I started
this post with every intention of analysing the deep gloom which has descended on
“progressives” not just this year but since it became clear that neoliberalism
– far from dying since 2008 - seemed to be enjoying a second coming. I discovered, however, that this required a bit of a diversion into the issue of political labelling.....so bear with me....
Despite my 20 odd years’ experience as an
elected politician, I have never been happy with political labels…..from the
very beginning (in the late 60s) I could see how my (older) Labour colleagues were closer to
officials than to their constituents. And the sympathy I quickly developed for
community development also gave me a slightly anarchistic approach in matters of political ideology.
I was lucky,
of course, to be able to occupy a senior role at an early age - slipping into
position after the Labour party locally had experienced a few years of
electoral defeats - and had the luxury, after the first few elections, of
knowing that my party had a fairly impregnable grip on power on the massive new
Strathclyde Region which had been set up in 1973/74.
I’ve been
out of politics for the past 25 years - and out of sympathy with British (and
European) political parties for the past 15 of these. It was George Monbiot’s Captive
State (2000) which first alerted me to the scale of the corporate takeover
of the British state – which has intensified globally since then…..
Four separate issues arise from this -
- First, do the editors not realise that use of
such a label for one (only) of the articles is effectively an invitation to
their readers to ignore it or treat it with suspicion? What does this say about
freedom of expression?
- Second, criticism of the logic and effects of
“neo-liberalism” has come from a great variety of quarters – not least
the ordo-liberalism which
has been the backbone of the post-war German economy.
- Third, it has been recognised for a long time
that the left-right labelling makes little sense. Wikipedia has an excellent briefing on
this. And I recommend people do their own test on the political compass
website - which uses two (not one) dimensions to try to situate people
politically.
Finally, there is the issue of whether I deserve
the label which has been thrown at me – either from the article or from the
range of beliefs I actually hold. The references in my article are impeccably
mainstream academia (Colin Crouch; Henry Mintzberg) and a final section clearly
signals that I have no truck with statism.
All my political life I have supported community
enterprise and been opposed to state ambitions and the “evil” it brings in, for
example, the adulterated Romanian form. My business card describes me as an
“explorer” – which refers not so much to the nomadic nature of my life in the last
20 years as the open nature of my search for both a satisfactory explanation of
how societies and economies work; with what results; and the nature of relevant
mechanisms for adjusting what societies judge (through democratic processes) to
be unacceptable trends.
I readily admit to having been attracted in my
youth to the British New Left’s analysis of British inequality in the late
1950s - but I was profoundly influenced at University by people such as Karl
Popper and his The
Open Society and its Enemies, Schumpeter (his Capitalism, Socialism
and Democracy and Ralf Dahrendorf; and, at a more practical level,
by Andrew Shonfield and Tony Crosland who were also writing
then about the benefits of the “mixed economy”. More recently I have generally been a fan of the
writings of Will Hutton (whose stakeholder analysis of UK society was
disdained by Tony Bliar on becoming PM).
As an academic I was influenced by the
critical analysis of UK and US political scientists in the 1970s which went
variously under the terms “Limits of the State” or “problems of implementation”
and the softer end of the “public choice school” of institutional
economics. But, unusually, the anarchistic/libertarian sweep
of Ivan Illich and Paulo Freire also got to me in the 1970s
(which is why I am (unusually) located in the south west quadrant of the
political compass).
I therefore not only disdained the injunctions of the
dominant left and right extremes of British politics of the 1980s but, as an
influential Scottish regional politician, used my role to create more open
processes of policy-making. Indeed community activists and opposition
politicians were more important partners for me than members of my own party. I held on to my leading political position on the
huge Regional Council simply because I belonged to neither the left or right
factions amongst my colleagues but was their natural second choice! The
definitions I give in my
Sceptic's Glossary reveal the maverick me.
It is "big business" and its abuses of power I have always been hostile to.........
The next post's analysis of the "apocalyptic" turn which progressive comments have taken in recent months and years should be read in this light......