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View Full Version : Don't underestimate toxic Blue Labour



Die Neue Zeit
1st June 2011, 14:55
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/may/21/blue-labour-lord-glasman-conservative-socialism



By Ed Rooksby



It seemed faddish at first – a here today, gone tomorrow curiosity advocated by a tiny number of Labour party affiliated thinkers and policy wonks. But it looks increasingly like the Blue Labour doctrine may well have greater staying power than many of us previously suspected.

Ed Miliband has been flirting with Blue Labour for several months. Indeed, it's well known that the doctrine's founder, Maurice Glasman, is a close friend of the Labour Party leader. Miliband recently authored a preface for a Blue Labour e-book and this has been interpreted as a sign that he's moving towards a full embrace of Blue Labour as the party's "big idea" under his leadership. It's for this reason that critics of Blue Labour need to take the approach seriously and to look carefully at what it represents. Many have been rather too brusque in their dismissiveness towards it and have failed to grasp the doctrine's real strengths and thus failed to understand the dangers it poses.

The basic idea animating Blue Labour is that Labour needs to rediscover strands of thinking buried in its historical traditions that have been obscured since 1945. Lord Glasman argues for a creative re-engagement with the party's roots in 19th century traditions of mutuals, co-operatives and friendly societies and with associated labour movement values such as community, solidarity and reciprocity. Glasman argues that the party should embrace what he regards as the fundamental conservatism of the working class. An ethics of community and solidarity he suggests implies a defence of traditional institutions, social relationships and identities as valuable in themselves. These include the family, patriotism, faith and the work ethic. As such Blue Labour advocates, in Glasman's words, "a deeply conservative socialism".

Glasman argues that these original values were lost as the postwar reforms of Clement Attlee and Nye Bevan produced a bureaucratic state, fostered a culture of irresponsibility and transformed Labour itself into a similarly technocratic, centralised organisation. New Labour made things worse. Its embrace of market forces brought untrammelled "commodification" of human relationships, dissolving the ethical glue that binds communities together. One of the most destructive aspects of this, he argues, was that it led to an influx of immigrant labour that drove down wages and produced huge resentment amongst the "white working class". In addition, the discourse of "multiculturalism" that accompanied this process further corroded community cohesion.

Much of this, let's be clear, is toxic stuff. But this shouldn't blind us to its strengths. Glasman has an impressive grasp of the way in which political traditions are always constituted by paradoxical components – a series of tensions. This is one reason why they are always contestable. Political ideologies are battlegrounds on which factions struggle for hegemony, seeking to articulate these ideological components in different combinations. This is the kind of struggle in which Glasman is engaged. For this reason I don't think that Glasman really believes for one second in the kind of historical story he's telling – a tale of corruption of "authentic", prelapsarian labour movement values. This is not really an objective description – it's a "performative" endeavour which seeks to reshape the ideological terrain and create its own truth.

Of course, Blue Labour hasn't conjured up the values it advocates out of nothing. It's right that there's a long tradition of working class self-organisation, community organising and hostility towards statism. It also takes inspiration from the old tradition of "ethical socialism" which sought to ground socialism in communitarian moral values. Glasman's argument that there's a strong conservative component to socialism – though, at first glance, counter-intuitive – is quite right. It's often observed that socialism shares much in common with "one nation" Toryism. Both emphasise social solidarity and are profoundly suspicious of market individualism. However, whereas conservatism tends to hark back to some past golden age, socialism characteristically seeks to combine resistance on the one hand with radical, creative change on the other.

There are other problems with Blue Labour's narrative. It doesn't take a genius to see that its hostility towards statism, in the context of economic crisis and austerity, could provide useful ideological cover for an assault on welfare. Blue Labour thinking, here, converges seamlessly with Cameron's "big society". Its professed hostility towards market forces should be taken with a pinch of salt. We should also note that Glasman's critique of market forces nearly always singles out "finance capital" – rather than capitalism itself – as the chief enemy. This specific focus on "finance capital" as the root of all evil has an unsettling history – it's long been a mark of rightwing populism.

This brings us to the most disturbing area of Blue Labour's thinking – the similarities between some of its ideas and those of the far right. This is most obvious in the case of its stance on immigration and national identity. The frequent invocation of the "white working class" in particular is reminiscent of far right discourse. No one doubts the anti-fascist credentials of Blue Labour figures – but their ideas sail close to the wind in this respect. Outrageously, Glasman recently argued that Labour should seek to involve EDL supporters within the party. But there's no future for Labour in pandering to far right extremism and it's certainly not socialist to pitch "whites" (working class or not) against immigrants and ethnic minorities.

The left shouldn't underestimate the sophistication of Blue Labour, or the degree to which it represents a serious threat to the principles the left holds dear. Labour needs to hold fast to its most important values – defence of the poor and vulnerable, internationalism and robust anti-racism. The adoption of Blue Labour ideas would be a terrible betrayal of Labour's best and noblest traditions.

Jimmy Haddow (SPS)
1st June 2011, 23:07
Review: Blue Labour

'Shame on you for turning Blue'

Steve Score Secretary, East Midlands Socialist Party ( 30 March 2011)

BBC Radio 4's Analysis programme recently looked at 'Blue Labour' (BL).

I thought we already had 'Blue Labour', given the complete acceptance by New Labour of the Tory Party's 'neoliberal' agenda and many of its social policies. But apparently it's not 'blue' enough! Behind BL is an attempt to shift Labour even further to the right on social issues and, in particular, a further attack on the welfare state.

In the internal debate about the future direction of the Labour Party a group has been formed around Maurice Glasman, recently appointed to the House of Lords by Labour leader Ed Miliband.

Glasman has previously been quoted as saying that Labour needs to 'return' to the values of "a deeply conservative socialism that places family, faith and work at the heart of a new politics of reciprocity, mutuality and solidarity".

On the programme he was supported by the likes of former Labour minister James Purnell. BL is being promoted as Labour's answer to Cameron's 'Big Society', yet another code word for cuts and privatisation.

Suspiciously Tory
It certainly sounds suspiciously similar to Tory rhetoric.

In Labour's working class heartlands many voters have broken with their previously traditional party.

Instead of drawing the conclusion that this breakaway is because Labour carried out pro-big business policies, presided over the decimation of jobs, cut and privatised public services, and stopped representing working class people, BL looks for other solutions.

They quote the fears that many people have over immigration, for example, due to the scarcity of jobs and stretched public services.

But instead of answering those fears with a programme of creating jobs and homes, expanding services, and pointing to the real cause of those problems - big business and capitalism - they adopt a British National Party (BNP) style programme on immigration.

The rise of the BNP vote has everything to do with the abandonment of working class people by Labour.

Attempting to wear the same clothes merely increases the far-right, racist BNP's credibility.

False dichotomy
The programme tried to categorise Labour's support as middle class graduates who were socially 'liberal' and concerned with equality on the one hand, and working class people, who were socially 'conservative' but were yearning for a return to community values on the other.

The former were apparently won over to Blairism, but it was the latter's fault that Labour lost the 2010 general election! What a false dichotomy!

Blairism brought us such socially 'liberal' things as clamping down on civil liberties and the 'war on terror'.

Of course working class people want equality - it reflects the middle class prejudices of the authors of Blue Labour to think they don't!

Not many people in either of those falsely separated social categories supported Labour's university tuition fees.

The proponents of Blue Labour have in particular attacked the post- 1945 welfare state as being 'bureaucratic'.

Instead they put forward 'mutuals, co-operatives and friendly societies, the creation of local banks and worker representation on company boards'. They want 'more localised provision of services, an end to Labour's obsession with post code lotteries'.

Token
But this sounds to me like a token reference to genuine democratic control of services with an agenda behind it of further privatisation and break-up of services. The 'post code lottery' exists because of inadequate resources being put into local services.

Yes, the Socialist Party supports proper democratic control by the workers and users of services; yes we support real workers' control and management of companies. But that firstly needs public ownership - you can't control what you don't own - and secondly not just a token workers' "representative", but a board of management elected by the workers and users of services.

In reality they are talking about the dismantling of services in the same way that the Big Society does, after all even Cameron talked of "cooperatives".

It is a comment on how far Labour has shifted to the right that Roy Hattersley, a solid right winger in 'old Labour' terms was brought on to criticise Blue Labour from the left! The working class does need political representation, but it will not come from the Labour Party. A new party of the working class is needed, one that opposes the capitalist agenda of cuts and privatisation of all the main parties.

The likes of Miliband can pose on demo platforms, but they are offering more of the same cuts, except 'slower'.

Blue Labour proponents bandy around words like 'solidarity' and 'community', but a real sense of solidarity and working class community will come out of the battles to defend public services we are now embarking on, and a real working class alternative to New Labour will be created out of those struggles.

Red Future
1st June 2011, 23:13
So this is where Social Democracy ends up....?:blink:

Red Future
1st June 2011, 23:22
"finance capital" – rather than capitalism itself

Oh dear, oh dear indeed.

Iraultzaile Ezkerreko
11th June 2011, 17:18
This is real?! There's a proto-fascist pressure group inside the Labour Party and its the new fad?!

L.A.P.
11th June 2011, 17:26
So this is where Social Democracy ends up....?:blink:

Maybe the Third International had a point about social democracy being social fascism.