Power Can't Shape Truth Forever New Labour is Dead
CounterPunch
Awestruck by Margaret Thatcher, Blair and Brown aped her achievements within their own party, squeezing old social-democratic ideas out of themselves, drop by drop. They were all market fundamentalists now. Deregulation and privatisation became a mantra and over the last ten years the social divide in the country between rich and poor increased more than even under Thatcher. Redistribution of wealth was no longer on Labour’s agenda.
As the market suffered a series of shocks---the collapse of a debt-ridden British bank, Northern Rock, led to state intervention in the form of nationalisation. No lessons were learnt. Helping the rich by further tax-cuts, abandoning (under pressure from the Financial Times) plans to tax non-domiciled billionaires symbolised the regime. The neo-liberal model atomised social and political life, weakened democratic accountability and drastically reduced the margins of reformist possibilities within the system. After 9/11 civil liberties were seriously eroded. A fdew weeks ago Brown and his ministers were arguing for increasing the detention of suspects to 42-days without trial. The Conservatives and police chiefs opposed this as draconian.
The British electoral system helped to conceal the relentless ebbing of popular support for the Blairite agenda. No longer. The New Labour Emperor is now revealed without any clothes. Power can shape ‘truth’, but not forever. That is the lesson of the New Labour defeat.
In
The elections for the Mayor of London reflected the national mood. That Livingstone made mistakes is obvious. The biggest error was not in receiving an eccentric Muslim cleric and annjoying the right-wing press, but re-entering the Labour fold. The basis of his popularity had rested on the fact that he was not a confected New Labour politician. The fact that margin of his defeat appears to be less than the national average reflected this fact, but was not enough to save him. The official result has yet to be declared, but New Labour commentators on TV have accepted defeat. He suffered because he was associated with an unpopular New Labour government. Had he remained an independent and lacerated the Blair and Brown regimes, instead of being photographed with them he would have been home and dry.
A city in which 70% of the citizens oppose the British presence in
Tariq Ali’s memoir Streetfighting Years: An Autobiography of the Sixties is published by Verso.






Re: Power Can't Shape Truth Forever New Labour is Dead
By Steve, Jimbob at May 06, 2008 12:45 PM
Aside from rejoining the labour fold, I can inform readers that the reasons that many londoners wanted a change is because people are fed up with Ken Livingstone\'s high handedness, self-righteousness (embodied in many social democratic high modernist ideas) and his uncomfortable friendship with many rich city developers
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Power Can\'t Shape Truth Forever New Labour is Dead
By Andrews, John at May 05, 2008 12:11 PM
Tariq Ali\'s article is correct but, sadly, I do not believe New Labour is Dead, yet. It will blunder along for a few more years, trying to out right wing the Conservative Party.
Blair idolised Thatcher; Brown has had her round to tea. This is sickening to the millions of working people who suffered under Thatcher in the eighties.
On the Sunday after the London Mayoral Election, I was talking to a couple of lads in their early twenties. They had voted Boris Johnston. How could they have done that, I thought to myself? Don\'t they know what the Tories stand for? Tax cuts for the rich; greed; privatisation of everything including the National Health Service; private education; imperialism and militarism. Then I realized - no that\'s what New Labour stands for and it is all these lads have seen for the last ten years. They did not witness the Thatcher Eighties or the Major Disaster that took up most of the Nighties. All they have known is the Labour Government.
I wish I could see the silver lining in the cloud, I can\'t. Things are going to get much worse this side of the pond.
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