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LabourList: Socialism – it’s nothing personal

with 5 comments

This post originally appeared on LabourList

I’m almost feeling sorry for Fred the Shred. ‘Humbling of Mister Godwin’, mocked the Daily Mail; ‘Goodwin is shredded’ (geddit?) bellowed the Daily Telegraph; ‘Once A Knight Fred’, echoed the Sun, a newspaper always keen to win the most imaginative pun stakes.

It’s more than tempting for the left to jump on this populist bandwagon. After seething with anger as those who had nothing to do with the crisis have been expected to pay for it, finally, one of the those responsible for the current catastrophe has been held to account in some small way.

But this is where the left should have a different approach to the right. The crisis was not caused by a few “bad eggs”; the odd greedy banker who can be treated as a fall guy, and then we can all move on. It was a system – not a few individuals – which plunged the world into economic catastrophe. This is a crisis of unfettered capitalism, red in tooth and claw, not the unfortunate consequences of some cock-ups by the likes of Fred Goodwin. We forget this at our peril.

I’ll give you an example: James Dyson, a businessman who gave his name to the pioneering vacuum cleaner. He was once hailed as leading a renaissance in British manufacturing, until he shut his British factory down and upped sticks to Malaysia in 2003. It’s not because he’s a bad person, or morally questionable: it’s because capitalism is about making profit, rather than putting the good of society first.

In short, a good slogan could be: “Socialism, it’s nothing personal.” The left stands in opposition to the way society is currently structured, not to the fact there are greedy or selfish individuals running the show.

Apologies for quoting myself, but in the introduction of my book Chavs I wrote: “We are all prisoners of our class, but that does not mean we have to be prisoners of our class prejudices.” I could be accused of hypocrisy here: after all, like others, I’ve railed against the fact that we currently have a government of multi-millionaires, and the fact that Parliament is full of middle-class professionals. That’s not to say the well-heeled have no place in politics whatsoever: but unless working-class people are properly represented, their interests will not be properly championed (as indeed they’re not). When I asked Hazel Blears why New Labour had let 5 million people languish on social housing waiting lists, for example, one reason she gave was that there simply hadn’t been anyone sufficiently interested in housing. Yet if there were people in Parliament who’d actually experienced the housing crisis, the odds of something being done about it would dramatically increase.

It should be how we understand politics, too. Some on the left offer a lazy critique of New Labour, effectively arguing that the Labour leadership swung to the right in the mid-1990s because a coterie of right-wingers (led by Tony Blair) made it that way. But New Labour was really the product of a whole range of factors: the rise of the New Right, the battering of the labour movement in the 80s, repeated electoral defeats producing massive disorientation and desperation, and the capitalist triumphalism that followed the end of the Cold War.

It’s easy, too, to castigate Ed Miliband personally for the concessions the Labour leadership has made to the Tory cuts agenda. But, again, it is in large part a product of the weakness of the left (which barely exists as a coherent political force).

That doesn’t mean individuals should not be beyond criticism: after all, we’re not all robots – we all have agency. Attacking a politician for hypocrisy is completely legitimate. For example, I wrote a pretty blistering attack on Liam Byrne on LabourList back in January. But it was a political, rather than a personal point: if you demonise some of the poorest people in society who receive money from the state while wrongfully claiming far larger sums yourself, then you should expect to face accusations of hypocrisy.

But because the right believe that the left is motivated by personal hatred towards those from privileged backgrounds, there’s nothing they like more than going for “posh” lefties. If you’re from a middle-class background or above and have anything other than a commitment to naked self-interest, then you’re a hypocrite, or so this line of attack goes.

Sometimes this is taken to absurd lengths. For example, one senior right-wing journalist attempted to pressure his fellow columnists to write a piece about the fact my ex-boyfriend was privately educated. I don’t mind right-wingers taking pot-shots at me – it’s what I expect – though I do object to others being dragged into it; at the time, I had to explain to him that he might be about to be publicly outed while he was being treated for cancer. Unpleasant, but the point that the journalist was trying to make was – “oh look, here’s a left-wing journalist who rages against privilege, but look who he’s sleeping with”.

My whinge aside, there’s always been a long tradition of people from relatively privileged backgrounds in the ranks of the left, such as George Orwell and Tony Benn, for example. And as long as they don’t crowd others out, and make sure they defer to working-class experiences, then there’s nothing wrong with it.

Above all, the left’s beef is with a system that is as unjust as it is irrational. Taking pot shots at the odd banker, or those who had no say over which school they went to, misses the point. After all, socialism is nothing personal.

Written by Owen Jones

February 2, 2012 at 12:27 pm

5 Responses

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  1. Mr Jones, I think you fail to see the way the world is turning.
    The whole world has been socialist since the mid 80s.
    This is not a political issue, rather it is one of natural evolution. Evolution will force the world away from socialism, it already is doing so, just look at Greece.

    Look around, the whole world is deeply in debt. Goverments cannot afford their liabilities. People cannot afford their debts. The whole world must deleverage.
    You may try to blame the problem on rampant capitalism, but ask yourself why a republican in the US, and a labour government in the UK did the same thing? There is no longer any real difference between left and right, every nation is now communist, statist, call it what you like.

    Sadly, history shows that statism never creates real prosperity, it just causes malinvestment.

    We now will inexorably move to smaller government, lower standards of living, and a long long depression, until the debts are cleared and the world can start again. You talk about the UK ‘needing demand’, but you fail to see that our current level of living standards, wealth, everything is built out of thin air, it’s all debt, it will all crumble.

    I am from a working-class background, council house family, but I have opened my eyes and can see where we are heading.

    You will become irrelevant very quickly, as there are only two ways the UK can go. I suspect Labour might win the next election, as the electorate (perhaps like you) does not like to confront reality and pain, and so will vote for yet higher debts, but that will quickly lead to a collapse in our currency, and that is game over, reality biting.

    At this point in time, if you read this comment, you may feel angry and ignore this, but you will see. All, yes all politicians are lying to us, they all know where this ends, but they dare not tell us, it would cause havoc.

    But we’ll get there anyway.

    Try to move away from left v right, we are all left now. Try to position yourself on the side of reality, there is a big gap there.

    superfurry

    February 16, 2012 at 11:31 pm

  2. Your research is shallow and poor. This is because as a Leftie all you see is bitterness towards those that create jobs and wealth in this country which is used to support the poor.

    If you did only a basic amount of research you will have easily have learnt that Dyson were refused planning permission to expand their production facilities, by yes you guessed it a Labour council.

    I think my point just goes to show that before spouting your bile you should really get a grip of reality.

    Steve Smith

    February 17, 2012 at 8:17 am

  3. But of course when you now talk about the left in Labour your not talking about many, most are now new labour or middle of the road, which means actually you read the daily Mail comment section and decide this is what the country thinks.

    Fred Goodwin was a made man under a labour government we had minister who actually thought it proved Britain was booming because of this bonus culture.

    We hear that David Miliband is making hundreds of Thousands of pounds but having it paid off shore to stop him having to pay tax.

    The left is not a minority which it has been for a long long time.

    I’m now called a Tory for attacking Miliband for being what we called in my day a bloody wet, have no idea of his own by will listen to anyone and everyone else.

    Labour had thirteen years in which the poorest got poorer under Blair the rich took off, and now we have the Tories.

    Me I rather not bother any more, I go off the bus

    Robert

    February 17, 2012 at 11:38 am

  4. Owen- interesting read. Just wondered what you mean by “defer to working class experience”? Are you saying there are some issues which John Prescott is better qualified to talk about because he came from a working class background?

    John

    February 23, 2012 at 11:54 pm

  5. “It’s not because he’s a bad person, or morally questionable: it’s because capitalism is about making profit, rather than putting the good of society first.”

    Profit is only made when the wants of consumers (i.e. “society”) are fulfilled.

    “The left stands in opposition to the way society is currently structured, not to the fact there are greedy or selfish individuals running the show.”

    Don’t you think it is selfish to want to control the lives of other people?

    rondaldo

    March 27, 2012 at 7:54 pm


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