So we’ve now had
two months of the so called “new politics” and, well what do you think of it
kids?
Corbyn & Cameron recreate the Frost Report's Class sketch |
The most obvious
thing to say about the new politics is how unelectable Labour have now
become. The upcoming Oldham by-election
presents a negotiable test for Corbyn & co, though the acid test will be
next years London Mayoral elections & the Welsh Assembly elections. Not the Holyrood elections because frankly
the SNP could do all manner of daft and stupid things and Sturgeon would still
be in pole position to become First Minister.
Kezia Dugdale’s task is to put Labour in striking position for a full
blown tilt in 2021 (why not 2019?). In
reality, Corbyn’s scorecard should be marked with those elections for London
& Cardiff and not with the current polling ratings.
That Labour’s
polling ratings are tanking is really not a surprise. Between the open warfare on Corbyn from
Progress wingers and sundry other Blairites who have done everything in their
power to undermine their own leader to an incredibly hostile press determined
to spin and smear every small nugget and titbit to make Corbyn look like the
second coming of Stalin, there’s not very many people who would be capable of
surviving that. Indeed Corbyn possibly
could and should be able to get out and get some traction within his own
party. The reason that he isn’t, and why
so many left wingers (not unlike myself) should be hitting their heads against
the nearest wall is because Corbyn actually isn’t very good.
In my piece about
how Labour lost, I’d recycled a gag from the The West Wing to highlight Labour
electing leaders who were cerebral thinkers but with not very good leadership
skills. In Corbyn, they have elected someone
else in that vein. Except that at least
Brown had the gravitas of a big hitter and Miliband at least could deliver good
thought provoking speeches. So far Corbyn has allowed
himself to be pushed about and bullied by a furious Progress wing who feel that
they were entitled to the keys to the Labour Party. His handling of his shadow cabinet is a prime
example of his lack of political nous.
His cabinet has the feel of a cobbled together list and hints at Corbyn
not expecting the wave of people ruling themselves out of serving under him so
therefore feels as if zero planning went into this key moment. Someone with political nous would have turned
this to their own advantage and blood the next generation of Labour front bench
spokespeople. Corbyn did not do this.
Of course, no
other politician, however talented they are, has ever been able to survive the
size of outright mutiny which is on the cards within the parliamentary Labour
party. Corbyn’s honeymoon lasted all of
0.08 seconds until Jamie Reed threw his toys out of the pram and put his own
selfish interests before his party.
Within three hours of the result, six other politicians showed
themselves up as clearly not understanding Labour values – Liz Kendall, Yvette
Cooper, Rachel Reeves, Tristram Hunt, Chuka Umuna and Emma Reynolds joined Reed
in the toy throwing exercise. It remains
to be seen whether those individuals have thrown away their political careers
(fellow lefies would claim that this is not a great loss in the case of Hunt, Reeves
& Umuna while asking who’s Reynolds).
Since then,
Labour’s hard right have waged a campaign of their own to undermine their own
leader. The justification for this
behaviour being Corbyn’s own record as a serial offender in rebelling against
the leadership. Which really begs the
question that if they noticed that then why did they not take on board the
valid opposition to, say, PFI, Iraq and Blair’s fixation on security to the detriment
of personal freedoms to pick three issues out of the air. All valid reasons as well why I’ve not voted
Labour since the mid 1990’s.
Of course the
splits and the drip drip of negative stories is manna from heaven to a hostile
media opposed to a Corbyn premiership and determined to kill his
leadership. Shamefully included in this
is the BBC, who either repeat, unchecked, the claims of the press verbatim, or
in the case of their precocious new Political correspondent Laura Kunnesberg, turned
small issues into matters of national significance. Obviously because we’ve never had such a high
ranking republican in such a prominent position before. Sadly though you’d expect this behaviour from
the more foaming at the mouth sections of the English based media. This makes me wonder why several of the
Progress wing still write columns for these papers. Blunkett had a column last week in the
Torygraph while the most persistent offender is the Rochdale MP and serial self
promoter, Simon Danczuk. In between
complaining about a plot to deselect him from his seat, Danczuk writes columns
for those Corbyn friendly organs The S*n and the Mail on Sunday. No wonder the Labour activists in Oldham didn’t
want to touch him with the preverbial shitty stick.
The media’s
myopia even extends to their coverage of Corbyn’s own group – called Momentum. They’ve been accused of attempting to
initiate de-selection procedures against ‘unloyal’ MP’s up and down the country… except that’s precisely the sort of tactics
Progress have been pursuing for several years.
Indeed, the behaviour of Unite two or three years back were only
mirroring Progress’ own tactics. All of
which is an evolution on the selection process prospective Labour MSP’s went
through before selection by uber Blair sympathiser Rosemary McKenna in the run
up to the first Scottish Parliamentary elections in 1999. A process which damaged Labour in the long
run as the selected candidates only came from a narrow right of the party
section of Labour while alienating left wingers. Dennis Canavan left Labour, stood on his own
ticket and won becoming the Scottish Parliament’s equivalent to Rhodri Morgan.
With there now
being two distinct groupings within Labour – the Blairite Progress Group (the
original party within a party) and the Corbynistas under Momentum – it feels as
if Labour is being pulled apart like a political Stretch Armstrong. Pulling the legs are outside forces – the Conservitives
and the SNP. Their aim is to consolidate
their new found dominance of Scottish politics by highlighting Labour’s right
wing tendencies at every opportunity.
This week’s Westminster debate on Trident being the perfect example of
the sort of traps the SNP will set and Labour in it’s split personality
disorder will blunder into – thus haemorrhaging more votes come next May’s
Holyrood Election.
I had made the
point in August that none of the candidates showed enough of a realisation that
they needed to appeal and to play to the differing and diverging priorities and
aspirations of Middle England and Central Belt Scotland. Both Cooper and Kendall’s campaigns in
particular suffered because they refused to build bridges with sections of the
Labour party other than their own narrow supporter base. Before Progress wing politicians snipe and
blame Corbyn’s poor political skills, perhaps they should be looking in the
mirror at their own very real failings first.
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