I do understand that many readers dislike wading through chunks of text and like to get to the “bottom line”. That’s why, a couple of years ago, I started these famous TABLES - which try to extract the core messages from a dozen or so books. Today’s post starts positively – moves into more critical vein but ends with extolling a book which seems to strike all the notes this child of the 60s has been desperately looking for
The last post ended with an excerpt from Jacobin’s review of Thomas Pikety’s “Time for
Socialism” which had me returning to the future of the British and, indeed, European Left
- on which so many anguished columns have been devoted in recent decades.
This article from 2013 I found very thought-provoking Labour – left and right; party positioning and policy reasoning
- in that it made me realise that we needed to explore the links between different levels -
the working class/precariat – whose interests left-wing parties are supposed to further
parliamentary representatives – who have to balance considerations of feasibility, legitimacy and support
party programmes – which need to appeal to the floating voter
public perceptions – very profoundly affected by mainstream media (controlled by corporate power)
Liam
Byrne (a
Labour MP) has an article in (Political
Quarterly - a famous Social Democrat journal establised a century
ago) which, in so many ways, indicates the impotence of the breed.
His piece -
repudiates
nationalisation
prioritises
educational opportunity
and
aspiration
wants
more punitive welfarism
supports
(ill-defined) “de-inflationary measures”
and
continues -
The
conservative response to the pandemic was in many ways extraordinary,
but confined within the bounds of what was deemed acceptable in the
post-GFC fiscal and monetary framework. But, there is little
evidence that social democrats would have acted in a manner that was
drastically different.
Since
the end of the Third Way era, little
has been done by the party family to develop a new political
economy—a way of comprehending the
world and the possibilities for rupture—specific to the creed.
Social democrats have differentiated themselves by proposing specific
progressive policies, but when it comes to broader ideas about the
economic and political framework, they tend to replicate the core
tenets of the governing orthodoxy, formed as it is through the
institutional networks of power that shape established social
relations. But
more generally, the stark reality is that social
democratic politicians are often indistinguishable from
progressive technocrats
Centre-left
parties have sought to distinguish
themselves by their probity, loyalty to fiscal and monetary orthodoxy
and fidelity to correct parliamentary process. They have done so
while the ‘political centre of gravity [h]as shifted leftwards’,
with a greater general acceptance that higher rates of government
debt are acceptable if it is being used to create ‘the industries
and jobs of the future.’24
Social
democrats who pledged too far-reaching a vision of social
reform routinely found themselves disciplined by the merciless
mainstream media conglomerations, leading policy experts and the
markets themselves. Now, in a period of tightened economic and
fiscal constraints, jumpy markets and endemic low growth across the
developed world, social democrats have again raised adherence to the
orthodoxy to a principle. The bounds of the politically possible are
being policed not by their opponents, but by social democrats
themselves.
The
social democratic project needs to be more than the reallocation of budgetary
expenditures; it needs to be about the rebalancing of social power.
To do this, the creed must develop a consistent and coherent
alternative political economy—one that reflects the interests of a
social constituency of labouring people as they exist today. It is
insufficient to retrofit an economic agenda suited for a class
structure that existed forty years ago.
The
political cynicism that has become endemic in the neoliberal
era poses challenges for all democratic parties, but is particularly
potent for social democrats. Social democracy is the political force
of social transformation—albeit within constitutional and electoral
bounds. A generalised belief that democracy is failing, that
politicians constitute an alien and self-protecting class, and that
change is not possible—all rebound significantly on the left’s
political prospects.
The
challenge for social democracy is to utilise government to undercut
this disillusionment through practical and immediate changes that can
be identified in local communities and individual workplaces, but
which also compose a larger picture on social change for general
betterment. Through this, social democrats can create social
constituencies for their policies and construct long-term
governments. This is a transformative
project that can only be pursued with a coherent and distinctive
vision of the type of society the creed seeks to create, but one that
is perceived as realisable. As
British Labour discovered to its detriment in 2019, it is not
sufficient to present a bundle of
individually popular polices.
Somewhere
beyond both Jeremy Corbyn and Tony Blair there is a social democratic
means to comprehend the political economy of modern capitalism, and a
strategy to change it. The challenge is to find it.
And I think I’ve found it!! It’s by an Italian sociologist now living in London and it’s called
The Great Recoil Paolo Gerbaudo 2021
Recent Assessment of the Left
What’s Left of the Left – democrats and social democrats in challenging times ed James Cronin, George Ross, and James Shoch 2011
Endgame for the Centre-Left? Patrick Diamond 2016
The
Socialist Ideas of the British Left's Alternative Economic Strategy
Baris Tufekci
2020
The Great Recoil Paolo Gerbaudo 2021
Toward a Social Democracy Century? ed K Hofman de Moura, A Skrzypek, R Wilson 2022