- Thu Aug 24, 2023 5:45 pm
#51364
On contemplating that Labour seems consistently to be sustaining a 25 point lead over the Tories, and that not only that, that on the basis of the latest polling in Scotland, Labour is poised to recover at the election around 50% of Scottish parliamentary seats, and also that John Curtice has suggested that the party could be on course for an even bigger landslide victory in 2024 than was achieved by Tony Blair in 1997, I am once more drawn inexorably to the similarities between what happened in the lead up to the 1997 Labour landslide victory, and what is happening now in the lead up to what hopefully will be another landslide victory next year. In doing so, I am of course also mindful of Roy Jenkins’ famous analogy of Labour as a man carefully carrying a priceless porcelain vase along the highly polished floor of a long, long corridor.
In 1997, the Tories had been in government for 13 years, and the public was thoroughly sick of them. The electors had, it seemed, reached a tipping point, whereby the vast majority was firmly resolved on getting rid of the Tory government , whenever the election came.
And here now in 2023, the Tories have been in government for 13 years, and the public is thoroughly sick of them. The electors have, it seems, reached a tipping point, whereby the vast majority are firmly resolved on getting rid of the Tory government , whenever the election comes.
The government of John Major, from 1992 to 1997, had crashed the UK economy right at the start of its five year term, with Norman Lamont’s desperate efforts to keep the pound in the ERM resulting in record high interest rates and the ignominious crash out of the ERM on what became known as “Black Wednesday”.
The Tory government elected in 2019 crashed the UK economy in 2022 under the disastrous, blessedly short-lived premiership of Liz Truss, when she borrowed heavily to finance a package of tax cutting measures for the wealthy.
In 1997, Tony Blair had broadly re-shaped the Labour Party into “New Labour”, an electable alternative well-placed to take advantage of any disaffection with the incumbent government in order to win election back to government, following a catastrophic defeat in 1983 under a unpopular left wing leader .
In 2023, Keir Starmer has broadly re-shaped the Labour Party into an electable alternative, well-placed to take advantage of any disaffection with the incumbent government, in order to win election back to government, following a catastrophic defeat in 2019 under a unpopular left wing leader .
So, amidst all the similarity, what’s the difference? Why is Labour supposedly on track to win a much larger landslide in 2024 than it did in 1997?
I think it’s this : the current iteration of Tory government is simply THE very worst that there has EVER been. They have encumbered the country with (at least) three disastrously incompetent and/or corrupt Prime Ministers in Theresa May, Boris Johnson, and Liz Truss (the jury is still just about out on PM Sunak). They have inflicted untold damage on the country’s economy (and societal fabric) via austerity, then Brexit, and then by lurching shockingly further to the right with a cruel, inhumane, and deeply inefficient policy on immigration and asylum. It’s taken a while, but it seems to me that that these Tories are dancing on an electoral trapdoor and the electorate simply cannot wait to get its collective hands on the release lever. They desperately want to give these bastards a bloody good kicking - and who can blame them ? Bring on the landslide.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.