a rooted politics based in the every day, and one aimed at preserving what is good while making things better. Labour would be foolish to abandon anyone who aspires to such.

The second part of his argument is why Labour in such a state. Naismith says that Labour has abandoned its vote. The breaking of the so-called red wall " ... was because gradually, over decades, the party’s centre of gravity shifted toward a metropolitan liberalism that felt increasingly judgemental of parts of the tradition that founded it." What does this actually mean? In British politics discourse the term "metropolitan liberalism" has distinct connotations. It's right wing shorthand for "things we don't like", such as equal rights and affording racial and sexual minorities recognition and respect. I don't know how long Naismith's been in Labour for, but in my nine years of knocking on doors in Stoke-on-Trent, from the dog days of Gordon Brown to Jeremy Corbyn's Waterloo, no one told me they weren't voting Labour because it supported gay rights. Or offered help to the disabled. What I got instead was a lot of "you're all the same", you "don't listen", some anti-immigration bile, and even an occasional "you've abandoned the working class". For much of the previous 30 years, that last comment was absolutely right. Who oversaw a greater decline of manufacturing than Thatcher? Tony Blair. Who did nothing to enhance collective rights in the workplace? Tony Blair. Who continued the undermining of sate institutions by subjecting them to the market? You get the idea. This was not thanks to metropolitan arrogance, though there was plenty of that around, rather it was because New Labour was open about its contempt for the labour movement, its aspirations, and presented itself as a reliable custodian of British capitalism and manager of its class relations - for capital's benefit. And when this anti-working class agenda was challenged by Corbyn's leadership, we know what happened.

Naismith's class-blind history aside, he really gives social conservatism too much credit. When we look at the toerags and fools who present themselves as Blue Labour, it's telling that this club are a) middle class, b) white men, and c) have absolutely no standing or roots in the wider labour movement. Read Maurice Glasman - I have - and it's obvious that the "economic radicalism" that is supposedly the flip side of this very, very moral politics is merely a rhetorical nod. A never-articulated alibi for a miserable dismalism of scapegoating, and stop-the-world fogeyness. If only Blue Labour was a careful plea to understand the interests of our class, its (long-declining) culture of collectivism, and putting that at the heart of policy making and the vision for a better future. Instead, what we have had under Keir Starmer is a racist effort to out-Reform Reform, the rolling back of trans rights, and until recently a noted reticence to take on bigotry. Very middle class Labour MPs and well-heeled friendly journalists defended all this because this was their idea of what social conservatism was, and they were merely giving voice to values shared by the salt-of-the-earth. Meanwhile, polling of working age Britons has found this ventriloquism is a poor impression of what they say and think. The Labour working class base was imploding because other parties were actually speaking to their interests and their actual values. It was them talking the language of respect and reciprocity, while Labour imitated the spite, the division, and the small mindedness of their opponents on the extreme right.

Thirdly, Naismith's definition of social conservatism is empty to the point of meaninglessness. If Naismith is impressed by the class cultures of old, what policies are he and his party following to promote a new collectivism appropriate to the actually existing working class? The answer to that, of course, is very little. Instead, along with racist and transphobic divide-and-rule politics, we've seen the same commitment to labour market flexibility, of letting capital run riot in the NHS, and the handing of a veto to business over crucial aspects of their much trumpeted, and much watered-down Employment Rights Act. The danger, the existential threat to Labour lies not in the call for the party to be less racist and binning off Blue Labour, but in its refusal to act as the political fulcrum of the class that made it. And this is why that class is now turning elsewhere.

12 comments:

McIntosh said...

Connor seems to be another rightist Labour MP that is exhibiting the general panic and shock as all that they thought was solid in their political ecosystem dissolves. There was not supposed to be anywhere for their 'core' vote to go and yet it seems to have got up and gone. Once the habit of voting Labour is lost it is hard to reinstate and no bad new ideas look like getting it back soon.
It doesn't help that all the values that Starmer and his reformed LP were supposed to have - serious, professional, competent, capable, responsible, sober - proved illusionary as they have U turned time and again, been immersed in corruption scandals and failed to show any moral compass. What they have shown themselves to be is a bureaucratic machine, brutal and hostile to the Left, full of careerists in blue suits with tidy hair looking to exploit politcal opportunity for themselves without care of the consequences, intellectually insipid with an indifference to party members and voters, unable to humanely manage capitalism while providing low cost anti-poverty measures despite the hopes they raised about change.
They are a weak and enfeebled gang whose capacity to get up to mischief seems limitless. All they can do is continue to divide and shrink.

Kamo said...

I think Naismith has a point, it certainly chimes with my personal experience growing up in the red wall, amongst the traditional working class. If you've ever been in a Labour club in the North of England you will see this social conservativism, although they are far more tolerant to others than Metropolitan liberals will ever understand. How much weight you give to this in the development of Labour is one's own judgement. However, what he is describing aligns with my previous comments about 'working class' increasingly being used more to describe class(es) who don't do that much 'working' (a definition this blog leans into). The Labour Party was formed to represent the interests of the class that laboured, the clue being in the name. For the working class that actually works the obsession with identity politics (a commercial industry that has moved beyond parody) is farcical, the moral relativism towards repellent behaviour within certain groups is evil, and the double standards towards foreigners killing each other is perplexing.

Anonymous said...

Naismith's piece is laudable for saying out loud something that few in mainstream politics have dared to for decades: that politics has at least two axes, a social axis and an economic axis, and bi-partisan neoliberalism is based on maintaining the fiction that the economic one doesn't exist.

Then it all goes wrong. He tries to argue that social conservativism is key to bringing the economic axis back into the political discussion. Erm, what...?

If it was meant to be a call for solidarity between social conservatives and "metropolitan liberals", then it's an astonishingly opaque and evasive one. Not to mention graceless, with Naismith apparently assuming that his readers are exclusively on the side of the latter group (he doesn't make any appeal to the working class to make any effort towards unity, does he?), even as he casually refers to his supposed target audience by one of the far-right's favourite divide and conquer epithets. Smooth.

And if it's not that, then what is he trying to say? It reads like a rambling, one-sided, revisionist attempt to rehabilitate the connotations of the term "social conservative" - even while accepting without question the far-right's poisoning of "metropolitan liberal". If he had an honest point to make about the political relevance of Blue Labour, and wasn't simply trying to advocate for the continuation of McSweeneyism in the face of all political sense, then he probably should have shown some understanding that the city liberals have anything in common with the "working class" - especially when it comes to matters of the economic political axis. Don't any of the working class live in cities? Don't any of them have liberal social values?

Anonymous said...

Here's Kamo, the self-appointed spokesman for "the class that actually works" (a vague divide-and-conquer category that he made up himself, inspired by Gideon Osborne no doubt), on schedule to provide a nugget of moral vacuum encoded and thinly disguised as moralising.

So the social conservatives of the North, as well as somehow being the only ones who do any "work", are in reality an epitome of tolerance (who we "metropolitan liberals" give far too little credit for their... um... social liberalism?). And that's why the list of what they really care about - as duly offered by their self-appointed spokesperson - sounds suspiciously like a list of far-right talking points.

As well as there being a socially conservative class of people who somehow do all the work, there's also a commercial obsession-with-identity-politics industry. Really? I must have missed their outlets when walking down my local high street. I'm guessing that what they sell are the kind of grievances against social discrimination that the very tolerant socially conservative denizens of Kamo's favourite Northern working men's clubs would rather not hear about. And also that, horror of horrors, there are buyers for the wares of this ghostly industry, although presumably only amongst metropolitan liberals whose work doesn't involve sufficient labour and therefore isn't work.

Then there's the "moral relativism towards repellent behaviour within certain groups", another of these things that Kamo appears to be able to see through his special glasses. Taking a stab at deciphering this through my far-right code book, the "certain groups" appear to be people who do unforgivable things to women and children whilst also having dark skin. Despite the fact that they get caught and locked up whenever possible, just like the white skinned purveyors of similar behaviour, us liberals apparently give them a free pass by not talking sufficiently about their dark skin and how it is the cause of their repellent behaviour, and that free pass is the "moral relativism". So tolerant!

And lastly, "double standards towards foreigners killing each other". Unless I miss my guess, that's code for the failure to give Israel a free pass for its Western-backed genocidal activities, on the grounds that there are some nasty Arabs in the region too. A towering fortress of a moral position, I'm sure, and one that (we are asked to believe) resonates throughout the very tolerant socially conservative working men's clubs of Kamo's youth, even when neither the LFoI nor Nigel Farage are paying them a campaigning visit.

Art McGovern said...

Long time reader, first time commenter. Just want to thank you for all your efforts to make political issues of the day more understandable in terms of historical context, class relations, and so on. I look forward to seeing your posts and getting fresh insights into current events, even though I live in the States. Posts like this resonate with me because our Democrats have much in common with your Labour Party and so the parallels make for easy applicability over here. Cheers!

Sean Dearg said...

There's nothing new or interesting in what Naismith has to say. It's another attempt to justify the failure of his clique who have taken over the party and made it unprecedentedly unpopular. Instead of owning that, he doubles down on the rhetoric. Does he think that if he can only get the words out in the optimum order it will change minds? This is more delusional "it's not the actions, it's the messaging" nonsense we are always seeing from the career politicos.

Pal, it IS the actions. Repeating the message with a slightly different set of phrases won't make any difference. Amusingly, our friendly neighbourhood racist, Kamo, makes the same mistake. It imagines that inventing new descriptor and labels is more than self-entertainment. In its eternal search for new ways to express the same old bigotry, it mines the seams of euphemism, insincerity, deception, hypocrisy and sanctimony with enthusiasm that would impress a mythical horny-handed coal miner from one of his imaginary "clubs".

Max Headroom said...

"the double standards towards foreigners killing each other is perplexing" .

10 words that contain so much. Nothing of value, but a whole twisted world view culled from the pages of the most reactionary and deceitful of our newspapers. It's code, but not a secret or hidden one. Just a code to avoid spelling out what they really think. That it's OK for "our" foreigners to kill "theirs", but not vice versa.

What defines "ours"? We are not told, but we all understand. America and Israel can kill who they want wherever and whenever they want. But those they attack should accept it with grace, roll over and surrender or die.

This person is not "perplexed". That is pretence, an attempt to convey the image of a wise elder looking on with fatherly concern, rather than the self-righteous resentful bigot spewing hatred and division that hides behind these words.

Anonymous said...

The current Labour Government has been implementing the policies you have spent years advocating. It is an idealogical position that any price or wage set by the market is the result of an unequal fight between capital and Labour, so government should intervene wherever it can to get a fair price. And they are intervening everywhere. Similarly being out of work is a failure of capital not workers so there is to be no distinction between workers and those on benefits. So welfare recipients receive outcomes at least as good as or in many cases better than those in work.

What would be great is if we could have an actual experiment where we took a country, divided it in two, allowed market forces to dominate one and state-managed equality in the other. And amazingly we have exactly that experiment. Post WW2 Germany. And we know the outcome. One was fantastically rich, the other grimly poor. The left has looked at that experiment and chosen East Germany. And East Germany is the best outcome those policies have delivered. Venezuela is more typical.

So this Labour Government has delivered and is delivering everything you've spent years demanding. And now the results are coming in you have abandoned it and moved to the Greens.

At least in the Greens you aren't encumbered by anything resembling an ideology. Your ideology can never fail, because you don't have one.

Anonymous said...

Good lord, even Kamo appears coherent and insightful compared to some other brave anons volunteering to fight the online rearguard action for neoliberalism.

Apparently this one thinks - as is depressingly common amongst right wing dullards - that everything in politics and economics is a choice between just two alternatives. That there's no complexity anywhere (which raises the question of why we need a nebulous Invisible Hand to sort everything out, as the disciples of free market capitalism maintain as their core doctrine... but I digress). That if this blog supports an economic "left" position, then it automatically supports the most visible party which postures half-heartedly as having that position, because no differences of opinion are possible within the two available buckets. Oh, and that both the blog and the party simultaneously have no ideology, whilst also having an ideology that would see us going the way of East Germany.

And if the first sentence isn't merely adapted from part of its prompt, this same rambling shambles of a visitor affects to have been reading the blog for years! If that's really true, then they can't have enjoyed it much, and also apparently have not learned a single thing from it. I'd be tempted to call it a tragic waste of time... if our visitor appeared capable of anything other than waste.

Anonymous said...

Well, Anonymous 11:41, that's certainly one of the lazier attempts at inventing an alternate reality that I've ever seen.

That script was fresh and new in the late 1970s. At least the fascism revivalists of today are playing a record from a comparable period of history! But free market gospel preachers like yourself have been in government for the majority of the last five decades, including at least 15 out of the last 16 years. So whatever results are coming in now are the results of their ideology.

Anonymous said...

"Social conservatives" do seem to be getting a bit desperate nowadays.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpwjxx5eyn1o

It feels a bit like there is an enormous amount of dark money sloshing around, going towards any kind of pressure which could repress the idea that real people - or at least, real Caucasians - are done with those mechanisms of social coercion.

Anonymous said...

The confidence with which these narratives are still pushed does speak of an absence of paying any attention whatsoever.