Cape Times

UK Labour Party lurches to left

- Tom Quinn

The new leader of Britain’s opposition Labour Party named an ally whose declared aim is the overthrow of capitalism as finance spokesman yesterday, pushing hard-left policies that opponents, even supporters, say will make the party “unelectabl­e”.

After winning Labour’s top job by a landslide on Saturday, Jeremy Corbyn named John McDonnell – a former trade unionist who backs renational­ising banks and imposing wealth taxes – as his finance minister-in-waiting.

WHAT began as something beyond the realms of possibilit­y ended as an inevitabil­ity. Jeremy Corbyn’s victory in the Labour leadership election represents – depending on one’s perspectiv­e – either the rebirth of the party and the final demise of the careerists who led it astray, or, the deepest crisis in its 115-year history.

Corbyn secured 59.5 percent in the first round of voting, beating the other candidates by a significan­t margin. Andy Burnham took 19 percent, Yvette Cooper 17 percent and Liz Kendall 4.5 percent.

Importantl­y, Corbyn won across all categories of eligible voters, giving him what the BBC referred to as a “rock-solid mandate”.

Leadership elections can normally be explained in terms of unity, electabili­ty and competence, with the winning candidate being the one best able to unite a divided party and/or offer the best chance of electoral victory, while looking like a credible prime-ministerin-waiting.

But this Labour leadership contest was not normal. It was decided on an altogether different basis. The combinatio­n of an uninspirin­g line-up of candidates, new selection rules and the shock of the 2015 general election defeat left Labour open to a left-wing insurgency. It appeared to come out of nowhere but was actually five years in the making, with Corbyn its unsuspecti­ng beneficiar­y. How he did it Ed Miliband’s victory in the 2010 Labour leadership contest, delivered by union votes, marked the start of a new assertiven­ess in internal Labour affairs by the party’s affiliated trade unions.

Since then Unite, under Len McCluskey, has been forthright in demanding a strong Labour platform against austerity. Along with other unions and ginger groups such as the People’s Assembly Against Austerity, Unite has helped create a left-wing narrative against cuts that has taken root within the wider Labour Party.

The new selection rules opened the door to this left-wing revolt – though not before moderate Labour MPs, seeking to “widen the debate” in the leadership contest, helped Corbyn pass the nomination threshold of 15 percent of Labour MPs. Under the new onemember-one-vote rules, individual­s could sign up as full members, as affiliated supporters for free via their unions or as registered supporters for just £3 (R62.5). The contest was dogged by controvers­y, with accusation­s of left-wing entryism as well as Tory troublemak­ers applying to vote, then claims of a purge of Corbynites.

Once Corbyn was on the ballot, his allies mobilised. The potential electorate increased from under 200 000 in May to 550 000 in September. A coalition of idealistic youngsters, anti-austerity union activists and grizzled left-wingers returning to the party they quit in disgust under Blair has proved to be a large part of that dramatic increase. They delivered victory to Corbyn against the odds.

Much of this victory was achieved online, with Corbyn’s cyber-left supporters spreading his message, denouncing his opponents and encouragin­g others to sign up to vote. This contest has been Britain’s first social media leadership election – though in the eyes of Labour moderates it became a flash-mob democracy. Holding on to power During the contest, Corbyn regularly called on registered and affiliated supporters to become full party members – not least because he hopes they will provide a firm base of support now that he is leader. Only as full members will they be able to participat­e in Labour policy-making and in the selection of parliament­ary candidates. That is vital because Corbyn enjoys very little support among Labour MPs. Several big-hitters, including leadership hopefuls Cooper and Kendall, have already ruled out serving in his shadow cabinet. Within minutes of Corbyn’s victory, Jamie Reed, the shadow health minister, had resigned.

Many others are biding their time and waiting for him to fail.

Certainly, Corbyn’s authority would be undermined if, say, he voted against future UK military action in Syria but a majority of his MPs backed it. The EU referendum could have a similar effect. Hence, Corbyn will need to show that he enjoys a wider mandate within the party, perhaps holding conference votes or even membership plebiscite­s to demonstrat­e that the grassroots are with him.

In the longer term, he will need to deal with potential threats from Labour MPs. To this end, some have raised the prospect of reintroduc­ing mandatory re-selection for MPs, harking back to a Benniteins­pired rule from the 1980s that helped left-wing constituen­cy activists to keep moderate MPs in line. Such a move would require a change to Labour’s constituti­on to be passed by the party conference, but given that the unions – most of which back Corbyn – hold 50 percent of the votes, it would be possible. How long has he got? For Labour MPs opposed to Corbyn, the immediate future looks bleak. There’s no formal mechanism to hold a confidence vote in the leader, though an unofficial vote could be held. They would have to wait a year to challenge Corbyn for the leadership, which would require a candidate to be nominated by 20 percent of Labour MPs. That could be feasible but under the current selection rules there is no guarantee that the result of the voting among party members would be any different. Moreover, there is no certainty that Corbyn will simply fail and lose support quickly.

He will have powerful backers from the unions and among the new members, as well as strategic and managerial input from a committed backroom team. Moderates will hope that the newly elected deputy leader, Tom Watson, will prove a restrainin­g influence. Panic on the right The Labour right finds itself in the worst situation it has been in during the party’s history. It is much worse than the 1980s when Michael Foot was leader. Foot was chosen by the MPs themselves and had served in the Callaghan government. Corbyn is an outsider, an inveterate rebel and a standardbe­arer of the far-left.

In the 1980s, a section of the Labour right split away to form the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and the fate of that party is a cautionary tale for today’s moderates about the potential consequenc­es of a split. But if the left remains in control, Labour’s polling plummets and the moderates find themselves in the cross-hairs of local Corbynista­s looking to remove them, some may decide that an SDP- Mark II is the least-worst option.

In the meantime, Corbyn will need to argue his case to voters for left-wing policies that they have hitherto shunned. The government will politicise issues on which Corbyn is on the wrong side of public opinion. Corbyn supports unilateral nuclear disbarment – voters do not. The government wants to find £12 billion in welfare cuts, including reducing the benefit cap. Voters support welfare reform, but Corbyn strongly opposes it.

Voters accept the necessity for cuts to reduce the budget deficit, but Corbyn and his union backers made opposition to austerity a central plank of their campaign. Corbyn favours immigratio­n and a generous approach to refugees, but voters, despite recent events, prefer a more restrictiv­e policy. And while a majority supports re-nationalis­ing the railways, the issue isn’t deciding many votes. If nothing else, the next few years will test to destructio­n the theory that it’s possible to win an election from the left.

The Conservati­ves will believe that with Corbyn’s victory, all their Christmase­s have come at once. David Cameron has already staked a claim to the centre-ground that Labour looks to be vacating.

The Tories will present themselves as the only party that can be trusted to defend the country and manage the economy.

They will paint Labour as extreme and unfit to govern, and will be enthusiast­ically assisted by the Conservati­ve-supporting press.

Labour is entering uncharted waters. Whatever the future holds – a left-right civil war, defections and splits, attempted coups, a return to left-wing street politics of marches and demos – one thing is certain: British politics is changing in a dramatic way.

Quinn is a Senior Lecturer, Department of Government at University of Essex. This piece first appeared in The Conversati­on, theconvers­ation.com/ africa

 ?? Picture: THE CONVERSATI­ON ?? ‘ROCK-SOLID MANDATE’: Jeremy Corbyn secured 59.5 percent in the first round of voting, beating the other candidates by a significan­t margin and winning across all categories of eligible voters.
Picture: THE CONVERSATI­ON ‘ROCK-SOLID MANDATE’: Jeremy Corbyn secured 59.5 percent in the first round of voting, beating the other candidates by a significan­t margin and winning across all categories of eligible voters.
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