Ed Balls
want us to go retrospective, back to the Summer of 1945 he cries, what a
wonderful time to be alive! Or dead,
perhaps, an estimate at the time put the figures of at 55 million dead amongst
the victorious and the defeated. Now
some think it could be a lot more.
He is
thinking of August 20th, 1945 when the House of Commons met for the
first time since the July elections, which returned the Labour Party with a
large majority to change the nation decisively from the past.
They began
the proceedings during the election of the Speaker by roaring out “The Red
Flag”, only for him, Colonel Clifton Brown, to observe later, “I wondered
whether I was going to be Speaker or Director of a musical show.” He was more right than he thought because
things had already begun to go out of tune.
Only a few
days before at the end of July at the Conference at Potsdam the Allies had already begun to fall
out. By May 1946 Churchill was claiming
that an Iron Curtain had been slammed down against The West. Relationships with the Soviet
Union began to worsen, despite all its friends on the Labour
benches.
Between
then and 20th August, both Hiroshima
and Nagasaki in Japan
had been Atom bombed and reduced to rubble with Japan surrendering a few days
later. However, some Japanese forces
literally did not get the message and fighting continued sporadically in some
places.
By August
24th we learned that the Bright New Socialist World was not quite so
bright. Mr. Attlee told the House of
Commons that there would have to be major cuts in the imports of food, cotton,
tobacco and petrol. Goods produced for
home consumption would have to go for export.
Also Whitehall needed a new credit deal from the USA . But this was not easily forthcoming. There were strings attached, such as goodbye
British Empire and hello the International Monetary Fund and International Bank
run by the USA . As a large scale debtor nation we no longer
called the tune, we danced to it.
Back home
by 1946 there would be one million man returning to civilian life and cities
either in ruins or with worn out roads, services, utilities, railways, mines
and factories. What was to be done with
them all and how could they be found work?
Help For Heroes is difficult enough for a few thousand, but over a million?
Also, it
soon became apparent when the camps operated by the Japanese were found that
there was a major crisis, largely for military but also many civilians were
dying from disease and starvation. In
various ways this was occurring in Europe as
well as the full horrors emerged.
Within a
handful of weeks, Home Rule for India
was declared whilst the USA
and the Soviet Union partitioned Korea , leading to a full scale war
four years later. What was not known,
but emerged, was that some of Labour’s friends had passed on nuclear secrets to
the Soviet Union so that by October 1945
Stalin was ordering his first Atomic Bombs.
In the
following years Labour embarked on its command and control of the UK
Economy. The railways were nationalised,
leading to a lot of paint being used to rebrand the image, but railways
remained much the same. There was a good
deal of tinkering and a few new things but all in the same pattern. The critical issues were not tackled and key
decisions avoided.
Road
services were nationalised, assuming that they would always be an auxiliary set
of short distance services with some specialist functions. That went badly and the pilfering there was
worse than on the railways. Quite what
damage this did to distribution or to truck production is difficult to
estimate.
The miners
did have some benefits, but whilst many facilities were improved far less was
done for real efficiency in coal production, job protection was a
priority. The dockers on the other hand
were quick to show their displeasure at any suggestions of mechanised handling
or changed conditions by going on strike in the Autumn of 1945, despite the
severe shortages of food. The Army were
called in.
Everywhere
there were queues and we were all still in the queues for basics in 1950 and
for some things beyond. It is difficult
to explain some of the discomforts, but can you imagine having to wear a hand
knitted woollen pair of swimming trunks? Saving
was paramount, old newspapers wiped our rears, string was hoarded.
The
National Health Service was created.
Whilst initially it did tap a huge amount of unforeseen needs there were
neither the doctors nor the facilities to deal with them. Key drugs were scarce and effectively
rationed. It took a long while for the
new antibiotics to be available for common use.
If Balls
and the Labour Party seriously want to go back to 1945 they are entirely
welcome.
For those of us who have been
there before, please never again.
Your excellent review of Balls' 1945 sounds very much like 2010. Just sub Iraq, Afghanistan, economic collapse..................
ReplyDeleteIt's only ordinary people who will suffer. The Socialist leadership and their media apparatchiks will be just fine!
ReplyDeleteI wonder, why did I feel safer and actually have more freedom to roam than at any time since, in the War. Perhaps because it was much more apparent to me who the enemy were. I was lucky, all the neighbours were friendly, but we were bombed quite a lot and Dad was at sea most of the time. I feel quite a chill reading the recent items.
ReplyDelete