Experience is an odd commodity. As a generalization,
most of us might expect that someone who has a lot of experience of doing
something will be better at it than someone who has none, but it doesn’t always
work that way. One of the reasons why some people end up doing the same job for
many, many years is that they really aren’t very good at it. Peter’s Principle (“In
a hierarchy individuals tend to rise to their levels of incompetence”)
applies. I once interviewed someone for a job who claimed to have twenty years’
experience, but when we questioned him it turned out that he really had one
year’s experience repeated twenty times. Experience is not only about duration
– it’s also about depth and breadth. And experience of repeated failure without
learning from mistakes made is a handicap, not a qualification.
The First Minister claimed
this week that Labour should stay in power because it is the only party with
previous governing experience in Wales. Even if it didn’t effectively amount to
an argument that Labour should therefore enjoy perpetual power (because no-one
will ever be able to gain that experience if we accept the argument), it’s a
curious claim to make. In the first place, whilst some of the lessons learned
from experience can be passed on after a fashion, ‘experience’ itself is
personal to the experiencer. In the second place, ‘parties’ don’t have
experience of government, it’s the ministers (who are often in any
post for only a comparatively short time) who do; parties, as institutions,
tend not to be very good at passing lessons on, which is one of the reasons why
new generations of politicians often repeat the mistakes of the past. In the
third place, many of those within Labour who possess this magical experience
are either standing down in this election, or else at risk of defeat anyway. In
the fourth place, whilst not everything that the Labour Government has done can
fairly be described as a disaster (whatever their opponents might say), and there
are often mitigating arguments based on relative incomes, ages and health, the
objective evidence surely means that there are very few who would look at the
last 27 years and see nothing but outstanding success; experience of failure
may not be quite the qualification as which the First Minister apparently sees
it. Finally, the institution which is supposed to be the guardian and repository
of experience and its lessons isn’t the party, or even the ministers, but the apolitical
civil service – which will still be there after May 7 to serve the new
ministers.
I’m not sure that “desperate” – the headline accusation
lobbed by Plaid – is an entirely fair description of the tactic by Labour. The
subtext is surely a much more powerful condemnation: Inability to comprehend
any alternative approach, complete failure to understand that voters in Wales
want ‘change’ (even if they don’t all want the same change), and a general weariness
with the apparent inertia of our political systems and structures. Our best
hope for the outcome on 7 May is a government composed solely of independence-supporting
parties. It’s hard to envisage any government which includes the attitudes
currently being displayed by Labour having the vision and the energy to do
anything sufficiently different.