The last time that I voted for Labour was in 1997. It was
great to see the Tories routed so thoroughly, although I didn’t expect much
from the new Labour government. Even these low expectations were confounded
though by the timidity of Labour in government.
I think it must have been by about 1998 when the penny
finally dropped for me, that is, Labour weren’t just getting away with as much
as they thought they could get away with. The realisation dawned on me that new
Labour didn’t actually believe in or want to implement anything like
traditional social democrat policies. They believed in the neo-liberal
consensus established by the preceding Thatcher/Major Tory government.
I had always voted Labour, my family did, this is what we
did at elections, without even thinking about it. My dad was a union shop
steward for the engineering union (AUEW as it was then) in the 1960s and 1970s.
He was often on strike or lock out and left politics was constantly discussed
at home.
Come the 2001 general election, I’d had enough of new Labour
and decided to vote for the Socialist Alliance, who had a strong candidate
running in my constituency, Louise Christian, the human rights lawyer. I
reasoned that if enough people voted SA, Labour would take notice and move back
to the left. Louise Christian got about 1100 votes, and the Labour government got even worse.
I did notice that the Green party candidate got twice as
many votes as the SA in my constituency and looked into the Greens policies,
and was pleasantly surprised to find them similar to old Labour ones. At the
time I was beginning to get increasingly concerned by climate change as well,
or global warming as it was known then. I decided to throw my lot in with the
Greens, around my way at least. I didn’t join the Green party at this stage but
resolved to vote for them.
Then the whole Iraq war debacle started which led eventually
to me joining the Greens, but I also made the discovery around this time of ecosocialism after
reading Joel Kovel’s ‘The Enemy of Nature’ subtitled ‘the end of capitalism or
the end of the world?’ I started to work for ecosocialism within the Green
party joining Green Left pretty much immediately it was formed and am here to
this day.
And so to Jeremy Corbyn’s campaign for the Labour leadership
this year. It reminds me a bit of Ed Miliband’s campaign for the Labour
leadership in 2010 although on steroids this time. Against expectations Ed beat
his brother with a pitch that moved Labour to the left, but not as much as
Corbyn is offering this time. People from the Green party flocked to join
Labour thinking it was going back to social democracy, but ultimately what
radicalism there was, was watered down and Labour fought the 2015 general
election on policies that were only a millimetre or so to the left of the
Tories.
I wonder whether Corbyn’s ideas will meet the same fate or
whether he will be deposed entirely before 2020? His platform is actually not
all that left wing despite the hysteria in the media and from the Labour party
establishment. Take a look at the Liberal – SDP
Alliance manifesto for the 1983 general election and you can see what I
mean.
Jeremy Corbyn himself is a decent, principled man and has
been a constant thorn in the side of new Labour over the years. I think the
Green party should be supportive of his attempt to drag Labour to the left and
hopefully he can be persuaded to support introducing a fairer, proportional
voting system, for future elections that should keep the Tories out of power
for good.
But my thinking has moved on from 1983, 2003 even, and I am now firmly an ecosocialist which is a word I have not heard Corbyn mention. The fact is, old Labour pro capitalist style politics is out dated and completely inappropriate for the contemporary problems that the country and indeed the world faces. And yes, the Green party is not ecosocialist either, but it is closer to it than even the best case scenario (which is unlikely) that a Corbyn Labour party will advocate. I'm staying put, for now at least.
Hi, Mike
ReplyDeleteYour readers may find this blog piece interesting: Lobbyist firm connected to Maximus dabbles in Labour Party Deputy Leadership campaign? (Whatever next?)