One
of the great questions of the 2015 Election is how did Labour manage to lose it
so badly? An article on the LSE web site
deals with this among others quite simply and clearly. It is by Patrick Dunleavy, Chair of the LSE
Public Policy Group and Head of Democratic Audit.
It is here and is based
on the thesis that if Cameron sticks to his promise not to contest the 2020
Election then in effect he has three years more to go. What will then matter is proper succession
planning for a clear handover.
He
describes the Liberal Democrat manifesto as the shortest suicide note in
history if only because it was lacking in so many ways. As
for Labour, it seems to be much their own fault because they simply have not
learned and are unlikely to learn the lessons of recent history.
Quote:
The
Bourbon Labour elite
It
was said of the late Bourbon
dynasty monarchs in France that despite living through the French revolutionary
and Bonapartist periods, they
had “learnt nothing and forgotten nothing”. This seems an apt characterization
for a Labour party
leadership that has had more than two decades to face up to inevitability
of constitutional
change in the UK, and
repeatedly refused to do so (outside a
brief period from 1997 to 1999).
A
whole generation now of political analysts and reformers have pointed out to
Labour that the first past
the post voting system becomes incredibly unstable in any multi-party context,
and your best bet is to change to proportional representation before you get
overtaken.
The wipe out of Labour’s
Scottish MPs proves the
point in dramatic fashion, and it will now be very hard
for the party to undo. Scotland was long a ‘dominant
party system’ for Labour, but now looks like
it has become one for the
SNP.
Similarly
I have lost count of the times that Labour leaders have nodded sceptically
through the arguments that devolution for Scotland and Wales alone was
unstable; that a written constitution is needed to restabilize the UK; that House of Lords
reform was a century overdue; that the only way for Labour to win was to have
genuinely popular leaders and
reasonably distinctive
policies; and that the party
needed a far
healthier relationship with its supporters.
Yes,
yes, the nodding Labour elites have said. But voters care little for such
things – it’s the ‘bread and
butter’ issues of the economy and
the NHS that matter, not political and constitutional reform.
Ed Miliband’s whole
leadership style was premised on the tactical
exploitation of this and that issue, on
scraping back to power in a multi-party world without ever trying to resolve
the larger issues or achieve genuinely popular policies that might compromise a future Labour government’s
grip on the levers of power.
Even
in the post-referendum dealings with Scotland, Labour’s devo-max
proposals were always as few and as mean little concessions
as possible.
And
yet what in the end kept Labour’s growth in 2015 votes to a dismal
1.5 per cent, despite Cameron’s economic policies and the erosion of the NHS?
Overwhelmingly it was the collapse of the Liberal Democrats to the Tories and
to UKIP (foreseeable
under FPTP), and a late ‘safety first’ reaction against the potential ungovernability that Labour's cumulative constitutional
inaction has now induced.
The set of issues
so ‘unimportant
on the doorstep’ proved very
important indeed for voters in the polling booths. Even when Miliband goes though, it is
not yet clear that any potential successor has really escaped the mindset of Labour’s
last fifteen years.
Unquote.
So
who succeeds Ed Miliband?
My
nine bob note is on Sadiq Khan or Chuka Umunna if only because Andy Burnham has
form when dealing with the NHS and is an Everton fan. Tristram Hunt of Kings College Cambridge also
has hostages to fortune. Yvette Cooper
is a light weight who has lost her ballast.
They could try Neil Kinnock again.
ReplyDeletethey could go very green
ReplyDeleteThat’s Labour’s problem. They don’t have anyone with stature or enough character to lead their party.
ReplyDelete