In the light of the Conservative victory
in the Hartlepool by-election, Labour figures are lining up to say that Labour
needs to reconnect with people, to listen to what their former electors are
saying, and to change to reflect that. It’s a response which raises the whole
question of whether parties exist to lead or to follow. Telling the electors
that they’re wrong is, they argue, not a good place to be.
But. It doesn’t take a lot of listening or
polling to understand that what electors in England are increasingly saying
that they want is a government which puts up barriers to the rest of the world
and a government which penalises the poorest in society. They welcome the
‘hostile environment’ and want the government to deport more people. They like
macho posturing with gunboats and weapons of mass destruction and they regret
the loss of empire and the unwillingness of those foreign types to agree to
whatever we want. It would be unfair to tar all English voters with the same
brush (or to claim that there aren’t voters in Wales with similar views), and
there are certainly generational differences, but the above seems to me to be a
reasonably fair reflection of where ‘middle England’ is today.
Political parties have a choice between
attempting to lead public opinion and following it. Boris Johnson is choosing
the latter path, as one might expect from a party whose only objective is to
gain and exercise power for the benefit of themselves and their cronies. And –
at present at least – playing to the gallery works; it not only wins them
elections currently, but it also reinforces and entrenches the attitudes of
their supporters. On the other hand, a party which believes in an alternative
approach has the much harder task of persuading and convincing people to
support that alternative – and that includes a willingness to disagree with the
consensus of public opinion when necessary. As an example: in Wales, independence
isn’t on the table because it matches the preconceptions and beliefs of the
majority, it’s on the table because a minority have spent so much time and
effort arguing for it.
Labour have spent decades conflicted
between the two approaches to politics. Very occasionally the more visionary approach
wins out in the internal battle, but since such an approach can never be
expected to bring instant electoral success (it is, necessarily, a longer-term
project), it always gets ditched again after a bad result. They may gloss over
it by saying that it’s better to be in power and mitigate some of the worst
effects of the Tories, but ultimately, given a choice between being in power in
the short term and fighting for real change in the long term, they invariably
choose the former. That’s what ‘listening to the voters’ is really about. The
sooner ‘Welsh Labour’ realise that the English Labour Party isn’t going to
appear over the hill like the 7th Cavalry to save Wales, the sooner
they can start participating in a real debate about what sort of Wales we want
to build.
1 comment:
When did the 7th cavalry come over the hill to save anyone ? Last I heard they were in desperate need of help themselves !. Fast forward to today, the nasty jingoism of middle England is not new, it's just a case that it has spread to a wider demographic as it often did in times of war and crisis. This is a post Brexit mindset out to prove that the decision was right. Labour, despite having some dissidents is seen as the party of Remain by those who wish to draw sharp distinctions.
What does all of this hold for Wales ? Not a lot I suspect.Jingoism as often voiced on sites like Guido shows scant respect or comradeship towards Welsh or Scots unless they are of the compliant types well dipped in dependency culture. So we'll be picking up a share of HS2 and Trident whether we like it or not and continue to be subjected to the usual abuse about being a drain on the UK ( English) Treasury.
If you turn and suggest they cut us loose all sorts of feeble folk this side of Offa's Dyke will come out wailing and waving begging bowls. A conundrum indeed.
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