- Wed Sep 29, 2021 11:27 am
#10996
Let’s imagine an alternative recent history of the Labour Party.
Let’s look at Keir Starmer being emphatically elected as Labour’s new leader, having promised to deal with the shocking legacy of anti-semitism in the party, and to co-operate in full with the findings of the EHRC in its report on the party (as yet, at that point, unpublished).
Let’s imagine that the outgoing leader, Jeremy Corbyn, wished his successor well and expressed a genuine hope that he would lead the party back to government as soon as possible.
Let’s imagine that Rebecca Long-Bailey did not like and re-tweet (then refuse to delete the re-tweet when asked to) a social media post by the actor Maxine Peake in which she endorsed an anti-semitic conspiracy theory that claimed that police in America who knelt on George Floyd's neck had learned the tactic from 'seminars with Israeli secret services'.
Let’s imagine that Long-Bailey kept her shadow cabinet post, and had worked diligently and constructively towards the key goal of getting Labour back to government.
And let’s imagine that Jeremy Corbyn, on the morning of the publication of the EHRC report into the problems of anti-semitism in the Labour Party during his tenure as leader, had maintained a dignified silence, as he had been specifically asked to do by Keir Starmer, instead of making a statement to news media that directly undermined Starmer’s leadership by asserting that the anti-semitism that the EHRC had found in the party had been “dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents inside and outside the party, as well as by much of the media.”.
Let’s imagine that Mr Corbyn had not been suspended from party membership as a consequence of his remarks, then reinstated by an NEC committee still at that point dominated by his supporters. Let’s imagine that he had not had the Labour whip withdrawn, but continued to sit as a Labour MP, not as an independent – as he is today.
Let’s further imagine that the far-left faction within the Labour Party had not taken this as a cue to embark on a divisive and destructive campaign against the party leader that continues to this day. Let’s imagine that they instead took active steps to achieve the party unity that they so persistently insist they so desire.
Imagine how much stronger a position Labour would be in now. A strong, united party, an obvious alternative government in waiting, with a de facto next Prime Minister in waiting at its head – a Labour victory at the next election nailed-on in the collective mind of the electorate, in the way that our victory in 1997 was nailed-on many, many months before the actual election.
You may be having trouble imagining this alternative timeline. Because of course, it didn’t happen. The far-left faction is still determined to drag the party down. Owen Jones is launching daily, vitriolic attacks on the leadership. Ken Loach, self-excluded from the party for supporting a proscribed organisation, has declared war on Starmer. There is a concerted effort to trash Labour’s first physical conference since Starmer’s leadership began, with a choreographed, out-of-the-blue resignation in mid-conference by the last Corbynite in the shadow cabinet, a similarly choreographed disaffiliation, complete with boilerplate back-stabbing denunciation of the leader by the minor BFAWU bakers’ union, and the slippery and disingenuous John McDonnell popping up on Newsnight seemingly every night to claim that all his faction wants is unity, and that all of this division and factionalism is entirely the fault of Keir Starmer, who is apparently doing it all not because he wants the party to succeed, but because he is simply interested in “witch-hunting” true socialists, and has reneged on a solemn promise to bring about party unity.
John McDonnell is a disingenuous liar. He is at pains to portray the factional schism within the party as nothing to do with him or his colleagues. All they ever wanted was a united party and to attack the Tories, and why were we wasting time on important rule changes at conference (the only time and place that rule changes *can* be dealt with) instead of attacking the Tories – a false dichotomy if ever there was one.
What McDonnell purposely neglects to say is that party unity is a two-way street. It isn’t possible unilaterally to impose party unity on a permanently indignant faction that in truth, has no interest whatsoever in uniting with the party mainstream. A faction that has obstructed and undermined the leadership at every turn, and only seeks to bring down the present leader, not unite behind him. A faction whose interests are brutally at odds with the historic aims, objectives, and historic founding principles of the Labour Party. McDonnell, Corbyn and their friends claim that they want unity, yet have done demonstrably nothing to work towards its achievement.
The brutal truth is that Corbyn, McDonnell, and their disciples represent and constitute a separate party within the Labour Party. Their objective – as McDonnell himself has made clear in his unguarded moments – is revolutionary socialism (as espoused only slightly less crudely by crank far left sects such as “Socialist Outlook”). It is not, it is clear, the achievement of incremental improvements to peoples’ lives via the democratic election of progressive Labour governments – the very purpose for which the Labour Party was first founded. The conclusion inexorably presenting itself – the massive elephant blundering around the room - is that Labour cannot succeed until this poisonous faction is divorced from the party’s mainstream, whether voluntarily, or forcefully.
Last edited by Abernathy on Wed Sep 29, 2021 5:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.