*******
Ramsay
McDonald: 1922-1931
McDonald, in the eyes of many Labour supporters, is Judas incarnate.
In the midst of economic turmoil, he left the Labour Party to form a
National Government. He did this largely with Conversative MPs,
winning a total of 470 seats. The Labour Party became a depleted
force and it was left on the brink of extinction. The National
Government was a notoriously ineffective entity – it presided over
mass unemployment and a depressed economy – and McDonald lashed out
at the Labour Party during this period.
McDonald was crucial in helping the Labour transition from a protest
movement to a party of government. McDonald’s politics were a
synthesis of liberalism and socialism. He transcended class divisions
and he helped the Labour Party reach a broader electorate.
Unemployment, inequality and poverty were reaching boiling point in
the 1920s. Nothing was being done on issues like housing and health
care. The Liberal party weren’t going the full hog – they
introduced limited means-tested benefits in the 1910s. Several
parties surfaced at this period and the Labour Party emerged
triumphant. Helped by the universal vote, they sneaked in as the
second largest party. The Labour Party emerged as a minority
government in 1924 – despite amassing a smaller share of MPs –
but this fell apart in a matter of months.
Subsequently, Winston Churchill was a dreadful chancellor under Stanley Baldwin. He decided to return to the gold standard and lowered interest rates. This artificially overvalued the pound, the cost of production fell and investment stalled. Unemployment and poverty soared.
McDonald and the Labour Party sneaked in as a minority government again in 1929. Unlike the Conservatives, who were protectionist and nationalist, McDonald advocated free trade and low tariffs, as they kept prices low for workers.
However, the Great Depression struck in the United States and made its way to Europe. This threw a spanner in the works for the minority Labour Government. McDonald and his chancellor Philip Snowden turned to advice to the City of London and ignored the radical ideas of John Maynard Keynes. They devalued the pound in 1930. MacDonald and Snoweden were forced to make drastic cuts, which their socialist MPs were vehemently against. The King George V – in quite like the last royal intervention in British politics – urged him to form a National Government. As the crisis reached breaking point, McDonald threw the towel in, deserted the Labour Party, formed the National Government and called a general election in 1931. The ailing Labour Party were wiped out and were left with a meagre 52 MPs.
Subsequently, Winston Churchill was a dreadful chancellor under Stanley Baldwin. He decided to return to the gold standard and lowered interest rates. This artificially overvalued the pound, the cost of production fell and investment stalled. Unemployment and poverty soared.
McDonald and the Labour Party sneaked in as a minority government again in 1929. Unlike the Conservatives, who were protectionist and nationalist, McDonald advocated free trade and low tariffs, as they kept prices low for workers.
However, the Great Depression struck in the United States and made its way to Europe. This threw a spanner in the works for the minority Labour Government. McDonald and his chancellor Philip Snowden turned to advice to the City of London and ignored the radical ideas of John Maynard Keynes. They devalued the pound in 1930. MacDonald and Snoweden were forced to make drastic cuts, which their socialist MPs were vehemently against. The King George V – in quite like the last royal intervention in British politics – urged him to form a National Government. As the crisis reached breaking point, McDonald threw the towel in, deserted the Labour Party, formed the National Government and called a general election in 1931. The ailing Labour Party were wiped out and were left with a meagre 52 MPs.
George
Lansbury: 1931-1935
Labour were all but wiped out after the 1931 general election.
Several heavyweights such as Herbert Morrison had lost their seats
whilst others like Snowden joined the National Government and Oswald
Mosley became a fervent fascist.
George Lansbury, a firebrand leftist, was selected as their leader.
Labour MPs like Clement Attlee and Stafford Cripps entered their most
left-wing period during this phase. Attlee – to his later
embarrassment – envisioned the idea of commissars commanding local
councils. Stafford Cripps during this period was maturing from
communism, but he still wanted all left-wing groups from all over
Europe – socialists, labourites and communists – to form an
alliance. He also wanted Britain to appease the USSR.
The small group of MPs were a very organised unit. Lansbury had a
lot of energy, toured the entire country and gave speeches
endlessly. However, he was prone to emotional and platitudinous
rhetoric which embarrassed most of his MPs. He was prone to making
overblown speeches that were very light on detail and policy.
Most worryingly, Lansbury was a staunch pacifist. He met up with
Hitler and Mussolini and wanted to secure peace across Europe. This
was a disturbing position to adopt with European and British values
jeopardised by the rising tide of fascism. Lansbury fell ill in late
1934 and Clement Attlee filled in as temporary leader. Lansbury was
dropped before the 1935 general election.
He died in 1937. In an ironic postscript, his house was bombed to smithereens during the war.
He died in 1937. In an ironic postscript, his house was bombed to smithereens during the war.
Clement Attlee:
1935-1955
The appointment of Attlee was only meant to be temporary, a stop-gap
measure before someone abler came along. He stayed on as Labour
leader for twenty years. There is no doubt for many people that he is
the best leader that Labour ever had and some argue that he is
Britain’s greatest peace-time prime minister. Selfless, modest,
curt and somewhat taciturn, Churchill claimed that ‘he is a modest
man with much to be modest about.’
Labour recovered well in the 1935 election, gaining 154 seats.
Attlee provided stern opposition to Stanley Baldwin and later to
Neville Chamberlain. He denounced and opposed Chamberlain’s policy
of appeasement.
Once Britain went to war, Labour formed part of a coalition government and Attlee became deputy prime minister. He was fiercely loyal to Winston Churchill and always trusted his judgement.
The consensus was changing during the war. The state played a much greater role in controlling the economy. The Beveridge Report sold 600,000 copies during this period. Beveridge called for a universal welfare state, full employment and the elimination of poverty.
Hitler, of course, was defeated and Churchill was a hero. In quite largely the biggest electoral upset in British history – and the biggest swing – Labour won a landslide with a majority of 156 MPs.
Labour’s manifesto was ambitious, promising nationalisation of key industries and a universal welfare state. Britian had been left bankrupt by the war and everyone urged Attlee to make cuts, but Attlee stuck to his guns.
Britain were no doubt boosted by the Marshall Plan as well as a large loan. There were many grumbles in Washington about the idea of funding socialism in Britain.
Attlee introduced national insurance and a whole spate of generous welfare benefits. These were designed to ‘take the shame out of need.’ There was a concerted effort not to return to the depression and the rampant unemployment of the 1920s and 30s.
Labour built thousands of council houses during this period, ensuring that the post-war generation had somewhere to live.
Once Britain went to war, Labour formed part of a coalition government and Attlee became deputy prime minister. He was fiercely loyal to Winston Churchill and always trusted his judgement.
The consensus was changing during the war. The state played a much greater role in controlling the economy. The Beveridge Report sold 600,000 copies during this period. Beveridge called for a universal welfare state, full employment and the elimination of poverty.
Hitler, of course, was defeated and Churchill was a hero. In quite largely the biggest electoral upset in British history – and the biggest swing – Labour won a landslide with a majority of 156 MPs.
Labour’s manifesto was ambitious, promising nationalisation of key industries and a universal welfare state. Britian had been left bankrupt by the war and everyone urged Attlee to make cuts, but Attlee stuck to his guns.
Britain were no doubt boosted by the Marshall Plan as well as a large loan. There were many grumbles in Washington about the idea of funding socialism in Britain.
Attlee introduced national insurance and a whole spate of generous welfare benefits. These were designed to ‘take the shame out of need.’ There was a concerted effort not to return to the depression and the rampant unemployment of the 1920s and 30s.
Labour built thousands of council houses during this period, ensuring that the post-war generation had somewhere to live.
Labour delivered on their promise of full employment and production
increased. Britain decided to increase exports and limit imports. The
latter was done so that they could afford to enact their ambitious
spending aims. All goods were rationed for a long time and post-war
austerity lasted longer than other countries in Europe.
Labour initially aimed to create a ‘planned economy,’ which was really a reaction against the economic ruin bequeathed by the previous laissez-faire system. They initially aimed to plan all aspects of the economy, but they found it inordinately difficult to compromise this with democratic principles. This idea was largely shelved after 1947, though some planning was introduced.
Labour initially aimed to create a ‘planned economy,’ which was really a reaction against the economic ruin bequeathed by the previous laissez-faire system. They initially aimed to plan all aspects of the economy, but they found it inordinately difficult to compromise this with democratic principles. This idea was largely shelved after 1947, though some planning was introduced.
Quite possibly the most lasting legacy of this government was the
NHS. Hospitals were nationalised and all health care was made free at
the point of use. This was delegated to the left-wing firebrand
Anuerin Bevan, who was unenviably also tasked with the ministry of
housing. ‘No society can
legitimately call itself civilised if a sick person is denied medical
aid because of lack of means,’ he
claimed. Britain’s health care quickly became the envy of the
world.
The Attlee administration also
nationalised all utilities – electricity, gas, water,
telephones, buses, trains – as well as the coal and steel
industries and the bank
of England. 20% of the
economy was nationalised. Indeed, part of the ‘post-war consensus’
that emerged accepted a generous welfare state and a ‘mixed
economy’ as part of a new social contract. Although the NHS was
created in an imaginative way, the new nationalised industries were
anything but. They were ran in the same way and the previous owners
formed part of boards. Nationalisation
was not the panacea that many people in the Labour Party were hoping
it to be.
The Attlee government also gave
workers’ unheralded rights. A spate of regulations were
introduced and trade unions were given the right to strike whenever
they wanted to, which created problems by
the 1970s. ‘Collective bargaining’ was introduced and trade
unions enjoyed greater power than before. Government, unions and
business merged to form a large single entity. This has been called
‘corporatism.’
With Ervin Bevin as foreign
secretary, Labour adopted a staunchly anti-communist position. They
formed part of NATO and created a nuclear deterrent. They sided with
the United States in the cold war against the Soviet Union.
Attlee also effectively ended the empire by granting independence to India and all other the other colonies. A ‘commonwealth’ was created and all the former colonies kept close ties with the United Kingdom. Although as a youth Attlee was a Conservative who was proud of empire, he came to see poverty as an aberration and he also regretted the way in which Britain had imposed its will on so much of the third world. India became a major preoccupation and he regarded independence as paramount.
Attlee also effectively ended the empire by granting independence to India and all other the other colonies. A ‘commonwealth’ was created and all the former colonies kept close ties with the United Kingdom. Although as a youth Attlee was a Conservative who was proud of empire, he came to see poverty as an aberration and he also regretted the way in which Britain had imposed its will on so much of the third world. India became a major preoccupation and he regarded independence as paramount.
The
government redistributed wealth, but there were grumbles that they
were not creating wealth, that there was not enough competition and
that there too many monopolies in several industries. The middle and
upper classes were heavily taxed and they were alienating several
people who voted for them in the 1945 election. The notoriously
austere chancellor Stafford Cripps was forced to devalue the pound
after the dollar fell in
value, which the British economy relied on.
Attlee called on the country to keep making ‘sacrifices’ and the public kept being told that they would have to wait for rations to be lifted. After going through the second world war, such rhetoric grated a bit.
Attlee called on the country to keep making ‘sacrifices’ and the public kept being told that they would have to wait for rations to be lifted. After going through the second world war, such rhetoric grated a bit.
Labour increased their share of
the vote to a historic thirteen million votes in
1950, but they were only
returned with a majority of five MPs. Most
of the Labour Party grandees were exhausted after fighting
in a world war and delivering
on the promises of an ambitious manifesto. Cripps resigned in ill
health and died in 1952, Enrnest Bevin died in 1951, Morrison died in
the late 50s and
Hugh Dalton died in the
early 60s.
The UK joined the Korean war in
1950. Chancellor Hugh Gaitskell made cuts to the NHS to fund
armament, which infuriated Bevan. Gaitskell made cuts to dental care,
drug prescriptions
and glasses, which had
all been free. This
infuriated Bevan, since the principle of the NHS was that all its
services should be free at the point of use. Bevan resigned and this
created a split between the leftist Bevanites and the right-wing
Gaitskellites.
The
Conservatives had opposed all of Labour’s reforms to begin with,
however they accepted they
post-war consensus in a document called ‘One Nation’ in
1950. They were now
rejuvenated and Churchill
was once more full of energy.
Attlee lost patience with his
slim majority and called another election in 1951 to increase it.
Labour amassed nearly fourteen million votes, which until
1992 was the most votes
ever obtained by a political party and to this day remains the
largest share of the popular vote ever achieved by Labour. They still
won the popular vote, but due to the idiosyncrasies of the
first-past-the-post system the Conservatives were returned to power
with a majority of 17
MPs.
Most people assumed that the new Churchill administration would only be temporary. Few people suspected that Labour would be out of power for thirteen years. The Conservatives told voters that they would benefit from the Attlee settlement, but that they would also enjoy more freedoms. They lifted price controls, increased imports and most rations were lifted by 1953.
Most people assumed that the new Churchill administration would only be temporary. Few people suspected that Labour would be out of power for thirteen years. The Conservatives told voters that they would benefit from the Attlee settlement, but that they would also enjoy more freedoms. They lifted price controls, increased imports and most rations were lifted by 1953.
Attlee stayed on after 1951,
partly because he didn’t want Herbert Morrison to take over. The
Conservatives increased their majority in 1955 and he resigned.
Hugh
Gaitskell: 1955-1963
A centrist and scold
of the party’s left, Gaitskell was a fiery and confrontational
figure. The term ‘Butskellism’ was coined during this period,
which amalgamated the name of Butler, the conservative chancellor
with the then shadow chancellor Gaitskell. At a time of ‘consensus
politics,’ people found very little difference between the politics
of either figures.
Gaitskell
constantly ran into
confrontations with the Bevanites. Although Bevan was pro-defence,
his acolytes advocated
unilateral disarmament. In a notable conference, Gaitskell confronted
them and averred that he would ‘fight and fight and fight to save
the party we love.’
Gaitskell was also a statist nationalist. When the Conservative government attempted to join the European Economic Community, otherwise known as the Common Market, he opposed it. He claimed ‘that it is the end of the nation state – the end of a thousand years of history.’ Indeed, this was an argument that did chime with the Labour left, who did not want to pool sovereignty to a group of bureaucrats in Brussels.
Gaitskell was also a statist nationalist. When the Conservative government attempted to join the European Economic Community, otherwise known as the Common Market, he opposed it. He claimed ‘that it is the end of the nation state – the end of a thousand years of history.’ Indeed, this was an argument that did chime with the Labour left, who did not want to pool sovereignty to a group of bureaucrats in Brussels.
The Conservatives were
devastated by the
invasion of
Suez, when Britain invaded Egypt after they nationalised the Suez
canal. Britain’s international reputation dipped and the disgraced
Antony Eden was replaced by Harold Macmillan.
This was, really, the high
point of consensus. The model left by Stafford Cripps slotted into
place and British industry boomed. The welfare state had mollified
poverty. Macmillan continued a policy of full employment, building
several factories in poor towns. The government was spending more
than the level of production, which angered people like Enoch Powell
and these
policies caused mild inflation by
creating higher levels of supply.
British people also became consumers, which angered leftists like
Bevan. Macmillan claimed that ‘you have never had it so good.’
This was the context of the
general election in 1959. Labour
were enjoying leads in the polls. However, Gaitskell was pressed as
to whether he would raise taxes, which he denied, and this
sat uncomfortably with Labour’s ambitious spending plans. A heat
wave led to high consumption and the Conservatives exploited this in
their propaganda. As such, the Conservatives increased their majority
to 101 seats.
However, the Conservatives were
beset by a series of scandals in the early 1960s. The ‘Profumo
Scandal’ tarnished their lofty
reputation for moral
puritanism. Macmillan
sacked most of his cabinet ministers in what was called ‘the night
of the long knives,’ which
only created a
sense of party
disunity. Economic
problems had started to increase. What was called ‘stagflation’ -
stagnation and
inflation – started during this period. Finally, Harold Macmillan’s
attempt to join Europe had been vetoed by Charles DeGaulle.
It seemed more and more likely
that Gaitskell would become prime minister. However, he suffered a
stroke and died in January 1963.
Harold
Wilson: 1963-1976
Wilson
had only earned a reputation for duplicity by
1955. He had joined Bevan by resigning from Attlee’s cabinet during
the Korean war, however he chose to join Gaitskell’s shadow cabinet
in 1955. Although ostensibly a member of the party’s left, he
earned a reputation for being unprincipled during his period as prime
minister.
Wilson
certainly proved to be a formidable parliamentary performer. In 1963,
he promised to deliver a ‘technological revolution’. He
claimed: ‘In
all our plans for the future, we are re-defining and we are
re-stating our Socialism in terms of the scientific revolution. But
that revolution cannot become a reality unless we are prepared to
make far-reaching changes in economic and social attitudes which
permeate our whole system of society. The Britain that is going to be
forged in the
white heat of this revolution will
be no place for restrictive practices or for outdated methods on
either side of industry.’ He
came
from a working-class background and
had
gone on to get a first from Oxford and, indeed, become
prime minister. He represented a new meritocracy and this was a
threat to fusty upper-class Tories like Harold Macmillan and Sir
Doug-Alec Hume. He also cultivated a ‘man of the people’ image by
smoking pipes – many people did indeed smoke pipes back then –
and professing his love for HP sauce and fish and chips.
Wilson also created greater
party unity than Gaitskell. His idealistic rhetoric excited the
party’s left and he also consoled the right-wing by promising
to be realistic about the
economy.
Wilson won ‘by a whisker’
in 1964, achieving a slender majority of four MPs. The
Conservative government had left a balance of payment deficit of []
and Britain was importing too much and exporting too little.
Indeed,
Wilson was beset with one economic problem or another during his
premiership. He set up the ambitious Department of Economic Affairs
to put more emphasis on planning, but
this department was scrapped very quickly. The aim of the department
was to modernise a stagnant private sector
through scientific and technocratic planning. The planned economy
assumed as part of its program that a twenty-five percent increase in
output would occur within five years. The Labour Party did not take
into consideration what would happen to wages and unions if this did
not occur.
Wilson called another election
in 1966 to increase his majority. The Conservatives were struggling
to find direction under their new leader Edward Heath and the gamble
paid off – Labour were returned with a majority of 96 MPs.
The Wilson government had
claimed that it would never devalue the currency. Wilson claimed that
he didn’t want Labour to be ‘the party of devaluation,’ having
devalued the pound in 1930 and 1949. However, the inevitable could
not be staved off and the government was forced to devalue in 1967.
Chancellor James
Callaghan resigned.
Wilson’s personality ratings never recovered after he appeared on
television claiming that ‘the pound on your pocket’ would be
worth just as much as
before.
Wilson’s ‘technological revolution’ never really took off. They invested heavily in technology that people did not really need, such as the Concord. British industry did not modernise and stagnation continued.
Wilson’s ‘technological revolution’ never really took off. They invested heavily in technology that people did not really need, such as the Concord. British industry did not modernise and stagnation continued.
‘Town planning’ was also a
prevalent idea during this period. ‘Progress’ was a fashionable
idea, but the modern council buildings that they built during this
period aged terribly and no-one wanted to live in them. The few
remaining buildings during this period look like monstrosities. Most
of them have been destroyed.
However, the government did
live up to its meritocratic credentials. Led by intellectual guru
Anthony Crosland, the government abolished eleven-plus exams, closed
grammar schools and increased comprehensive education. ‘If it’s
the last thing I do, I’ll close every fucking grammar school in
England. And Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales,’ Crosland
asserted. The Wilson years were first and foremost about increasing
equality of opportunity and ending the culture of deference.
Wilson also created the Open
University in 1969, which was his idea. He wanted to give other
people from his working-class background the opportunity to study at
university. The institution continues to this day.
The Labour government abolished
capital punishment in early 1965.
Roy Jenkins was shortly after appointed as Home Secretary. His
eighteen-month stint was wildly successful and he has gone down as
the most liberal home secretary in history. He had pining for the job
for years and he had a clear agenda. During his period as home
secretary, Jenkins – with the assistance of other Labour, Liberal
and Conservative MPs – enacted a whole spate of radical reforms. He
legalised homosexuality, legalised abortion, relaxed divorce
laws, relaxed censorship and legalised the pill. He also legislated
racial laws which specified that
racial minorities should
not be denied employment
or housing.
Jenkins
also increased immigration from the commonwealth countries, aiming to
create a diverse multi-cultural society that recognised and
appreciated each other’s differences. This
spurred Enoch Powell to make his highly controversial ‘Rivers of
Blood’ speech in Birmingham. Jenkins was insistent that the empire
had come to an end and that it was now time for Britain to reach out
to the countries that it had colonised.
Although Wilson was not a social liberal, he gave Jenkins complete
freedom to pursue his agenda. Jenkins was lampooned by Conservatives
for unleashing a decadent
and amoral
society, but Jenkins insisted that ‘the
permissive society is the
civilised society’ and
that individuals should be allowed to do what they want with their
private lives. This is why this particular Labour government is
associated with ‘Swinging London.’
Wilson introduced statutory income and price controls to control inflation in 1966. This would continue to be a political hot potato well into the end of the 1970s. This infuriated their trade union base, who frequently organised strikes in protest against frozen wages. Barbara Castle’s proposed union reform, ‘In Place of Strife,’ was eventually quashed by then home secretary James Callaghan, who had come from a union background.
Following devaluation, James Callaghan switched roles with Roy Jenkins. Jenkins had the unenviable task of healing Britain’s sick economy. Devaluation was done primarily to increase exports and they did indeed increase, as British goods were cheaper to buy thanks to the lower value of the pound. This did mean that inflation continued to rise – approaching 10% - as it became more expensive to import goods. Jenkins also made numerous cuts to welfare and defence and increased taxes. Eventually, by 1970 the balance of payments deficit was overturned from the £400 million bequeathed by the Conservatives to a record surplus of £550 million. Jenkins’ spending cuts and tax increases also meant that he had achieved a budget surplus, which had also been high when the Conservatives left office.
The Conservatives had been well ahead in the polls after the devaluation of the pound. However, the economic recovery meant that Labour had recovered in the polls as well. By 1970, it was a given that Labour would win the next election. Buoyed by poll figures, Wilson called an election for June 1970 (which coincided with the World Cup). The Conservatives surprisingly won with a majority of 3[] MPs.
Wilson introduced statutory income and price controls to control inflation in 1966. This would continue to be a political hot potato well into the end of the 1970s. This infuriated their trade union base, who frequently organised strikes in protest against frozen wages. Barbara Castle’s proposed union reform, ‘In Place of Strife,’ was eventually quashed by then home secretary James Callaghan, who had come from a union background.
Following devaluation, James Callaghan switched roles with Roy Jenkins. Jenkins had the unenviable task of healing Britain’s sick economy. Devaluation was done primarily to increase exports and they did indeed increase, as British goods were cheaper to buy thanks to the lower value of the pound. This did mean that inflation continued to rise – approaching 10% - as it became more expensive to import goods. Jenkins also made numerous cuts to welfare and defence and increased taxes. Eventually, by 1970 the balance of payments deficit was overturned from the £400 million bequeathed by the Conservatives to a record surplus of £550 million. Jenkins’ spending cuts and tax increases also meant that he had achieved a budget surplus, which had also been high when the Conservatives left office.
The Conservatives had been well ahead in the polls after the devaluation of the pound. However, the economic recovery meant that Labour had recovered in the polls as well. By 1970, it was a given that Labour would win the next election. Buoyed by poll figures, Wilson called an election for June 1970 (which coincided with the World Cup). The Conservatives surprisingly won with a majority of 3[] MPs.
Wilson clung on as leader of
the party. However, the party swiftly tilted to the left. Although
Wilson did try to join Europe and it had been official Labour policy
to join, Wilson changed tack by opposing membership of the Common
Market once the majority of his MPs revolted. Roy Jenkins – the
only British politician
to have ever been president of the European Commission – resigned
as deputy leader of the
party. Once
Heath managed to get Britain to join the Common Market in 1973,
Wilson promised to hold a referendum in 1975. Once the referendum was
held, 70% of the public voted to remain, which was the outcome that
Wilson wanted.
Heath promised to end consensus politics once he had been elected. However, unemployment rose to one million in 1971. Having lived through the 1930s, this spooked him. Having scrapped them upon assuming his premiership, he reinstated price and income controls in 1972. His attempt at union reform, The Industrial Relations Act, incurred their wrath.
British industry continued to struggle and Heath bailed out ailing British companies like British Leylands and Ferranti. The Conservatives even nationalised Rolls Royce. Heath recklessly pushed for growth and he created an artificial boom for a few months – 18% growth – which led to a bust. The government printed money to finance these ventures, which worsened inflation.
Heath promised to end consensus politics once he had been elected. However, unemployment rose to one million in 1971. Having lived through the 1930s, this spooked him. Having scrapped them upon assuming his premiership, he reinstated price and income controls in 1972. His attempt at union reform, The Industrial Relations Act, incurred their wrath.
British industry continued to struggle and Heath bailed out ailing British companies like British Leylands and Ferranti. The Conservatives even nationalised Rolls Royce. Heath recklessly pushed for growth and he created an artificial boom for a few months – 18% growth – which led to a bust. The government printed money to finance these ventures, which worsened inflation.
However,
it was the oil shock in 1973 that irreparably damaged the Heath
government. There was an oil embargo after Arab countries refused to
sell oil to the west following the Israeli-Palestine war, which led
to inflated prices in
all western countries.
Coal had been getting more
expensive to mine,
but the oil shock made it even more expensive. Heath decided to
ration the use of coal, which led to mass union strikes. Heath
limited the use of gas and electricity, which meant that all
television ended by ten pm and several black-outs occurred.
Strikes continued, which meant
that several working hours were lost and this harmed productivity.
Heath decided to call an election in February in 1974, seeking a
mandate to confront the unions. He framed it with
the question ‘Who Governs Britain?’ Surprisingly, it resulted in
a hung parliament. Labour emerged as the largest party, despite
getting a slightly smaller share of the popular vote.
Wilson had gone into the
campaign promising to get the miners back to work. As such, Labour
were
on the side of the unions, which meant that it now had a much more
left-wing program. Heath tried to form a coalition with the Liberals,
but this fell through. Wilson led a minority Labour government for a
few months before calling another general election for October 1974.
Although inflation remained extremely high, Wilson claimed that
Labour had solved the miners’ dispute. Labour managed to gain a
tiny majority of three MPs.
Wilson
settled the miners’ dispute by raising their wages, which
accelerated inflation. This meant that inflation rose
from 18% under Heath in
1974 to an historic 30%
in 1975.
Wilson
also assuaged the left of the party by appointing leftists Tony Benn
as Industry Secretary, Michael Foot as Employment Secretary and Peter
Shore as Trade Secretary. Benn scared industry by tentatively
proposing mass nationalisation and planning. He wanted to create a
‘siege economy’ by raising tariffs and erecting other types of
import controls. Peter Shore was also thinking on these lines. Parts
of British Leylands were also nationalised, but
these
protectionist measures only managed to depress British industry even
more. Michael Foot as Employment Secretary was keen to please trade
unions as much as he could. All three ministers were soon removed
from these posts.
Chancellor Dennis Healey
increased
income taxes to historic highs. The top rates were now 83% and, in
some cases, 98%. Such taxes were meant to confiscate ‘unearned
incomes.’ These revenues were pumped into the NHS and other social
services. However, this also created a flight of capital, as several
high earners left the country.
Despite their precarious
majority, Labour still pushed several reforms through
in this period: Social
Pensions Act, Health and
Safety Act, Employment Protection Act, Sexual Discrimination Act,
Child Benefit Act, Homeless Persons Act and many others.
Wilson resigned in April 1976.
By this point, he was completely beleaguered. He had not achieved
many of his lofty promises and the country was in serious economic
turmoil. He looked older than his years. Against the odds, he still
achieved party unity and several worthy social reforms. He would soon
develop Alzheimer’s.
James Callaghan: 1976-1980
The leadership election that
followed boasted some heavyweight names: James Callaghan, Dennis
Healey, Roy Jenkins, Michael Foot, Tony Benn and Tony Crosland.
Callaghan, a self-made working class boy who never gone to
university, came on top. He was the only politician to have ever held
the three biggest ministerial positions – chancellor, home
secretary and foreign secretary. He was on the right of the party
and had close links to the trade unions. It was said that, whilst his
political judgement might not be sound, that he would be the most
suitable leader to deal with the unions. The opposite turned out to
be the case.
Callaghan lost his majority a month after assuming office. This meant that Labour had to form an informal alliance with the Liberals, called the ‘Lab-Lib pact.’
The ongoing economic problems soon reached boiling point. The pound had been trailing the dollar by 18%. A speculative attack on the currency meant that the pound almost collapsed. Dennis Healey met the IMF and agreed terms for a loan. Healey agreed a £3.9 million loan in exchange for £2 billion in cuts to social services.
Callaghan lost his majority a month after assuming office. This meant that Labour had to form an informal alliance with the Liberals, called the ‘Lab-Lib pact.’
The ongoing economic problems soon reached boiling point. The pound had been trailing the dollar by 18%. A speculative attack on the currency meant that the pound almost collapsed. Dennis Healey met the IMF and agreed terms for a loan. Healey agreed a £3.9 million loan in exchange for £2 billion in cuts to social services.
Additionally, Healey cut
interest rates and started to tightly control the supply of money,
which was really the start of ‘monetarism.’ Healey started to
open up Britain to world markets and the economy gradually started to
heal at this point. Although the Thatcher government has been seen as
the end of consensus, others have identified this as the moment in
which Kenyesianism had run out of steam.
Callaghan
addressed
a Labour conference, claiming that
‘I
tell you, in all candour that option
[to spend our way out of a recession]
no longer exists. And in so far as it ever did exist, it only worked
on each occasion… by injecting a bigger dose of inflation into the
economy, followed by a higher level of unemployment as the next
step…’
This
was not wholly accurate, as inflation had been modest when Labour and
Conservative
governments spent heavily throughout the 40s, 50s and 60s. Inflation
started to soar after the devaluation of the pound and its impact
would not have been so great had Wilson and Callaghan not postponed
it. Healey also acknowledged that Keynesianism had come to an end and
he believed that the Labour Party’s guru had underestimated how
disruptive trade unions and finance are to statist governments that
like to spend. Unions disrupt industry by striking when inflation
goes up whilst finance attack currencies when they are weak.
The
economy started to heal over the next two years and inflation had
gone just below double digits by 1978. Labour had a lead in the
polls, but Callaghan wanted to
give
the economy another year to heal before fighting a general election.
Callaghan
formed a pact with the unions in 1978 whereby they agreed to wage
restraint to curb
restricted government spending and also to
ease inflation. As
such,
strict
wage controls were imposed on all public sector workers. However,
trade unions – who had been radicalised by Marxist entryists
throughout the 1970s – called strikes, which
have been
called the ‘Winter of Discontent.’ Many hours of work were lost,
dead bodies were left in the streets, patients were not treated and
rubbish was left uncollected. Callaghan came back from a holiday and
appeared to dismiss the concerns of the press as ‘parochial.’
Many
of the tabloids had in the past supported Labour, but publications
like The
Sun
lurched to the Conservatives when they were bought by Rupert Murdoch.
They
lashed out at the government, with the Sun declaring ‘Crisis? What
crisis?’
Margaret
Thatcher issued a motion of no confidence as leader of the
opposition, which she won by a single vote. The Conservatives won the
1979 election by a landslide.
Once
more, Labour lurched to the left in opposition – this time even
more radically. Tony Benn thought that he should seize the
opportunity and sought to implement his radical economic plan. The
constituency Labour parties had been infiltrated by Trotskyites. Benn
sought to ‘democratise’ the party by devolving more power to
Labour members. He wanted to give members the right to deselect MPs
and he saw members of parliament as being delegates, not
representatives. This made a mockery of parliamentary democracy. Benn
stirred up radical activists by claiming that the Labour Party had
betrayed its socialist principles in government.
The
Trotskyite entryists were knowns as ‘Militants’ and were highly
organised. Callaghan resigned a month before constitutional reforms
were due to be introduced, which was a way to get back at Benn. The
next leader would be elected by the members of parliament, not the
party members or the trade unions.
Michael
Foot: 1980-1983
Dennis
Healey seemed to destined to take over as party leader. He was a
forceful character, so he was bound to confront the Miltants, the
left and Margaret Thatcher effectively. However, Michael Foot entered
the race later on and won. He was seen as a ‘unity candidate’ who
would be able to bridge the divides in the party. Although he was
well on the left of the party, he was an affable man and many people
thought that he would appease the right as well as the left more than
Healey. This assessment turned out to be dramatically wrong.
Foot
had been a totemic figure in the left, penning a manifesto called
Keep
Left! In
the 1940s
in
which he argued that Labour should commit itself to unilateral
disarmament and appeasement to the
Soviet Union. He was a highly learned man of letters, who wrote an
influential book about Jonathan Swift in the 1950s. A colourful
eccentric, he was a passionate and eloquent orator who was perhaps
more suited to the backbenchers rather than
the frontbenchers. He did, however, prove his
administrative acumen as Employment Secretary and Deputy Prime
Minister in the 1970s.
The
party soon committed itself to a program that included unilateral
disarmament, leaving the European Community and mass nationalisation.
Meanwhile, Roy Jenkins came back from his stint as leader of the
European Commission and was aghast by the state of the Labour Party.
He formed a new centrist
party called the SDP alongside David Owen, Shirley Williams and Bill
Rodgers. Whilst they soared in the opinion polls for a year, they
ultimately split the vote and cemented Thatcher’s
grip
on
power.
The
Militant tendency continued to permeate the party, who continued to
receive Tony Benn’s support. Foot seemed weak and unable to control
the problem. Labour seemed eons away from power.
Thatcher’s
first term was far from successful and she was very unpopular. Her
harsh monetarist policies meant that 20% of British manufacturing had
been destroyed, unemployment went up
to an unprecedented three million
– 12% of the total workforce –
there were high levels of poverty and low-tax policies meant that
public services were chronically underfunded throughout the 1980s.
However,
the invasion of the Falkland islands led to a surge in patriotism and
the Conservatives shot up in the polls.
Labour’s manifesto pledges also
seemed wholly ill-suited to the problems of the 1980s. Their
obsession with a state-run economy seemed painfully
ill-suited to Britain’s economic recovery in the 1980s. Their
pledge to reinstate trade union power seemed ominous to voters a few
years after the winter of discontent. Their
pledge to completely jettison the nuclear deterrent seemed
nonsensical as the cold war continued.
The
Labour Party manifesto for the 1983 election was dubbed ‘the
longest suicide note in history’ by Gerald Kaufman. Labour were
soon slaughtered by the Conservatives, returned with [] seats. It was
Labour’s worst electoral defeat since 1931. Foot was soon forced to
resign.
Neil
Kinnock: 1983-1992
Although
he was young and had never held a ministerial post, Neil Kinnock was
chosen as
the new Labour leader. Kinnock had been a firebrand leftist in the
1970s, but many MPs thought that he had the oratorical skills and the
charisma to be leader.
Kinnock
soon defied the Militant tendency. He lashed out at them in a
conference in 1985, claiming that their promises were ‘irrelevant
to the real needs of voters.’ Militant and other communist
organisations were judged to have breached the constitution of the
Labour Party and parliamentary democracy. Thousands of Labour Party
members were expelled.
Thatcher
won another landslide in 1987 during
an economic boom,
but Kinnock staged a spirited campaign and won more seats.
By
the late 1980s, Labour were gradually returning to the centre. By
1989, they had dropped its most unpopular policies – unilateral
disarmament and they became firmly committed to Europe.
Thatcher
continued to implement unpopular policies, such as the privatisation
of utilities. However, this reached boiling point with her ‘poll
tax,’ where everyone was forced to pay the same high rate of
council tax. She was forced to resign in late 1990.
Kinnock
now urged the party to drop its commitment to nationalisation. He
wanted the Labour Party to accept the market economy, but to instead
focus on more equality and fairness within that system.
Labour
now had a lead in the polls. By the time of the 1992 general
election, however,
several tabloids ridiculed
Kinnock’s awkward persona. They claimed that Labour’s plans would
lead to ‘a bombshell of taxes.’ Kinnock remained confident and
Labour led an unusually Americanised event at
a stadium in Sheffield. Kinnock awkwardly yelled ‘we’re all
right! we’re all right!,’ which appeared arrogant and
overconfident. A day before the election, The
Sun
published a headline that asked ‘If
Kinnock wins today, will
the last person to leave Britain please turn out the lights?’
John Major eventually won the election with a majority of twenty-four
MPs. The
Sun
published a headline that asserted ‘It’s The
Sun
wot won it.’
Although
Kinnock might not have won a general election, he won more seats and
vanquished the Militant tendency. He had made an unelectable train
wreck electable.
John
Smith: 1992-1994
Kinnock
was often pilloried by the media – he was often regarded as
bumbling, incoherent and incompetent. Smith, who held a cabinet
position under Callaghan, was more respected by the media. Although
he was staunchly on the party’s right, he somewhat ironically came
to embody ‘Old Labour.’
Britain
fell out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism after the 1992 General
Election and the Conservatives had also presided over a recession, so
they were no longer trusted with economic management. They were also
tearing themselves apart over Europe – the internecine battles
within Major’s party meant that they looked weak, scattered and
incompetent. Labour was now staunchly European and its own bloody
internal battles seemed to be a thing of the past. As such, it was
almost a certainty that John Smith would become prime minister.
Some
of Smith’s policy initiatives were later implemented by Tony Blair,
such as devolution to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland and the
minimum wage.
John
Smith had already suffered one heart attack and he was to suffer
another one in early 1994, which killed him. This triggered a
leadership election and Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, who had already
been plotting for a while, seized the moment.
Tony
Blair: 1994-2007
Gordon
Brown, Tony Blair and Peter Mandelson conceived New Labour. The idea
was that Labour should embrace globalisation, which had created so
much wealth and opportunities across the third world. However, they
thought that the state should be also play a part in correcting
market failure. Labour would embrace economics that ostensibly worked
without dropping their commitment to social reform. Brown had first
conceived the idea and had a detailed plan, so he wanted to become
leader. However, Blair was considered more charismatic and prime
ministerial, so it was agreed that he should be leader. The agreement
would be that he would stand down after his second term, so that
Brown could take over.
In
a way that was reminiscent of the early 1960s, Blair, like Wilson,
played up to his image of modernity, youth, novelty and popularity.
The Conservatives again seemed old and fusty. Blair’s talk of
‘aspiration’ meant that Labour ate into the Conservative vote in
the south of England, as well the upper middle-classes. There was
very much a ‘spirit’ surrounding Labour at the time (although
most of this, really, was ‘spin’), as there was in 1945. Most
newspapers – from tabloids like The Sun to intellectual
broadsheets like The Guardian – endorsed Labour. Labour won
an unprecedented majority – a total of 420 seats. The majority was
so large that several Labour MPs had to sit on the opposition
benches.
One
of the first measures that was introduced was Bank of England
independence, which meant that the setting of interest rates would be
devolved to the Bank of England as well as the printing of money.
Brown argued that this would depoliticise these decisions and that
the economy would benefit from it. In the past, Labour governments
had inflated the economy by raising interest rates and printing money
whereas the Conservatives had depressed it by doing the opposite. The
British economy had been too ‘boom and bust.’ Now, the Bank of
England would take these apolitical decisions in accordance with how
the economic climate fared. The result was that the British economy
enjoyed its longest economic boom in history as well as its lowest
rate of inflation.
More
controversially, Brown deregulated the banks from the oversight of
the British central bank. This was certainly following the trend at
the time – the more financial deregulation the merrier – but it
would subsequently prove disastrous. Brown later said that he
regretted doing it.
More radically, Brown imposed a ‘windfall tax’ on excessive
profits earned by shareholders of privatised utility companies. He
used these revenues to fund a ‘New Deal’ so as to help thousands
of people from welfare payments to work. Unemployment, as such, was
very low during this period.
Blair’s greatest achievement was perhaps the Good Friday Agreement.
Of course, IRA terrorism had been a major problem since the 1970s.
Blair read several documents carefully and co-ordinated talks between
Northern Irish republican separatists and the unionists.
Foreign
Secretary Robin Cooke promised to have an ‘ethical’ foreign
policy which, in light of later events, proved ominous. However,
Britain initially conducted successful interventions in Bosnia and
Sierra Leon. This success clouded his own judgement and Blair would
later become victim of his own hubris.
Labour
also devolved constitutional powers to Wales, Scotland and Northern
Ireland. They would all now have their own parliaments and their own
elected representatives.
Labour
also finally introduced a minimum wage. This would finally protect
workers from being exploited or underpaid in this regard. Union laws
remained extremely strict, but Labour did protect workers through
this legislation.
Brown
also started a ‘Sure Start’ scheme that provided young children
with financial assistance and to help them make the most of their
opportunities. He later implemented tax credits whereby tax payers
could apply to receive tax exemptions if they were struggling
financially. Such measures reduced poverty considerably. As such,
there was some redistribution of wealth in this regard, as lower
income workers earned more and higher income workers paid more.
The
2001 General Election was basically a repeat of the 1997 landslide.
The Conservatives had lurched to the right and were firmly
anti-Europe and pro-austerity.
‘Tax
and spend’ had been a phrase that had been derogatorily applied to
Labour. After the experience of the 1992 election, Labour became
extremely weary at the prospect of raising income taxes if it cost
them a general election. As such, income tax was not raised. However,
Brown pursued a ‘stealth tax’ and he raised considerable
revenues. Eventually, he raised National Insurance in 2003. They also
involved private companies to raise more funds for public services As
such, Labour spent record amounts on hospitals, schools, the civil
service and prisons. [] billion pounds was spent on the NHS in 2008.
There
major tussles between Blair and Brown during this period. Blair
wanted a more marketised NHS and several private contractors were
introduced, which Brown was firmly against. Blair wanted Britain to
join the Euro, which Brown thought would be imprudent (he was
subsequently vindicated). Blair continued to push for more
privatisation and deregulation in the economy whereas Brown was more
cautions, claiming that regulations should be enforced when they
needed to be enforced and that there was no need to deregulate for
the sake of it. These issues made people question if there was
anything remotely Labour about Tony Blair.
However,
things would become toxic after 9/11. George Bush and his
neo-conservative friends waged war on Afghanistan and declared a ‘war
on terror.’ Blair was keen to preserve the special relationship
with the USA, something that previous Labour governments had been
considered weak on. For instance, Wilson decided not to send British
troops to Vietnam.
British
troops were sent to Afghanistan. However, several neo-con crackpots
arbitrarily decided that somehow there was a connection between 9/11
and Iraq. Robin Cooke resigned in a dignified way as Foreign
Secretary and was replaced with Jack Straw. Blair and the neo-cons
speciously claimed that the country harboured weapons of mass
destruction. Spin doctor Alistair Campbell produced a ‘dodgy
dossier’ supporting these allegation. The US subsequently invaded
Iraq. The invasion soon unleashed a sectarian conflict between Shia
and Sunni Muslims. Sunni Muslims who had supported Sadaam Hussein
were removed from power and replaced with Shia Muslims. The bloody
sectarian conflict continued for years. No evidence of weapons of
mass destruction were found. The US and the UK started to loftily
talk about nation building, a completely flawed idea. Iraq became a
failed state. Because the US and the UK concentrated on Iraq, they
diverted their attention from Afghanistan and foreign policy in that
region became extremely confused.
Tony
Blair still decided to stay on, as he was selfishly concerned about
his legacy and did not want to bow out at this period in time. He had
become increasingly autocratic and he used his unhealthy majority to
justify this. Cabinet meetings were more presidential and there was
little collective decision making, which had been the hallmark in
previous Labour governments. Cabinet meetings concentrated more on
‘spin’ and targeting the media.
Labour
won the 2005 General Election with a reduced majority of 66 seats,
but they did so with the lowest share of the popular vote ever
obtained by a party with a majority. Several Labour voters had
defected to the Liberal Democrats, who had opposed the Iraq war. It
was an unprecedented result, however, as Labour had never won a third
term before.
Blair
eventually resigned in 2007 and Brown finally took over. Although New
Labour boasted some considerable achievements – they did a lot more
for the poor and the disenfranchised than left-wingers would like to
admit (I, for instance, benefited from Early Intervention support,
which has subsequently been scrapped, and NHS treatment which had
much more funds) – his legacy has been tarnished by Iraq. He has
become a villain and a war criminal. His reputation has –
justifiably – deteriorated year by year.
Gordon
Brown: 2007-2010
The
majority of the Labour party were happy when Brown took over because
he wasn’t Tony Blair. It was considered inevitable that Brown
would take over and it is all the more ironic that he did, as several
‘inevitable’ prime ministers, like Roy Jenkins and Dennis Healey,
never reached those lofty heights. He had been the longest-serving
chancellor in history, had presided over the longest boom in British
economic history and he had a lot political clout. Brown initially
wanted to put partisan interests aside and to rule ‘the nation’
and appointed people from the world of finance in his cabinet. He
also invited Margaret Thatcher to 10 Downing Street – again, in an
attempt to appear non-partisan and non-doctrinaire. Brown’s plan
was to be a ‘national’ leader for a two or three years and to
later implement an ambitious program of spending and stimulus in the
economy.
Labour
were well ahead in the polls at the time and many people assumed that
Brown would call one to seek a mandate. He was caught planning one,
which was the most partisan thing that he could do, so he decided
against as it did not bode well with his talk of leading in the
national interest.
However,
financial crisis soon struck. Like 1929, it originated from Wall
Street and made its way to the rest of the world. The lax regulation
had meant that a ‘shadow banking’ system emerged, in which
bankers invested in irresponsible ways. National Rock defaulted and
Brown had no choice apart from nationalising it.
Brown
co-ordinated with the Bank of England to bail out the banks, which
would have otherwise defaulted (which is what the Conservatives
wanted to happen). People’s savings were secure, but it meant that
Brown had ratcheted up a deficit of []. Brown joined other world
leaders to save the international banks and a stimulus package lift
the global economy, as well printing currency to stave off
depression. Paul Krugman claimed in a column that he had ‘saved the
world.’
Brown
wanted the British economy to grow for a few years and to later
enforce spending cuts to bring the deficit down. However, David
Cameron and George Osbourne claimed that the deficit had been the
result of wasteful government spending (which was untrue). They
claimed that Brown had been an irresponsible (which is ironic, as for
years he was seen as having been prudent). The spin largely worked
and David Cameron continued to score points against Brown at PMQs. By
2009, the Conservatives had a large lead in the polls.
Brown
was also been ridiculed for his awkwardness and he was wholly
unpopular by this point. His confrontational style meant that many
figures had left his cabinet, which meant that he had to bring back
his arch enemy Peter Mandelson. Talks of a coup had surfaced by 2007,
but this died down because he proved to be the most qualified and
accomplished politician able to rescue the world banks.
2010
surprisingly resulted in a hung parliament, with the Conservatives as
the largest party. Brown tried to form a coalition with the Liberal
Democrats, trying to convince Nick Clegg that 15 million people had
voted for pro-growth progressive policies whereas only 10 million
people voted for Tory austerity. However, Clegg noted that a Lab-Lib
coalition would have only resulted in a majority of eleven MPs and he
eventually decided to form one with Cameron.
Gordon
Brown’s legacy was not good when he resigned as leader but, unlike
Blair’s, it will improve. He saved the financial banks and the
Tories’ toxic brand of austerity and anti-EU mania has subsequently
proved disastrous and unpopular. He also spearheaded some of Labour’s
proudest achievements as chancellor.
Ed
Miliband: 2010-2015
David
Miliband seemed destined to become leader of the Labour Party. He won
the most votes from members of parliament, but in an ironic and
tragic twist his more left-leaning brother threw his hat in the ring
and won the leadership election, largely with trade union support.
Ed
Miliband struggled to find direction as party leader. He changed tack
every year and often spoke in abstruse and academic terms. He wanted
to distance himself from New Labour, but he seemed to think that this
meant that he did not have to defend their record in government.
Cameron, Osbourne and Clegg hyperbolically and spuriously bashed
their record, but Milliband never went out his way to say that Labour
did not overspend.
The
party started to lose its working-class base in the north, which
defected to Ukip. Most urgently, it was losing its base in Scotland,
which was defecting en masse to the Scottish Nationalist Party.
Labour
had a lead in the polls throughout Miliband’s reign, but this was
largely by default. Cameron had made billions of cuts and the economy
was by and large stagnant.
By
2015, Labour had a ‘shopping list’ of policies, but no real
narrative. As such, its pitch was incoherent. They wanted to freeze
energy prices, control immigration and impose a mansion tax, but none
of these things had a framing narrative or a philosophy about its
vision for the country. Its more interventionist streak – like the
price freeze – also jarred with Conservative spin about Labour’s
economic mismanagement.
Another
hung parliament seemed likely. The Conservatives exploited this by
saying that this would mean that Labour would be controlled by the
SNP, who wanted to break up the union and jettison Britain’s
nuclear deterrent. Their campaign largely worked and they were
returned with a majority of twelve MPs. Miliband resigned.
Jeremy
Corbyn: 2015 -
Many
people claimed that one major thing that could be salvaged about
Miliband’s period as leader was that, unlike 1951, 1970 and 1979,
Labour had not imploded and retreated into left-right sectarian
battles. He had by and large achieved party unity. However, that fell
to pieces when Jeremy Corbyn became leader.
Miliband
introduced ‘one member, one vote,’ as several of his Blairite MPs
were recalcitrant when the trade unions elected him. However, there
was wide-scale entryism when Jeremy Corbyn was elected and he was
elected with a whopping majority. (I had been toying with the idea of
joining the Labour Party for a year, as I was intrigued with its
history. I eventually did, but I never did anything about it and let
it expire, as the whole Momentum/social movement thing put me off.)
Jeremy
Corbyn had been a Bennite in the 1980s and had supported many trendy
leftist causes, such as opposing NATO, Trident and the EU. He had
shared platforms with Hamas. Many people thought that this was the
road to electoral oblivion for the Labour Party. He was easily its
most left-wing leader in its history.
Corbyn
proved to be an incompetent leader of the opposition and there was
constant in-fighting. By the time of the EU referendum, Corbyn
campaigned half-heartedly and Brexit one. He had a long history of
Euroscepticism and many people assumed that he was secretly happy
about the outcome. When his own MPs launched a coup and another
leadership election, they also cited the fact that he never put any
time or effort into policy either.
Corbyn
won another leadership campaign against another weak candidate.
Corbyn and McDonnell spuriously cited that they were respecting
‘democracy,’ notwithstanding that Labour has always been a
parliamentary party. Nine million people had voted for a Labour MP
whereas only 600,000 members had voted in the leadership election.
The
Conservatives were enjoying huge leads in the polls. By 2017, its new
leader Theresa May called another General Election to seek a
comfortable mandate for her Brexit negotiations. The Conservatives
subsequently led a terrible campaign whereas Corbyn and Labour led a
spirited campaign and manifesto. Young people also voted in record
numbers. The nature of Brexit meant that Britain had returned to
two-party politics, even though remaining in the European Union was
not Labour’s official policy. It resulted in a hung parliament,
with the Conservatives as the largest party.
Many
people claim that Corbyn is a prime minister in waiting, but he is
still a sloppy opposition leader. He has cemented his grip on power,
but his party remains hopelessly divided over Europe and the economy.