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As Cameron gets radical, the left dozes on planet 1945

The coalition is seeking to redefine the individual's relationship with the state. From Labour we get not a peep

The British left is a disgrace. In order to stabilise public finances, the coalition prime minister, David Cameron, clearly intends to challenge the ideological basis of our public services. Few corners are to be immune. The Liberal Democrats are riding the tiger. The left is nowhere. Like an arthritic Colonel Blimp, it merely cries, "Yah boo. All is well. The old ways are best."

Cameron has recently said the unsayable on two tenets of the welfare state. Today he questioned the £5.2bn being ripped off the taxpayer by benefit and tax credit waste and fraud. He is hardly the first to do so, but he may be the first to mean it. Last week he also questioned the static "deserving poor" concept of public housing, adumbrated by Octavia Hill and long adopted by Labour to benefit its electoral base.

This is on top of Andrew Lansley's bid to dismantle tottering NHS bureaucracy. He wants to do it not by slicing budgets, which seldom works, but by removing layers, which might. He has decided to give money for hospital care to frontline GPs, saying to the public: your health is your business; here is the money, but discuss with your GP how to spend it.

As a housing association trustee in the 1980s, I marvelled at the extravagance of giving people from a council list of "local and needy" a townhouse for life, removing it from the social housing stock. We were not making a dent in homelessness – surely the purpose of state subsidy – but selecting lucky people, mostly mothers, at a moment of financial stress and giving their families a subsidised house for life.

Council tenants were even luckier. They could bequeath the bonanza to husbands and children, irrespective of wealth, or convert it into capital through right-to-buy. As a way of relieving housing poverty, the system was grotesquely expensive and bore no relationship to ongoing need. There was no "stock" of social housing, rather a passing trickle.

I can't recall a Labour politician ever questioning this system. It was holy writ, handed down from the Victorians. The left reacts to Cameron like an admiral whose pet aircraft carrier has been scrapped. It howls. With some five million people on waiting lists, Shelter said tenure security was not "a big question" and the Chartered Institute of Housing said housing subsidies should not be seen as "a last resort". So what are they?

These three classic realms of welfare – housing, health and social transfers – were protected by Thatcher, Blair and their followers. Such articles of the faith as universal entitlement, nationwide benefit levels, centralised administration and distaste for means-testing have hardly been challenged in half a century. Spending soared under left and right, and ran out of control under Gordon Brown. Even when Margaret Thatcher cut council rent subsidies, housing benefit rose by an equivalent amount.

Tory governments railed against benefit cheats, invalidity fraud and unmarried mothers in council houses, but they dared not change the system. The same visceral terror resurfaced with Cameron's kneejerk rejection of an end to the wartime milk subsidy to infant schools. With child obesity on rampant, nanny Cameron dared not even suggest replacing the milk with an apple.

He has sent a grim message to ministers: some cows are more sacred than others, especially if they give children milk. The list of the protected grows more eccentric by the week. Infant milk joins Trident missiles, Olympic horses, wind farmers, aid to Indian taxpayers and "free school" yuppies. At least the list is short. Beyond those in this state of grace, everything is up for grabs.

For whatever motive – and reducing a budget deficit is hardly dishonourable – Cameron is seeking to redefine the individual's relationship with the state, more radically than anyone since the 40s. I may think the government should stall on some cuts, such as cash benefits, while the economy is stagnant. But when state revenues are static, claims rising and government indebtedness gargantuan, only those blind to reality refuse to discuss the structural basis of public spending.

From Labour we get not a peep. I have missed the draughty-hall hustings to which candidates for the leadership are traipsing this summer, but I have followed them on radio, television and blogs. They are like cement congealing round a mafia victim's feet. Nor do I imagine these events represent the entirety of conversation on the left. But nowhere has Cameron's challenge been really met, for or against. All we hear is a 1980s throwback to deploring "Tory cuts" and "defending public services".

David and Ed Miliband, Ed Balls, Andy Burnham and Diane Abbott can only blow a collective raspberry. They rabbit on about who said what during the Iraq war or the credit crunch. Like Stalinist courtiers they accuse each other of varying degrees of disloyalty to Blair and Brown, asking who said what, where and when. They try to curry favour with public sector unions, most of whom are way ahead of them in realism on government services. The candidates are intellectually barren.

Even on the left's own terms, the coalition is challenging the road ahead for redistributive socialism. It is raising the spirits of Beveridge and Crosland. What should national insurance mean with an ageing population? How can we afford "higher education for half the people"? Which services could be paid for by the individual or discrete communities, rather than a universalist government? Labour's answer is metronomic: leave it all to the state … the state … the state. This answer has run into the sand. It has driven the country into a worse plight than Greece or Spain.

To do Nick Clegg and his Lib Dems justice, they have at least engaged. Through the happenstance of the electoral system, they are joined in the most vigorous debate British politics has seen in half a century. Labour knew last year that some such crisis was in the offing; there were signs of Alistair Darling and others steeling themselves for the fray. Now the left has removed itself to doze on planet 1945. One day it must return.


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  • heverale heverale

    10 Aug 2010, 9:15PM

    Why would NuLab bother opposing right now?

    They're complicit in some of what's happening, and anyway, the worse the Tories do, the more likely NuLab are to get elected.

  • Zarahustra Zarahustra

    10 Aug 2010, 9:16PM

    I would be less worried if Cameron also criticized the military industrial complex and the link between State and private firms where they receive lots of tax money (welfare), for shoddy goods and services, and he did something about it.

    Labour or the left disgraced themselves when in power, they displayed their Stalinist potential and their love of big government, decrease in individual liberty and penchant for total control. Good riddance to the rascals, that is not to say that their replacement is any better.

  • rusticred rusticred

    10 Aug 2010, 9:17PM

    Simply not true Tony Benn and others have already said they would e challenging the principles set out by the Coalition.
    I'm not sure you can call out the left when the party of the coalition the Lib Dems claimed they were more radical than Labour. They are the architects of this radicalism the double agents inside the very heart of the radical left, looking both ways at once, to simply prop up a set of discredited policies.

    No the challenge is getting the lib Dems to admit to their infidelities and leave the Harlots on the right.

  • adamthegreat adamthegreat

    10 Aug 2010, 9:18PM

    I'm constantly confused about whether I'm a leftist or not.

    Are you saying I can be a leftist a and not think it OK for people to get a free home for life regardless of what they go on to earn?

    That I can be a leftist and think it is not OK to scam the benefit system?

    Bloody hell - maybe I'm not a liberal conservative...

  • JamesDickins JamesDickins

    10 Aug 2010, 9:18PM

    The problem with Labour is not that it is stuck in 1945 – but rather the catastrophic legacy of Tony Blair’s New Labour ‘project’:

    Sleaze - from Ecclestone to Cash for Honours (and everything in between)

    Wars - Afghanistan and Iraq (Mr. Blair also activey supported Israel's invasions of Lebanon and Gaza, and has recently been agitating for war against Iran)

    Wealth inequality - now at its highest ever in Britain (higher than any other Western European country)

    Personal debt - at tumorous levels

    National near-bankruptcy

    Until the Labour Party explicitly denounces New Labour, commits itself to income redistribution, and re-forms itself into a socialist/social-democratic party of the type which has fair societies and successful economies across Scandinavia and other parts of northern Europe, it will continue to languish.

  • picklederics picklederics

    10 Aug 2010, 9:22PM

    Labour are the opposition and parliament is not sitting so prey what are they supposed to do whilst the coalition implodes like a little boy in a sweet shop with no boundaries.

  • heverale heverale

    10 Aug 2010, 9:22PM

    Tory "radicalism"

    - ending council house tenure, without providing for additional housing stock to soak them up

    - throwing people on the dole, without the jobs for them

    - spending more on Free Schools, a policy discredited by the Swedish experience

    - having a bonfire of the quangos, only to set up more quangos

    - gaffes galore

    - a budget amendment to Labour's proposals that hits the poorest ten percent proportionally the hardest

    - more gaffes and cock-ups.

    - promoting the Big Society but cutting funding to voluntary organisations

    - saying they wouldn't reorganise the NHS, but then reorganising it

    - cuts greater than needed to bring the deficit under control, thereby threatening a double-dip.

    Very Tory, very.... "radical".

  • classm classm

    10 Aug 2010, 9:22PM

    To do Nick Clegg and his Lib Dems justice, they have at least engaged.

    Engaged in supporting far right Tory ideology is all they have done. Not much out of them - spineless in Government. The Tories would have been more constrained if the had had to set up a minority Government. LibDems have done nothing except sit and nod.
    Agree Labour need to do more but the leadership campaign has eaten up time. Also Tony Benn is raising concerns and once the cuts hit there will be more action and objections . And the worst Tory ideas are coming out now - when Parliament is in recess. This has been a trick by this Government to escape democratic challenge.
    They will not like the challenge when it comes because cuts will mainly hit some parts of society - unfairly. We are not in it together.

  • wotever wotever

    10 Aug 2010, 9:23PM

    I blame Labour for everything Cameron is doing.
    Nulabour set the scene for the Tories destruction of every value the working classes stood for. with 13 years of inaction, cowardliness and betrayal .

  • CiFAndrew CiFAndrew

    10 Aug 2010, 9:24PM

    Contributor Contributor

    The British left is a disgrace

    Labour does not represent "the British left" - it stopped doing that around 1994 when messirs Brown and Blair cooked up the New Labour project. Is it any real surprise then that there is no mainstream left-wing objection to the state carve up under the tories?

    Encroaching privatisation of the NHS, private businesses running academy schools, a failure to build or care about social housing - these are all merely an extension of Labour polices. Why would we expect Labour to now oppose them?

    We have two centre-right parties (Lib dems, Lab) and a raging right-wing party (Cons). The state is their for the taking - and they are clearly intent on doing so.

  • Zarahustra Zarahustra

    10 Aug 2010, 9:24PM

    Social democracy and fabianism is not the answer.

    Anyone interested in a honest appraisal should listen to this lecture:

    Democracy: The God That Failed [Hans-Hermann Hoppe]
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tkKblERRpKc&feature=channel

    The State whether it is being steered by the Left or the Right always creates corruption and the lowest type of character rises, the rich get to get richer.

  • RapidEddie RapidEddie

    10 Aug 2010, 9:28PM

    Since when have the Milibands, Balls and Burnham been on 'the left'? Centre-right and completely in agreement with the neoliberal consensus. They're not to going to raise their voices if they agree with much that the coalition's doing. Not that they're shouting about that too loudly, either.

    Notable figures on the actual left, such as Tony Benn, are organizing action with groups largely outside New Labour. If you're looking for an alternative to present policies, look outside of New Labour.

    When Call-Me-David Miliband takes the reigns, it will be another 10 years of soft-right horseshit from New Labour, dressed-up as 'progressive' by themselves and The Guardian.

  • therealsalparadise therealsalparadise

    10 Aug 2010, 9:28PM

    Labour are silent because these are basically the policies they would have followed themselves. Just take a look at who the leadership candidates are.
    The two Milibands and Balls followed by the other two.
    All fully paid-up NuLabour apparatchiks, who carried through policies that Thatcher herself would never have gotten away with.

    The poor, the infirm, the sick and the old are the new kicking boys for an Oxbridge/Westminster elite of all parties, whose only interest is enriching themselves, their respective cronies and hanger-ons.

    Get out of this shit-hole of a country while you can.

  • IsabellaMcC IsabellaMcC

    10 Aug 2010, 9:30PM

    I'm sorry Simon but aren't you pleased this is happening?
    I mean, this paper did everything they could to present labour as useless why start looking for thir opinion now?
    I think labour should take a leaf out of Dave's book and just criticise everything the con-dems do, don't say what they would do, then the media will lap it up like they did for the tories.

  • picklederics picklederics

    10 Aug 2010, 9:30PM

    How the hell can you blame Labour for what the Tories are doing? Mindless, indoctrinated, media hypnotism is all I can see as an excuse for thinking like that.The Tories seem to have mesmerised an otherwise nation of free thinkers.

  • oldefarte oldefarte

    10 Aug 2010, 9:31PM

    What a piece of Tory nonsense this article is. I really could write a lot but i cannot be bothered. Let us just refer to the following extract:
    'Today he questioned the £5.2bn being ripped off the taxpayer by benefit and tax credit waste and fraud'.
    First of all I believe that only £1.5 billion of this is due to fraud. Now the government could do a lot to reduce the deficit if it sought to deal with the real parasites by dealing with the £30 billion plus a year it loses through tax avoidance and the billions it loses a year through tax evasion. Instead staff at HMRC are being seriously cut. How often have people on here had work done for cash when they knew that the tradesman was only offering such good terms because the transaction would not be recorded. Conniving at the evasion of tax is a legal offence.

  • CJUnderwood CJUnderwood

    10 Aug 2010, 9:31PM

    There is no British Left! Or rather what little of it remains has been reduced to a rag-tag band of ivory tower intellectuals and middle class students who think socialism is a cool way to seem "different."

    Any possible leaders are too busy squabbling over the finer points of ideology and the definitions of technical terms to see that every decade that passes makes them increasingly irrelevant.

    They're too concerned with how their agenda chimes in with polite sentiment and political correctness to understand that the people don't need political handouts, they need political heroes.

    They would rather court the "liberal" media to gain the approval of journalists and commentators than engage in a programme of active and dynamic reform that would see them become a force to be reckoned with.

    Until the day that all petty factionalism, back-biting and in-fighting is put aside the Left will continue to be marginalised and mocked. Until that day the Left deserve everything they get, and so do we.

  • machel machel

    10 Aug 2010, 9:32PM

    .

    Simon, if you seriously think that the Labour party has got anything to do with "the left ", you yourself are dozing on planet 1945.

    Too true. The 'Labour' Party is a disgrace - the leadership candidates dire. The Left has trouble getting its message across, especially when journalists like Jenkins deliberately try to confuse the Left with the Labour Party.

    And whats this load of sh*te:

    These three classic realms of welfare – housing, health and social transfers – were protected by Thatcher, Blair and their followers.

    You're having a laugh aren't you?

  • heverale heverale

    10 Aug 2010, 9:34PM

    Coalition "radicalism" is basically just sayng "Fuck it."

    Obesity problem? Fuck it. Lets sack the nutritional experts and make it worse.

    No jobs? Fuck it. Lets throw more on the dole anyway.

    Unemployment will make the deficit climb again eventually? Like under Thatch? Fuck it. Lets have more unemployment anyway.

    Free Schools don't really work? Fuck it. Lets spend more on them anyway.

    A lack of affordable housing? Fuck it.

    Manufacturing in decline? Fuck it. Don't give any assistance the way the Americans have saved their car industry.

    Banks not lending? Fuck it.

    Not that NuLab were exactly brilliant. We have a generation of politicians basically giving the nation the big fuck off.

  • theredsparrow theredsparrow

    10 Aug 2010, 9:37PM

    Not a great article from Simon.

    As the opposition, you are always in a tricky position at the beginning and can't diss the men (in this case) in charge and there is of course a leadership contest.
    I wouldn't anticipate things really kicking off until the Party conferences and then October 20 and the CSR announcements.

    I'm also not sure how much it is a fantasy/delusion of Cameron's own making that he is radically changing our relationship with society, unless you are of talking about the fictional army of volunteers all eager to make us hot sweet teas while we chew over our neighbourhood plans without headbutting our neighbours or Cameron.

  • teaandchocolate teaandchocolate

    10 Aug 2010, 9:37PM

    Actually this is the fault of the multi-national warlords.

    People like Murdoch, Wal-mart and the rest have made the west reliant on luxuries and commercialism.

    The nature and culture of the this country is now more like America than the social-democratic long-suffering post-war Brits who decided enough was enough.

    Something will emerge from this right-wing bubble and something tells me we won't like it very much.

    So yes, the left may be stewing, but it aint dead.

  • mikeeverest mikeeverest

    10 Aug 2010, 9:37PM

    Simon,

    NuLab weren't Labour. Surely everyone understands that by now? Blair, Mandelson, Campbell and the other middle-class careerist entryists killed Labour deliberately to create a beast they could ride. Bumblers like Prescott let them.

    Listening to pundits talk as if the Labour of 1945 and the rump of NuLab inhabiting the gutted and derelict ancestral home have anything in common is astonishing.

    Forget Labour, it's just a label.

    The question to be asking is can anything be born of the shame and humiliation in which the left drowned when it allowed pretty boy Blair to claim what the narcissist clearly believed was his rightful place in the sun?

  • MuzzydeMontfort MuzzydeMontfort

    10 Aug 2010, 9:39PM

    I thought the point of the article is that "the left" (whatever precisely that means in the context of British politics) needs to come up with some new ideas regarding the problems we're facing as a country.

    At the moment there is certainly nothing "progressive" or "radical" coming from Labour politicians or their supporters in the media (and I don't mean in the sense of not being truly socialist, as socialism is hardly automatically "progressive" or "radical", if those words have any meaning in English at all), they're just banging on about how horrendous and evil the Tory cuts are, and clinging to an ideology regarding the role of the state that probably isn't viable any longer. This is surely fair comment and isn't necessarily an attack on those who hold left-wing views generally.

  • cybernet cybernet

    10 Aug 2010, 9:41PM

    Thank you Simon, I was starting to get that urge in the morning again but you've cured it. Still, that Pound a day I used to pay for The Guardian is being well spent - I got an 18-pack of Velvet loo roll with it last week!

    Twenty years of buying the same paper ended in one "liberal moment". Any chance of a refund?

  • localgirl localgirl

    10 Aug 2010, 9:44PM

    Simon Jenkins
    "The coalition is seeking to redefine the individual's relationship with the state"

    No it's not..it's seeking to return it to the awful, unequal, divisive, disastrous relationship of the early 19th century where the poor the sick the voiceless and the vulnerable were left to fend for themselves. There is nothing new in this Tory/Whig colation.
    You may be happy with this but when the full horror of this starts taking shape next year you may want to reconsider.

  • Zarahustra Zarahustra

    10 Aug 2010, 9:45PM

    Why do we not get an opinion piece here at the CiF about how bad the State is at providing any service or good? The inherent inefficiency, the corruption, the lack of knowledge, the red tape and the waste? It is obvious to anyone who has had any dealings with any government agency, any political party which reduces the State is doing a good thing. Individualism is better than collectivism, taxation is theft.

  • klang klang

    10 Aug 2010, 9:47PM

    We need the left more than ever.

    A popular distrust of business and politicians could, just could, result in fascism.

    And things are about to get very interesting.

  • robbo100 robbo100

    10 Aug 2010, 9:48PM

    Simon Jenkins

    To do Nick Clegg and his Lib Dems justice, they have at least engaged.

    Yeah, by propping up a Tory government. Perhaps in your view Labour should do the same seeing as you don't think they should oppose what the Tories are doing. But then again you are a Tory.

  • 1nn1t 1nn1t

    10 Aug 2010, 9:50PM

    http://www.thefreedictionary.com/radical

    rad·i·cal (rd-kl)
    adj.
    1. Arising from or going to a root or source; basic: proposed a radical solution to the problem.
    2. Departing markedly from the usual or customary; extreme: radical opinions on education.
    3. Favoring or effecting fundamental or revolutionary changes in current practices, conditions, or institutions: radical political views.
    4. Linguistics Of or being a root: a radical form.
    5. Botany Arising from the root or its crown: radical leaves.
    6. Slang Excellent; wonderful.
    n.
    1. One who advocates fundamental or revolutionary changes in current practices, conditions, or institutions: radicals seeking to overthrow the social order.
    2. Mathematics The root of a quantity as indicated by the radical sign.
    3. Symbol R An atom or a group of atoms with at least one unpaired electron.
    4. Linguistics See root1.

    Just as the post-war Labour government made a number of radical changes in British society in directions which they regarded as "progressive" so, now, is the Coalition government making radical changes in directions which it regards as "progressive". As SJ points out, there's not even a squeak of articulate opposition.

  • jeremyjames jeremyjames

    10 Aug 2010, 9:50PM

    @ Wotever 9.23 pm

    I blame Labour for everything Cameron is doing.
    Nulabour set the scene for the Tories destruction of every value the working classes stood for. with 13 years of inaction, cowardliness and betrayal .

    Precisely.

    Thatcher said she was going to destroy Labour. She has, although perhaps not quite in the way intended.

    So Labour is a disgrace.

    Those still yapping around the 'imploding coalition' would do more good by coming up with one - just one - idea about what Labour might sensibly do both now and in the way of creating a programme.

    I don't know which is less edifying; Blimps braying about the work shy or Sparts bleating about the coalition.

    They make Labour not just a disgrace but pitiful.

    The much lamented Tony Judt despised them both equally.

  • donalpain donalpain

    10 Aug 2010, 9:50PM

    The coalition is seeking to redefine the individual's relationship with the state.

    And the way it is going about it is to redefine the state's relationship with the individual - which is a tad more worrying because there's no sign of much humble pie on the Westminster menu.

  • Parvulesco Parvulesco

    10 Aug 2010, 9:53PM

    I think labour should take a leaf out of Dave's book and just criticise everything the con-dems do, don't say what they would do, then the media will lap it up like they did for the tories.

    No they won't.

    11 out of 12 mainstream national daily newspapers worship this coalition, make no mistake, the British bourgeoisie are, for obvious reasons, glorying in this class war.

  • heverale heverale

    10 Aug 2010, 9:53PM

    Zarahustra
    10 Aug 2010, 9:45PM

    Why do we not get an opinion piece here at the CiF about how bad the State is at providing any service or good?

    Because it is arrant nonsense, that's why.

    It took public funding to eradicate mass illiteracy. Because if you are illiterate, you are unlikely to be able to afford private education.

    That's why private education never eradicated mass illiteracy.

    Public funding gave us universal healthcare, unlike the American mess they are still trying to repair.

    There are lots of things that are hard to solve, hence public funding is not always effective and needs refining over time.

    But that's a lot better than just saying sod it and going back to the nineteenth century.

  • jeremyjames jeremyjames

    10 Aug 2010, 9:53PM

    @ Wotever 9.23 pm

    I blame Labour for everything Cameron is doing.
    Nulabour set the scene for the Tories destruction of every value the working classes stood for. with 13 years of inaction, cowardliness and betrayal .

    Precisely.

    Thatcher said she was going to destroy Labour. She has, although perhaps not quite in the way intended.

    So Labour is a disgrace. Those still yapping around the 'imploding coalition' would do more good by coming up with just one - only one - idea about what Labour might sensibly do both now and in the way of creating a programme.

    I don't know which is less edifying; Blimps braying about the work shy or Sparts bleating about the coalition.

    They make Labour not just a disgrace but pitiful.

    The late lamented Tony Judt despised them both equally.

  • deldranium deldranium

    10 Aug 2010, 9:55PM

    Right wing nonsensense
    Right wing leanings
    Right wing Right wing
    Lies from the Right
    Right wing in allegiance with the far right in Europe
    Rhetoric of the Right
    Right wing Uturns
    Lies from the Right
    Right wing to be winged soon enough
    Right wing to be swept aside, with their traitorous Allies
    Right wing to feel their very foundations shake
    A BROAD COALITION OF THE LEFT TO REPLACE
    THE TORY REGIME AND IT'S FRIENDS
    Right wing to be smashed
    Right wing to feel like it's VICTIMS
    Right wing to be out , commonsense concensus politics to return
    LIes from the right to be dismissed and replaced with Facts.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Liberty53000 Liberty53000

    10 Aug 2010, 9:55PM

    The title should read 'As Cameron gets real, the left dozes on planet delusional'

    In every sense of the term Labour lived beyond their means. Which would have been tolerable if we had got something in return. But we didn't. Education standards declined, inequality rose, the immigration system was entirely abused, and we got landed with two wars.

    Labour did not turn us into Sweden but they did leave us with an astronomical mess instead. They're not in power for a reason.

  • Anax Anax

    10 Aug 2010, 9:56PM

    Contributor Contributor

    Very good article. Cameron's suggestion to ration future council house tenancies is a perfectly rational response to a critical shortage, no different from what we'd have to do if there was a devastating shortage of food or medicine. The flimsy communitarian arguments raised against it, by people who usually argue for fair distribution of scarce resources, are a microcosm of the Left's tendency to drift into identity politics, and away from hard-nosed materialism.

    A more sensible approach would be to agree with Cameron, and follow his logic to suggest a raid on corporate landbanks and second homes, taxing them out of existence. The Tories would have a tough time defending themselves from a concerted attack along these lines. But now they can point to the misallocation of council houses to the lifetime lucky over the presently needy, and present any attempt to limit private hoarding of land as class warfare. Yet another example of the Left neutering itself with communitarianism.

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