Scotland is now pro-nationalist, and even perhaps willing to
vote for independence in a year or two’s time. It has long been another country
in political terms too. While it was revolting over the poll tax, England
considered the mild radicalism of a Welsh Labour leader and, shyly, voted for
John Major’s Conservative Party. Yesterday the Tories got a majority after
hurting poorer “hard working” families for five years while those not in need
of in-work welfare benefits feared that the Labour Party would somehow jeopardise the
flimsy certainties of what, statistically at least, is an economic recovery.
The NHS is the exception to the rule, the last surviving
nationalised industry and one that, broadly speaking, is popular. Labour may
have won the 1945 election because its promise to introduce socialised medicine
was the most believable, but after only six years in office it was out for another
13. Labour’s two election victories in 1974 were barely deserving of the name.
The Labour government that lost office in 1979 had essentially been a minority one
for most of its rule.
Now Labour has to consider whether a more authentically
social justice and home rule message in Scotland and Wales will remotely help
it in England (where Westminster elections, after all, are decided). To
paraphrase Neil Kinnock, if you think that that is right, then go into the
semi-detached homes of people struggling to pay their mortgage in the south of
England and “tell it there, tell it there.”
The United Kingdom is under threat, and the very
self-serving economic reasons why we joined the Common Market are increasingly
being seen in England as not being upheld by the EU today. What will Labour do
next? A lurch to the left will this time definitely consign it to the dustbin of
history. There will be no electoral reform to save it, while Labour has lost
Scotland (and its parliamentary support) whether it becomes an independent
sovereign country or not. To be elected and then to govern in England will be impossible
for Labour without being able to both appeal to aspiration and not somehow
abandoning its so-called electoral base. In the 2015 election Labour absurdly
pandered to that base without offering anything more than half-hearted
apologies for past errors and an unconvincing line on deficit and debt reduction.
The outcome was its third worst General Election result since 1935.
The recession was a fork in the road. In this election
Labour tried to plough down the middle by refusing to say it had overspent in
the last government whilst claiming it would reduce the deficit faster, but
somehow more fairly, in the next. Electing a new leader who mouths the same (and,
ironically, non-inclusive) platitudes about hard working families will not cut
it, in England or Scotland. Something major needs to be tried. Reaching out to everybody, right across the Union, is an even taller order right
now. Perhaps more honesty would help. If Scotland hasn’t already left the
building by the time of the next Westminster election, tell voters that you
will work with the SNP precisely to save the Union, that we should stay in the
EU for the sake of jobs and, yes, for the sake of political stability across
Europe, and that ever-expanding health and welfare budgets are not the answer. Otherwise,
just carry on regardless.
'd agree with nearly all of that. I'd add my own theory though on the important contribution of employment to the Tories win. In particular, self-employment.......
ReplyDelete"Self-employment has been a key reason behind both the rise in the number of people in work and the lower jobless rate. Almost one in seven people - some 4.55m - are now self-employed, the highest level since records began in 1971. The number of people working for themselves has risen by 375,000 over the past year."
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/jobs/10829623/UK-jobs-growth-rises-at-fastest-rate-in-43-years.html
The self-employed, although not necessarily well paid, may well have decided that the pro-business Tories were more in tune with their thinking than the employee-focused (typically, public-sector employee) Labour party.