Archive for 2010

The Labour right needs a new leader

18/10/2010, 12:30:37 PM

by Siôn Simon

Many and dreadful have been the proclamations of its end, but New Labour is not dead. Uncut, as much as any, has mourned its passing. But to do so was an emotional spasm. Recollected in tranquility, there is hope beneath the hyperbole.

It is true that “New Labour”, whatever that meant, is no longer a dominant doctrine. It had been the ascendant national ideology since Blair became Labour leader in apposition (sic) to a philosophically bankrupt Conservative government in 1994. And it had been dominant within Labour since before it was invented. When Neil Kinnock became leader, in 1985 he opened a philosophical furrow which all his successors have ploughed since.

One of its currencies was linguistic nuance. And only in that coin can one understand the immense significance of Ed Miliband’s conference speech. According to the fragile, case-sensitive lexicon of New Labour, it was the brutal evisceration of a 25 year project. The keepers of the New Labour flame – those of us who have been fighting the fight since the Kinnock years – were devastated. Far more so than has been widely reported or understood. (more…)

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Conrad Landin blames Labour for the Browne report

18/10/2010, 11:30:20 AM

Reaction to the Browne report on higher education has focused on the broken promises of Liberal Democrats who pledged to vote against rises in tuition fees. For any opposition party, it is easy to fall into the trap of concentrating exclusively on the Lib Dems’ betrayal of their election pledges. Yes, this betrayal is the one, among many, that I still can’t get over – even more than their U-turn on the fundamental issue of the economy immediately after the election.

But the photos of Nick Clegg holding up his card pledging to vote against fee rises speak for themselves. While the media has devoted so much space to the betrayal that the morality of the rise in fees itself is put to one side. Which is exactly what David Cameron wants. (more…)

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The Tories aren’t winners, so don’t let them write our history, says Michael Dugher

18/10/2010, 09:00:45 AM

Nixon once said that the moment the public begin to complain about the message is the moment that some of the public have heard the message. At 1230 on Wednesday, George Osborne will get to his feet at the dispatch box to announce the outcomes of the comprehensive spending review.  Even if the precise measures contained in the review were only finalised late at night over recent days, his script was agreed months ago. With tedious repetition, Osborne will once again blame all of the country’s woes on the size of the deficit. He will say that Labour’s legacy, in terms of the public finances, was the product of reckless irresponsibility, “profligacy” and waste – and that the Tory-Lib Dem government is determined to “clean up the mess” Labour left behind. This, of course, is a complete untruth. But if Labour does not confront this argument, there is a danger that the message will not only be heard, but believed. (more…)

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Monday News Review

18/10/2010, 07:08:06 AM

AJ to “push for growth”

Johnson pushing for growth

Alan Johnson, the new shadow chancellor, has suggested banks should pay an additional £3.5bn a year in taxes on top of the £2.5bn annual bank levy already introduced by the coalition. Mr Johnson will set out his thinking in a speech in the City on Monday, but has made it clear that he wants higher taxes to play a bigger part than public spending cuts in the deficit reduction. The shadow chancellor said the pace and scale of Mr Osborne’s planned £83bn spending cuts were “masochistic”. He argues that deficit reduction should go hand-in-hand with more infrastructure investment. Mr Johnson’s proposal to raid the banks to pay for this investment was questioned by the Tories after he appeared to suggest that a new bank tax would only proceed if there was international agreement. Labour officials later said that Mr Johnson regarded international consensus as desirable – but it was not a precondition. – The FT

Alan Johnson, the shadow Chancellor, has said that banks should take a more prominent share in plugging Britain’s budget deficit, as he attacked the Government for its “perverse” plan to bring public spending under control. Mr Johnson, who admitted he was “mildly surprised” when he was given the job by Ed Miliband, also revealed that Labour would consider increasing capital gains tax to help to avoid the brutal £83bn spending cuts being lined up by the Chancellor, George Osborne. In his first major interview in his new role, Mr Johnson conceded Labour would have to be “more specific” about its economic plans, but promised to set out further details on tax policy during a major speech today. “We think tax, on the banks in particular, should play a bigger role in this,” Mr Johnson told the BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show. – The Independent

Shadow chancellor Alan Johnson is to accuse the Government of taking a “huge gamble with growth and jobs” as he sets out Labour’s alternative to the Treasury’s £83 billion cuts package. In his first major speech in his new role two days ahead of the comprehensive spending review, Mr Johnson is expected to reject Chancellor George Osborne’s argument that Britain’s structural deficit must be eliminated within four years, and insist: “There is another way.” The shadow chancellor is expected to unveil plans to make the banks contribute towards investment in infrastructure as part of a £7 billion “push for growth”. On Sunday Mr Johnson accused the coalition Government of “economic masochism”, warning that by cutting “too deeply and too quickly” it risks pushing Britain into an L-shaped recession in which the economy fails to recover momentum and “bumps along the bottom” for a period of years. Unless growth is supported, Britain could repeat Japan’s “lost decade” of economic stagnation, he suggested. – The Press Association

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The week Uncut

17/10/2010, 04:04:00 PM

George and Liam have been fighting again. And it looks like the defence secretary is claiming victory on this one. Other departments are likely to be less lucky as the Chancellor sharpens his knife ready for the spending review on Wednesday.

But this week was all about Ed. He entered the chamber as the young pretender. The media waited for the slick PR machine that is the PM to swat him aside. Ed stood up, a little shaky at first, and then, very slowly but surely he started hitting him. And he didn’t stop.

Yes it was only his first PMQs, and there are plenty of rounds to go, but he did something very important. He gave the Labour benches something to really cheer – for the first time in a long time.  Cameron now knows what he is going to face week in week out. The game has changed – the new boy knows the rules, and can play rough too.

In case you missed them, here are Uncut’s best read pieces of the last seven days:

Dan Hodges interviews Ed Miliband’s consigliere, Peter Hain

Tom Watson promises the new boss that he’ll stop behaving like a child

Siôn Simon gives his verdict on Ed’s first PMQs

Jessica Asato makes the case for the Oxbridge wonks

Pat McFadden offers a sensible review of the Browne report

Anthony Painter kicks off a debate on the role of the state

James Watkins says Labour mustn’t leave the countryside to the Tories

Uncut looks at the new generation front bench

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The Tory Lib Dem Government mustn’t be allowed to break their green promises, says Richard Costello

17/10/2010, 11:30:36 AM

He sounded green. He seemed concerned.  He even made a pilgrimage to the North Pole.  So there is no way we should allow Cameron to get away with dropping sustainability pledges next week.  The new shadow BIS team should move quickly to slam the Tory Lib Dem Government’s sham green credentials and prove that Labour is more serious about sustainability than Cameron has ever been.

Industry, NGOs and trade unions are all concerned that the comprehensive spending review will include cuts to feed-in tariffs, a move that could scare off investors from UK renewable energy initiatives including solar power.  Green investment, green business and green jobs, which the UK desperately needs, could all move overseas.

Feed–in tariffs guarantee small scale producers of renewable and low carbon electricity a long term and fixed price for their energy that is above market levels. The introduction of feed-in tariffs back in April led to a significant increase in the installation of solar panels and other domestic renewables.  Under the original plans, feed-in tariffs were to be set firm for a few years before being reviewed.  This timescale was set out to ensure companies and home owners had a clear incentive to invest in solar panels and other renewable energy kit.

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Sunday News Review

17/10/2010, 08:31:32 AM

What’s the alternative?

Radical plans to make banks pay the lion’s share towards a £7bn “push for growth”, to be unveiled by Labour on Monday, will be at the heart of Ed Miliband‘s alternative to £83bn of proposed government cuts. In his first major speech as shadow chancellor, ahead of Wednesday’s spending review, Alan Johnson will accuse the government of taking a “huge gamble with growth and jobs” by concentrating solely on deficit reduction. Johnson, who has been working closely with the new Labour leader to define a clear alternative, will say it is fundamentally unfair that cuts to child benefit should play a bigger role in reducing the deficit than the banks that did much to cause the economic crisis. In a departure from Labour’s policy at the general election, Johnson will call for a big increase in capital spending on road building and construction – probably funded by a far higher levy on banks and action against bankers’ bonuses – to boost economic activity and create jobs. – The Observer

Peter Hain is wizened counsellor to young king Ed, or gives that impression at least. The two are close, which makes Hain’s recent comments on tax noteworthy. Hain describes universal benefit as ‘non-negotiable’, adding: “If you start driving a coach and horses through universality you’re effectively saying to middle Britain, ‘you’ve got no stake in the welfare state.’ I think the Tories and Liberals are making a very big mistake on child benefit. There’s an answer to people on higher incomes and that’s they pay higher taxes. And that is the answer to squaring that circle.” Miliband is determined to defend universal benefit regardless of cost and he also favours a 50:50 split between tax hikes and spending cuts to reduce the deficit – a policy that would require £61bn to be raised in tax. Miliband and Alan Johnson will reveal Labour’s economic policy on Monday; expect it contain a fetid dram of Old Labour. – The Spectator

Osborne sharpens the knife

Even before Chancellor George Osborne makes his announcement, we know it is going to be terrible. What we aren’t yet sure of is the scale of the harshest blows. What has become clear is that the most vulnerable will suffer the most. In particular, the elderly and those in poverty are going to be hit hardest. Yes, the middle classes will be affected but those who can least afford to lose anything will be crippled. Although the Government was panicked by last week’s Sunday Mirror revelation about pensioners’ allowances being slashed and swiftly backed off, older people will still be targeted. – The Mirror

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Labour mustn’t leave the countryside to the Tories, says James Watkins

16/10/2010, 03:30:38 PM

If the economic downturn has told us anything, it is that our economy is unbalanced and at risk. When the City of London  – which pays 11% of all UK tax – takes a dive, then so do the rest of us.

Some Labour MPs say the economy must be strengthened by a shift to manufacturing. But the rural economy can also bring jobs and prosperity to working people.

The rolling countryside may not seem a hotbed of economic activity. But, according to the government’s outgoing “rural advocate”, the English rural economy has the potential to create £236 billion and £347 billion per annum. And while some peoples’ ideas of the countryside may be all about cows, pigs and sheep, the truth is very different.

Newcastle University’s centre for rural economy has found that farming takes up just 2.6% of rural employment. 80% of rural employment is in distribution and retailing, business and financial services, public administration, education, training and health and – finally – manufacturing. (more…)

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Where have all the Scots gone, and are they coming back, asks Kevin Meagher?

16/10/2010, 10:00:00 AM

Will a Scot ever lead Labour again? You might think that’s a strange question. Of the 17 men elected as Labour leader since 1906, eight have been Caledonians. This includes Labour’s first five leaders and its last three: Smith Blair and Brown.

But the party is becoming less Scottish. This is an imprecise science; but just think back to Tony Blair’s first cabinet in 1997. Gordon Brown, Robin Cook, Donald Dewar, Gavin Strang, George Robertson, Alistair Darling and Derry Irvine. Scots abounded.

Yet the new shadow cabinet contains just three Scots: Jim Murphy at defence, Douglas Alexander at transport and Ann McKechin at the Scottish office. Meanwhile, the biggest casualty of the shadow cabinet elections was Pat McFadden, although he is an anomaly: a Scot representing an English seat. (more…)

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Saturday News Review

16/10/2010, 08:13:01 AM

Hain on tax

One of Ed Miliband’s closest allies has backed a tax increase for higher earners as Labour prepares to reveal new details about his plan to deal with Britain’s budget deficit. Peter Hain, who was part of Mr Miliband’s leadership campaign team, said an increase in tax on the wealthy would “square the circle”, allowing Labour to avoid the Coalition Government’s controversial cut to child benefit. His intervention comes as the new shadow Chancellor, Alan Johnson, prepares to make his first major speech in the role on Monday. Mr Johnson has also agreed to television interviews over the weekend. – The Independent

Mr Hain told website Labour Uncut: “I think the Tories and Liberals are making a very big mistake on child benefit. “There’s an answer to people on higher incomes – they pay higher taxes. And that is the answer to squaring that circle.” Former Welsh Secretary Mr Hain is party leader Red Ed’s new policy chief. He also hinted that new Shadow Chancellor Alan Johnson may be overruled by Mr Miliband to set the party’s economic policy. It could mean paying back the deficit more slowly than Mr Johnson would like. Mr Hain said: “People forget Ed is an economist. He’s got a very clear idea of where he wants to go on the economy and the deficit and we’ll set that out. We’ll both be offering a serious alternative.” – The Sun

Ed’s week

Reflecting on his performance in the Commons, Mr Miliband is pleased. He wants to set a new tone, although he stops short of falling into the same trap as the Prime Minister who pledged to end “Punch and Judy” politics when he became Leader of the Opposition, only to fail miserably. “I want to use PMQs to ask serious questions the country wants to know the answer to, because I don’t think people particularly want a lot of political point scoring,” he says. “I think it’s unrealistic to say you’re never going to have that – and I didn’t say that – but I think you need it to be a place where serious issues get debated. It went well this week, it’s a long game and we’ll see what happens in future weeks.” In preparation for the big event, Mr Miliband’s team considered the topics they could raise and plumped for child benefit, a raid on the incomes of higher-rate taxpayers in middle England – voters whose support he will need to win power. – The Yorkshire Post

The press’ attention was temporarily distracted on Wednesday, when Ed Miliband entered the Commons for his first PMQs as opposition leader. The press gallery was stunned to find the man they had patronised for two weeks easily beat David Cameron in a confident and businesslike manner. – Politics.co.uk

No one would begrudge Ed Miliband the plaudits for his fine first performance at PMQs. He has made a good start and seemed to take David Cameron by surprise. The Labour leader has a small, under-resourced team, which has been devoted much of the last week to preparing him for the task of his first confrontation with the Prime MInister. This is simply not sustainable. The weekly duel, terrifying though it may be, cannot come to dominate his thinking – however good he comes to be at it. – The Spectator

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