The debate about Labour's future colour leaves me somewhat aesthetically torn because, if pressed, I would name both red and purple (the, deep, dark and brooding imperial kind) as my favourite colours. Politically, however, my favour definitely falls on red. Despite all this the release of the Purple Book by Progress is a welcome contribution to the increasing ferment within Labour which, in itself, is welcome after the intellectually dead and stifled Blair years.
It's premise is however, fundamentally flawed. Anthony Painter, writing on Labour Uncut explains it thus:
The frame for the collection comes from David Marquand's Britain since 1918 where he discusses four British democracies. Tory nationalism and Whig imperialism speak for themselves. The other two are the major fault-lines that exist with the modern labour movement: democratic collectivist and democratic republicanism. The former finds expression in the old-style socialism of much of the trade union movement and in traditional (and caricatured) Fabianism.
It should never be the way of the left to falsely counterpose the freedom of the individual to the collectivist duties of the state or indeed 'collective power' in general. All can and should exist in tandem. No individual can be truly free living in a bubble, cut-off from the rest of society just as no collective should see its role as to squash or superimpose itself on the individual. Instead, the role of any collective is to support the individual and help them flourish and realise their full potential. The 'individual v state/collective' discourse is one that has been cynically created by the right-wing to further its own political agenda and the left should not accept it into its own discourse and politics.
Such is the nature of the beast that some of the policy suggestions within the Purple Book will even curry favour with left-wingers; mutualising banks and/or turning some into co-operatives is a good idea, as is free universal childcare and free at the point of use elderly care. All good stuff - all stuff that Labour should be doing. We should be radically reforming the finance sector and be the leading proponents of a new way of doing things economically after the crash. We should also ensure our most vulnerable citizens are cared for; so, I can happily and enthusiastically sign-up to these proposals in principle.
However, in some areas the book flatly contradicts what it purports to want to do. For example, why should we impose directly elected mayors on cities without first asking the people that live there? Generally, I think it's a good idea to ask the people first before you do something like that. If Purple Booker's are committed to localism, as Anthony seems to think they are as 'democratic republicans' then I ask them this, how is it fair to tell local communities they must have a directly-elected mayor and give them no choice?
In other areas, because it accepts the false dichotomy above as its terms of reference the ideas within the book are slightly repugnant to be honest. For example, I have long been an opponent of merging income tax and national insurance and continue to remain so, as I oppose any attempts to undermine the universal nature of the care provided by the National Health Service. Why provide free child and elderly care but leave people to the mercy of the market in-between? We need to return to the principle that the state will help, provide and enable from cradle right through to grave.
Especially in these suggestions we see how the Purple Book falls into the trap of accepting a fundamental dichotomy between the interests of the collective and individual. It also makes a bit of a slapdash implication that there is no difference between the state and 'collective' power. Many different kinds of collective power exist; trade unions are one, community, activist groups others. In seeing the 'collective' as always being a bad thing, as always being something that must be opposed, the premise of the Purple Book misleads us by airbrushing these other kinds of collective power effectively out of existence.
This is why ultimately I would choose a future for Labour that is red because a red future understands that individuals need collectives and that collectives must be democratic enough to ensure individuals can flourish within them. It does not get trapped travelling up a blind alley that the purple one does by accepting a cage provided for us by our political opponents. I would urge everybody to read the Purple Book, to comment on it, to critique it (or defend it, depending on your own preference), but ultimately though I support some of the suggestions within it, I urge the Labour Party not to choose the future it prescribes because that future is not the best one for our Party, nor indeed our country.
Follow Darrell Goodliffe on Twitter: www.twitter.com/DarrellGoodliff
That's a long way away, however, and my gentle jibe is that In The Current Situation in North Britain, a "thinking person of the centre-left" can not find their home in the party of Iain Grey and Richard Baker - PFI, Hang Megrahi, Nuclear Power, Trident and a series of Stalinist Rotten Boroughs in local government.
You could say, oh, well, "work from within for change", the cry of the disenfranchised and disillusioned within a thousand political parties the world over.
Eventually, everyone realises that change comes not from within, but without. The voters of Scotland, even if they did not believe in Independence, have seen a competent government of the centre-left by the SNP for four years and now another five. That's who we voted for, and if Dave, Nick or Ed had got 45% of the vote, it would be "a ringing endorsement for change", eh ?
Did I miss any buzz-phrases ? The Tories did it several times until they realised that all that they had to do was to sit back and for Brown and Bliar to make a backside of it.
Not going to work this time for NotNuLabourAnymore.
Your party, Darrell, seems devoid of concrete policy. Your leadership will forever be associated with the last administration, the Brownies versus the Bliarites, the infighting at all levels revealed in a thousand memoirs, a government working not for the People but for itself.
The Tories were only “detoxified” when all bar Cuddly Ken Clarke had passed from the front Bench.
Basic, simple policies. NHS Free at the point of delivery. Universal Child and Eldrely Care. A decent pension. A living wage. No Trident. Taxation of those who can afford it, company or individual.
And if you agree with all of that, Vote SNP. Oh, sorry or Labour in what will be left of the “United Kingdom”.
If you can’t distinguish yourselves from the Tories, the people of Englandshire will just Vote Tory.
* With the exception of North Britain Parish Branch UK NotNuLabourAnymore, who still seem to be in denial that they got categorically whipped in May.
Doubt very much we will be in opposition for three terms though, if you count this one as being one, two is certainly possible, I agree.
We are lacking in the policy area, I agree and your other point is pretty valid which I why I think the next time we have a leadership contest we will skip a generation and probably ultimately select Rachel Reeves as our next leader.
Cant really disagree with anything you say to be honest, apart from voting SNP, not the solution in my eyes for Scotland and independence is a blind alley.