Yorkshire Post

Where Labour’s many MPs could become the few

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THERE’S AN unofficial Labour election rallying cry being heard in my corner of Yorkshire that’s a long way removed from the party’s official line of “For the many, not the few”.

It’s “Every man for himself.” And if that sounds rather less high-minded or inclusive than the party line, it’s because of a grim pessimism about what could happen in a swathe of Labour’s heartland Yorkshire seats on June 8.

The thinking in regional Labour circles, according to a senior party figure, goes like this – the election is already lost, so the primary objective is to avoid being wiped out and hang on to as many seats as possible.

And that means candidates conducting campaigns more akin to local than national elections – distancing themselves from a leadership proving a liability on doorsteps and emphasisin­g their own credential­s as constituen­cy champions.

Then, when the Labour infighting and recriminat­ions start after the Conservati­ves sweep to power with a muchincrea­sed majority, the survivors can play their part in rebuilding an electable party out of the wreckage.

It is not an approach that one Yorkshire Labour veteran – a long-standing acquaintan­ce with no time for Jeremy Corbyn or his hard-left cohorts – relishes, but it is pragmatic.

He also finds it depressing. He’s been campaignin­g in elections for his party for more than 30 years, and for the first time in a national poll, he’s not fighting to get a Government elected on a programme he believes in because it would be good for the country, but simply for survival.

“It’s not about winning,” he told me. “It’s about hanging on to as much as we can, so it’s every man for himself.”

He knows that this is not the attitude of a united party ready to govern Britain. It is as much about the future direction of Labour after the election, the struggle between centrist and left-wing ideologies for control.

And if there was little appetite for this election in Yorkshire Labour circles, there is the sense that it will, at least, deliver such a decisive verdict against the leadership’s agenda that a fundamenta­l rethink is inevitable.

The ‘every man for himself ’ approach is borne out by the two leaflets so far from the Labour candidate in my constituen­cy, which are telling in the distance they place between person and party. They are all about his record over many years as a conscienti­ous and hard-working MP tackling local issues.

There is no reference to Mr Corbyn, and the emphasis on what Labour has to offer mainly concerns its achievemen­ts in power between 1997 and 2010, not what it aims for in 2017 and beyond. As a campaignin­g tactic, harking back to the Tony Blair and Gordon Brown years is pretty forlorn. So much has happened since 2010 that the last Labour government starts to feel very distant, and the early, optimistic period after the 1997 landslide like to bat away, especially from those who strongly supported Brexit and see Mr Corbyn as epitomisin­g politician­s who have been too soft on immigratio­n.

And trying to turn doorstep conversati­ons away from national issues onto local concerns risks making candidates look shifty and unwilling to talk about the bigger picture.

But the bigger picture being presented by the London-centric inner circle around Mr Corbyn is only serving to reinforce the notion that keeping it local is a better bet to maintain Labour’s presence in Yorkshire.

Inept performanc­es by the likes of Diane Abbott and John McDonnell, in which spending figures are apparently plucked from the air and fail to stand up to scrutiny, are making selling Labour’s message even harder.

There is little appetite for such prominent Labour figures to come north and campaign, because they would hinder, not help. So it comes down instead to every man – and woman – for themselves, hanging on seat-byseat in an election haunted by the fear that for Labour in Yorkshire, the many could become the few.

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