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Labour must die

Andy Pearmain

Andy Pearmain argues that it is time to face the fact that the Labour Party is in its death throes, and that euthanasia is now called for.

© Soundings 2006

'I simply don't think that the current Labour leadership understands that its political fate depends on whether or not it can construct a politics, in the next 20 years, which is able to address itself, not to one, but to a diversity of different points of antagonism in society; unifying them, in their differences, within a common project. I don't think they have grasped that Labour's capacity to grow as a political force depends absolutely on its capacity to draw from the popular energies of very different movements; movements outside the party which it did not - could not - set in play, and which it cannot therefore 'administer'.

It retains an entirely bureaucratic conception of politics. If the word doesn't proceed out of the mouths of the Labour leadership, there must be something subversive about it. If politics energises people to develop new demands, that is a sure sign that the natives are getting restless. You must expel or depose a few. You must get back to that fiction, the 'traditional Labour voter': to that pacified, Fabian notion of politics, where the masses hijack the experts into power, and then the experts do something for the masses: later … much later. The hydraulic conception of politics.'

So said Stuart Hall, in 'Gramsci and Us' (see The Hard Road to Renewal, Verso 1988, p171), nearly twenty years ago now. New Labour was a response of sorts to that critique, and drew heavily on the late 1980s 'New Times'/Marxism Today analyses with which Stuart Hall was himself associated. They did make an attempt at a kind of virtual, heavily mediated connection with some of those emerging social 'movements outside the party'. But many of us now feel that it was a peculiarly selective and distorted response. The de-classed 'identity politics' we contributed to the New Labour project, with its worthy emphasis on race and gender and sexuality and sometimes giddy consumerism, came out the other end as Philip Gould's 'suburban populism' (Gould's 1998 The Unfinished Revolution 1998 is the urtext of New Labour, a work of shallow genius, laying bare quite unintentionally the project's emotional impulses and social bases). Our disintegrating industrial proletariat was reconstituted as their Home Counties petty bourgeoisie.

It may seem now that 'New Labour is unravelling', but with the prospect of Brownite renewal offering a variant strain, we should remind ourselves that it's still there and in government. Gould and others are insisting that the project's achievements are deep and permanent, in changing the terrain on which their New Tory opponents have to operate and in 'transforming' the Labour Party (albeit effectively out of existence). Whatever, New Labour needs to be historically accounted for, even if it's only so we don't fall for something like it again. It's time to ask - what was New Labour all about? Beneath the bossy spin and the rising, scummy tide of sleaze, what has happened in the fifteen-odd years since New Times?

If we look beyond the glossy rhetoric of ministers and advisers, and the Blair/Brown Punch and Judy show, two particular components of New Labour seem to have come to the fore, squeezing out the far richer mix which the best of late-period Marxism Today represented:

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