Some thoughts about how to make the leadership election a positive experience for Labour
Elections should be enjoyable experiences where the campaigners get a buzz out of promoting a person and policies they agree with and the electorate feel empowered.
If the preliminaries to the election of a new Labour Leader are anything to go by, there is a risk it will not be that kind of experience. So far everything has been about fear and negativity and division, not about finding what unites us, celebrating debate and diversity and empowering the electors - in this case the three sections of the electoral college (union members, party members and the PLP).
A good example of this is Polly Toynbee's nasty article today attacking John Reid for having the temerity to even hint at thinking about standing. Toynbee presents herself as a Brown supporter. She does Brown a great disservice with her attack on Reid. Toynbee is alienating Labour moderates who might be instinctively inclined to support Brown with crude attacks like this. In the most likely outcome of there being a Brown premiership he will need people like Reid in the Cabinet - they appeal to a segment of Labour's core working class support concerned about security issues. Just as Blair called for an end to ministers and ex-ministers playing the man not the ball after Charles Clarke's outburst a couple of weeks ago, so we need commentators and journalists to critique the policies on offer not trash the possible candidates. Unlike Toynbee John Reid has earnt a right to say what he thinks about the future direction of Labour. When she was in the SDP trying to destroy Labour, Reid was in Kinnock's office trying to rebuild it. Anyone who has had his breadth of Cabinet experience can be attacked for their views but can't be written off as not a "serious candidate" as Toynbee does. The left wing component of Brown's support around Compass also need to be muzzled - they clearly haven't won his ear on policy but their anti-Blairite rantings are driving away some of Brown's potential moderate supporters.
We need to stop questioning people's motives. That cuts both ways. It means acknowledging that however wrong they were, the letter signers of two weeks ago acted in what they thought were the Party's best interests. But also that people floating new policy ideas are not all wreckers, extremists, "people who don't belong in the Party" or agents provocateurs. And that those of us wanting to express our loyalty to Blair are not seeking to damage Brown given that he is the person we are most likely to have as our leader in the next General Election. The worst outcome of a leadership election would be one where we attack each other during the campaign so much that the winner is "damaged goods" when they go head to head with Cameron and the Tories.
We need to attract support to our chosen candidates for positive reasons - their policies, values and character - not negative reasons like "stopping" another candidate or avoiding a black spot when it comes to career advancement.
We need the rival camps to stop going nuclear and playing "for keeps". The choice of leader is important but it isn't Benn vs. Healey struggling for the soul and future of the Party. It is likely to be about nuance and detail between people who agree on the fundamentals and will need to work together in future. Like Wellington when an artillery battery at Waterloo told him they had Napoleon in their sights, we need candidates who will understand that it isn't the done thing to shell the opposing commander.
We need the candidates to look like they don't mind losing. Because democracy can't work unless candidates accept that not always winning is an occupational hazard and comes with letting large numbers of people vote on what your next job will be.
We have to involve the 190,000 party members and the millions of affiliated trade unionists in the debate. So far they feel totally alienated by a process being played out in the Westminster Village and the media. They have to feel they chose the Leader, not just woke up one day and discovered they had a new one. That means a contested election even if the outcome will be exactly the same as a non-contest. Mutterings about the financial cost of a ballot should be countered with "what price democracy?"
We need to look at how the last transfer of leader when Labour was in power - from Wilson to Callaghan - worked. Wilson decided the timing of his departure. Admittedly the threshold for nomination was lower, but there were six candidates: Benn, Callaghan, Crosland, Foot, Healey and Jenkins. Callaghan was by any estimation the frontrunner just as Brown is, having been Chancellor, Foreign Secretary and Home Secretary and a leadership contender back in 1963 but he did not feel got at or insulted by nearly a third of his Cabinet colleagues throwing their hats in the ring. Most (probably all) of them knew they would lose but quite legitimately ran anyway to either profile themselves and stake a claim to a future bid, mark their right to a senior Cabinet position, or measure the size of their ideological or personal power base. Dennis Healey even went into the second round despite only getting first round support from 30 MPs. Callaghan was magnanimous in victory and gave them all high office.
This time round we ought to have, besides Brown, McDonnell representing the Hard Left, Meacher or someone else representing the Soft Left, and maybe a soft Blairite (Johnson - who on some issues is actually close to the Soft Left) and hard Blairite (Reid) standing. That way Party and union members will get a real choice and the winner - still almost certainly Brown - will get a real mandate and we will have got a real measure of the strength of the different ideological currents in the Party. That way we can avoid the ill-feeling after the alleged Granita deal when Brown felt he had never had the chance to demonstate his support in the Party and Blair was unable to proove what support he would have had if Brown had stood.
We need to understand that actually our most senior ministers would be very odd politicians if they did not want to take the chance - however slim - to run for Leader and PM - that "inside every soldier's knapsack is a marshal's baton."
We also need to understand that we would be a pretty pathetic excuse for a Labour Party if we only had one person capable of being PM available and sat round the Cabinet table at any one time.
This election should be a festival of ideas and choice that shows Labour in the best possible light as open, democratic, comradely and inclusive. It's not too late to make it that.
12 Comments:
I don't disagree with any of that. I would observe however that Wilson kept his decision to step down top secret. Joe Haines accounts in Glimmers of Twilight demonstrates the thinking behind this. It is clear that if the Cabinet had known what was coming, they would have been jockeying for position. Denis Healey has openly said that he would have refrained from robustly attacking soft left critics of his economic policy for example.
Unfortunately the contenders are only human and can exercise little direct control over their outriders. Combine this with a 24 hour news media who will seize on every nuance to look at it through the prism of the coming contest and I fear that the grown up election Luke hopes for is going to demand a lot of self discipline and self denial on the part of us all.
5:09 pm, September 29, 2006
Some good stuffs here, especially in the second part.
6:14 pm, September 29, 2006
Agree with a lot of that - especially the conclusion.
But in a minor quibble, I definitely wouldn't say that Michael Meacher is in any way representative of the soft left...
2:01 am, September 30, 2006
No, Meacher is Bennite hard left. Cruddas would be more representative of the soft left.
1:31 pm, October 01, 2006
Yes I agree with the criticism re. my description of Meacher. Was struggling to find a name - what I was thinking of was the political tradition of say Cook and Short and you are right, Meacher is not from that.
9:25 pm, October 01, 2006
"what I was thinking of was the political tradition of say Cook and Short and you are right, Meacher is not from that"
Wasn't Short a Campaign Grouper until the late 80's (and IIRC she left it along with Beckett)?
9:40 am, October 02, 2006
Left it later than Meacher, I might add, who was very close to your hero Neil Kinnock, Luke!! Clare Short left the Campaign Group because she thought leadership elections were macho (apparently). I think if Tony Benn could have persuaded a woman to run as deputy in 88, then the Campaign Group wouldn't have split.
I don't really know what to make of Michael Meacher's return to the left in later life. Perhaps he's always been on the left, but decided to pretend he'd drifted to get a job, or perhaps he's changed his mind twice? Who can say!
It's interesting that you can't think of a name for the soft left candidate. I have heard some people banding John Denham's name about, but I don't think he'll stand personally, and I'm not sure he would see himself as centre-left.
I agree with the general mood of your post here Luke. I actually think it's unlikely that there will be as many candidates as you suggest - I can't see John McDonnell AND Michael Meacher, or Alan Johnson AND John Reid. I'm coming to the conclusion (although there's a long time to go and things can change quickly!) that it'll be McDonnell, Brown and Reid. And I suspect, publically at least, it will be conducted in quite a positive, constructive way. It will be important to make sure that people around particularly two of those candidates aren't briefing against the other secretly. There is the problem that Brown and Reid may find it hard to find much to differentiate between them on policy and so therefore may find personality and character more of a factor to focus on.
I suspect people, rather than dealing with John (McD)'s policies directly will do a lot of 'taking us back to the 80s' type stuff - but that's something his campaign will presumably expect and prepare for.
I think a leadership election CAN be a really positive experience, and I hope this one will be.
11:14 am, October 02, 2006
If Reid stands then Brown will rely on votes from the soft left to get elected and will have to outline his policies accordingly. I think this would be a good thing which is why I hope Reid does stand. There needs to be a contest and Brown needs to beat someone on the hard left and someone on the right.
11:53 am, October 02, 2006
Surely Brown will stand on the policies he believes in?
There's not much point being PM if you have to implement policies you don't actually support but ran on in reaction to your internal party rivals or your expectations of what might appeal to the selectorate/electorate.
12:27 pm, October 02, 2006
You could apply exactly the same logic to the pressure he's coming under from Tony Blair et al to stick to their agenda. I think Brown probably does believe in a lot of policies put forward by the soft left but has been hemmed in by those on the right of the party. After all he did deliver the keynote address at the first annual Compass conference in 2004.
In the spirit of fraternity that you've so eloquently outlined in your main post, please don't criticise the soft left for using tactics which you know Blair is equally guilty of.
1:18 pm, October 02, 2006
You're rigtht, we need a wide, wide, inclusive debate.
I wish someone better tan meancher was standing from my wing of the party! I'm edging towards Brown, but I have a few misgivings. Hmm.
Ed Miliband for leader!
12:26 am, October 03, 2006
I liked this post a lot
http://davehill.typepad.com/temperama/2006/10/sunday_service.html
Like you, would love the contest to be constructive and invigorating. Not too hopeful, though...
9:58 am, October 03, 2006
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