News that Labour has barred over 3000
new supporters and members from its leadership election process appears to
be highly selective. If you look ‘below the line’ on this Labour List post, you
can read about at least one example of a Corbyn supporter being barred unfairly.
Further examples can be found here
on Politics.co.uk where a Lambeth blogger who has criticised the Lambeth
Labour council has been barred and a piece in The
Independent by a new Green party member (and ex Labour member) who has been
barred with his wife who joined Labour before even the leadership contest
opened. The author Luke Wright admits that his Green party membership is
current, although he is intending to let it lapse, but his wife seems to have
been barred for being guilty by association with him.
The Labour party are putting huge resources into stopping
people vote in the contest who they suspect are planning to vote for the leftish
candidate and sometimes on very flimsy evidence. People can appeal the
decision, but first have to fork out £45 for full Labour membership (on top of
the £3 supporter fee), and of course there is no guarantee that the appeal will
be successful.
Contrast this with the case of Stephen
Tall, a well known Lib Dem activist who was the editor of the Lib Dem Voice website from 2007 to 2015.
He admits in his website post to being an ‘entryist’ and even went onto the BBC
10 o’clock news to flaunt the fact that he has voted for the right wing
Blairite candidate Liz Kendall. Has he been purged? I can’t find any
announcement by Labour to confirm that he has been, so I can only assume that
‘entryist’ voting for Kendall (or Burnham or Cooper) is OK, but anyone who is
even suspected of voting for Corbyn has to be rooted out.
I imagine that this desperate attempt to stop Corbyn winning
is doomed to failure, given the astonishing success of his campaign so far, and
the Burnham
camp have threatened to mount a legal challenge to the result as a back up
option. Cooper
and Kendall meanwhile have refused to serve in a Corbyn cabinet which is
further evidence of a back up plan should Corbyn win, involving sniping from
the back benches as a tactic.
Cooper
has also tried to rubbish Corbyn’s economic policies, despite 41
economists, including a former Bank of England advisor saying they support
them and with the public being unimpressed with Labour’s Tory lite offering
only 3 months ago that Cooper wants to re-heat now. And Corbyn’s ideas on
foreign policy are perhaps even more controversial (anti-Trident, anti-NATO,
pro-Palestinian) to the Labour right than his economic ones, something will
have to give if Corbyn wins.
One thing is for sure, Corbyn will need to mobilise the new
members/supporters against the parliamentary party if he is to enter the 2020
general election still at the helm of the party and still advocating the same
policies.
I think an SDP 1980s style split in Labour is unlikely,
though not impossible. The Labour right has learned from the SDP experience,
which ended with many SDP people coming back to Blair’s new Labour, so they
don’t want to make the same mistake again. They will remain in Labour and wait
for an opportunity to get rid of Corbyn as leader, more than likely well before
the next general election, but possibly afterwards in the event of another
defeat.
All of this is a measure of Labour’s control freakery and
anti-democratic nature and if Corbyn is to survive as leader he will urgently
need to re-democracise the party. The Labour right has lost the argument, and
is increasingly focusing on procedural and negative tactics. Corbyn will know
how powerful the Labour machine is and he needs to re-invent the party from the
bottom up if his revolution is to really achieve radical change.
Good luck to him, I think he will need it.
A facebook post by Arthur Clack says it all.
ReplyDeleteDear Sir,
Liverpool Football Club would like to thank you for registering as a supporter and thank you for your registration fee.
However it has come to our attention that you twice attended an Everton Game in 1998 and 2004 and were highly critical of the defence during a West Brom match in 1997. Furthermore, there is video evidence of you shouting "You useless get" at Tommy Lawrence in 1967 when Bremner scored 3 goals against us.
We are therefore not accepting you as a supporter of the club.
Yours sincerely
A. Swindler
Very droll - ha ha
ReplyDelete