Quite possibly Jeremy Corbyn will not be having the best Christmas ever this year. On the other hand, who knows? He was never a man ambitious for high office.
His ascension came about because the UK Labour party needed the appearance of pluralism in its post-2015 leadership election, and so Andy Burnham, the left Blairite frontrunner, lent him the nominees required to get on the ballot. The reformed Labour party electoral structure put in by Ed Miliband did the rest, empowering a vastly expanded membership to overcome the parliamentary party, and give them a man many of them loathed as leader.
Corbyn, said to be reluctant once actual victory loomed, did his duty. Miliband had done his; he was the son of a Mitteleuropean intellectual father, whose life’s work was to convince people that the UK Labour party was a conservative, establishment organisation whose historical role had been to frustrate the working-class path to socialism.
Ed, I believe, never lost that critical sense of the party, but by the ’90s the idea of a substituting organisation of the left was over. It was the only game in town, for both the Miliband boys, and Ed’s continuity with his father’s legacy was to do three things: break the block vote hold of the trade union leadership on the party, break the power of the parliamentary party over leadership selection, and defeat his brother David, who had drunk the Blairite Irn-Bru.
The election of Corbyn was the result, great and terrible at the same time. These are epic events, and will come to be seen as such, as the petty squalor and libel of the period fades. But that doesn’t do much for progressives, radicals and leftists at the present moment.
Jeremy Corbyn, one suspects, never expected to win — or even last long as leader when elected in 2015. Then he survived a leadership coup, Brexit got voted up, and Labor won 40% of the vote in 2017.
That happened for one reason above all; by simply saying that Labour respected the referendum result, the intra-party division over immigration was avoided. Northern voters were satisfied that freedom of movement would end, southern progressives that the party hadn’t gone nativist. Once that question was out of the way, the British public showed that it was very willing to vote for a left social democratic program which involved selective nationalisation/socialisations, and a raft of other measures.
But once that question was put into play, Labour was screwed. At the centre of modern tragedy is choice; this tragedy was ancient, of fate. Corbyn and the leadership team around him wanted to hold on to the party long enough to cycle out the Blairites from key positions, to scatter the faction. The Blairites knew this was happening, and that they lacked the numbers to stop it, so they took up the anti-Semitism cause– a real problem, in the new expanded party, but vastly, surreally exaggerated — as a battering ram.
Polls after poll has shown that without Brexit, support for the two major parties equalises, or did, confirming the 2017 election result. But the Corbyn team were trapped. They did not think, I suspect, that they could hold out until a scheduled election in 2022, even though that would have been a better election to fight (wave through Theresa May’s least worst Brexit deal, will of people etc, then relentlessly attack as things got worse, Brexit failing to deliver moonbeam pie).
But quite aside from concerns about lasting the distance, Labour was undermined by its relentless Remainers, who were unconcerned about the damage they were doing to the party with a sneering globalist elitism that treated a referendum vote — however it came about — as something to be worked around and trashed.
These forces will, and are, using their outlets in the mainstream press to trash Corbyn, his team, and a program that was to the right of Attlee’s 1945 program, and about level with Harold Wilson’s late ’60s positions — mild further nationalisations, staying out of Vietnam, etc.
But they could have been fought off too, had the Remain virus not infected the Corbyn leadership team too. From the outside, and as cliché, they were all a bunch of raving Marxists. This obscured real divisions between the actual internationalist Marxists who believe that sticking with a bad EU is better than re-invoking national autonomy, those from the mainstream Communist tradition who are equivocal, and English radicals, such as Corbyn, who are resolutely anti-EU.
The idea that Corbyn is a “Marxist” — as opposed to finding its theoretical framing useful — has always been laughable. The man has an allotment, makes jam from its fruits, and lives in a council house in Islington, which is far from fully gentrified. He’s a west country boy come to London, who plays Ewan MacColl songs badly on folk guitar. Any more English and he’d be on the lid of a Quality Street tin, for godssake.
So why has this personally gentle man been so calumnied by many beyond the right-wing media, when his opponent is one white cat away from being a Bond villain?
The immediate answer is that Corbyn was dead to a lot of Labour’s traditional voters after 2017, when he prevaricated on Brexit. The longer answer is that many had him on sufferance because of something that many Australians won’t recognise: Corbyn is middle-class, and working-class voters hear and see that instantly. His parents were minor professionals; he went to a minor public school. Once Brexit was betrayed, Corbyn was the middle-class snake, Boris was the bloke who’s alright.
Corbyn should have, unannounced to no one, got up one day in the Commons and supported May’s deal. She’d still be in place, under attack, and the tough times would be on the way. But here we are. British history: tragedy, farce, last episode of Blackadder, again and again and…..
As a wise pundit observed:
With the brainwashing of Western Males to aspire to be ‘naffy’ Chefs
and
brainwashing of Western Females to aspire to be ‘naffy’ brain-dead, ‘Kardashians’
BORIS was a ‘shoe-in’
ie a naffy publicity-seeking, self-absorbed, spineless, fossil-fuel vested interests puppet.
The problem was much less Corbyn, than that the parliamentary party was an unmanageable mix of leavers and remainers. Any other leader would have faced the same dilemma. Voting for May’s deal would have created serious fractures within the party. Would it have remained sufficiently intact to be a serious contender at the subsequent election?
Will Johnson’s govt now move sufficiently to the left on social issues that it will retain the support of at least some of the former Labour-supporting constituencies?
Things continue as they have (and not just in England), Johnson won’t need to move to the left to retain some of the recently gained support.
Coincidentally, just before I ventured here, I finished reading an essay (disguised as a review) by David Graeber, titled; ‘Against Economics’.
Graeber uses this book, to do as Graeber does so well i.e. destroy the ‘idea’ that the contemporary political economy is based on anything other than complete bullshit;
“Money and Government: The Past and Future of Economics
by Robert Skidelsky”
Skidelsky goes by another handle, which Graeber clearly revels in – “The Baron of Tilton”, and he has sat in the Lords for the last 3 decades.
The review is at The New York Review of Books, from the Dec 5, 2019 issue.
Have read that David. Skidelsky sounds like he has come to the position that anyone who isn’t an economist must admit to. Graebar is great. I’m just re-reading his “Bullshit jobs”, a book both hilarious and tragic at the same time.
Emperor Economus has no clothes!
Johnson talks bullshit, but to serve his own ends, which are not those of the Conservative Party of the recent past. While Johnson might get away with little more than cosmetic concessions to former Labour voting constituencies, I do not expect that he will take the risk. Labour, in the shape into which history had molded it, is designed to fight battles that are different from the one it now faces, and Johnson will do his darndest to see that the battle continues to be fought on terms that work well for him. In the immediate future, the party will not dare interfere too much with the path that he has laid out.
The UK’s electoral system is looking increasingly like a joke. Barely 66% of registered voters actually participated in the elections, & only 43% of them voted Tory……yet they still get a significant majority in the lower house of parliament. Their “First Past the Post” system is nothing but a very bad joke IMHO, & needs to be abolished, along with mid-week elections & the House of Lords.
I had always thought that Corbyn should have put the Leave / Remain question to an internal binding vote of members of the Labour Party shortly after the national referendum. This would have fostered internal party democracy and given a critical participatory voice to the Party membership, who would have loved such a vote. It would also have bound the Party to a very defensible and reasonable position on Brexit, whether this was Leave or Remain, and Corbyn and the leadership group would have been off the blame hook. Whatever the results, an internal poll would have ended the divisive internal arguments that were so damaging and would have stopped the madness of accepting that the results of the corrupted national referendum formed a unquestionable democratic mandate. In fact, following the rise of Momentum, I can hardly believe that this proposal did not happen.
So much they could have done to fight a pre-Brexit election and they did none of it. At least he didn’t blow up the entire party just before the election like Farage.
The problem still remains that the critical northern voter base was anti-Brexit.
I do find the parallels between Gillard’s undermining by the Ruddites and their press confidantes and Corbyn’s undermining by the Blairites and the British press suggestive. In each case a denial of legitimacy was based on an appeal to a stereotype invented by internal opponents and propagated by the msm: Gillard, despised as The unfaithful wife rather than a politician who gained her position in a process no different from the way many male politicians achieve it and Corbyn, abused as both an anti-Semite and Marxist on amazingly flimsy grounds. It does tell us though that high-flyers in both Labor parties care more for themselves than the people they purport to support, would rather the Tories win than that their man loses, and that the msm is happy to act as their uncritical mouthpiece in return for access.
A curious rewriting of history. Gillard did the same to Rudd, allowing her to become PM mid term, something that used to be unusual. This was only 9 years ago.
There was no undermining of Rudd, by Gillard. The disgruntled Labor members challenged Rudd pretty much immediately, & he was too much of a coward to face an internal leadership ballot. Once removed as PM, he went straight to work undermining Gillard at every turn, from before the 2010 election through to his eventual regaining of the leadership in mid 2013.