There is a mantra
much-loved by politicians about ‘putting country before party’. It sounds
pretty lofty and principled, but when broken down is ultimately meaningless, as
we’ve seen over the benefit cuts being proposed by Sir Keir Warmonger’s
government. The claim is, in essence, that the party doesn’t want cuts, but the
country requires them because of the allegedly parlous state of the national
finances. The reality is that Sir Warmonger is motivated first and foremost
(like all PMs that I can remember) by what he thinks will win him the next
election. His definition, when push comes to shove, of ‘the national interest’
is the continuation of his government. And for all the apparent disagreement
with his own backbenchers, they also are motivated by the same thing. I’m
prepared to accept that they honestly and sincerely believe that a Labour
government is better for the UK than a Tory government, but in that sense, the
interests of party and country, in their eyes, will always coincide.
The debate isn’t
about any conflict between party and country, it’s about which approach is most
likely to see the return of another Labour government at the next UK election.
In that sense, party always comes first. That doesn’t mean that there is no
serious disagreement, it just isn’t really about the substance of the
proposals, it’s about their impact on voting intentions. The PM and those
around him really seem to believe that their best hope of winning involves
appealing to those who think anyone receiving benefits is a shirker and
layabout, and are happy to see such people be pushed deeper into poverty as a
result. The revolting backbenchers think that their best hope of winning
involves placating those constituents who are besieging their offices and mail
boxes with complaints about the proposed benefit cuts.
Whilst there’s
surely no doubt that what the rebels are saying is closer to what many would
see as traditional Labour values, it doesn’t necessarily follow that it is
those values which are motivating them rather than a desire
to save their own electoral skins. It’s a tragedy for the Labour Party that debate
about visions for a better future has been replaced by venal considerations about
which particular cohort of electors they need to attract. It’s an even bigger
tragedy for those who will lose out that the proposed compromise isn’t about
whether they’ll lose out or not, but which of them will lose out and by how
much.