Search:

Last 3 Posts @ September 8, 2008 2:17:54 AM EDT

George Bush in lipstick (1 hour, 16 mins ago)

The Huffington Post has a funny piece about "George Bush in lipstick", a.k.a. Sarah Palin, complete with a series of pictures to demonstrate how Bush morphs into Palin...

The Alberta Spectator

The end of the neo-liberal project? (4 hrs, 51 mins ago)

Today’s news that the US’s two big mortgage lenders are effectively being nationalised would, if there any justice left around the place, be a final nail i...

The Bickerstaffe Record

Dion's moment (5 hrs, 2 mins ago)

Liberal leader Stéphane Dion has sent out this mass email this afternoon, titled "This Moment": This is the moment I've been waiting for. It's a critical moment for bo...

The Alberta Spectator

Friday, September 30, 2005

Tony Blair's apology - 7 comments

Update: It's back - the post that would not die. Deleted in a fit of pique on Friday afternoon, the BBC decided to link to it after its deletion, while it was still in Google's cache (or perhaps they bookmarked it). So I've decided to resurrect the post, even if it does make me look a prat - you'll see why.

I will add that whether they were Blair's words (which they weren't) or Oliver's, they're right on the money. The Labour Party isn't so desperate for activists it should just accept anyone with a desire for social justice. There has to be an acceptance that Labour's aims and policies are broadly right, or at least that where Labour are wrong, the argument can be won with peaceful debate. Some people with less than reputable pasts need to confront them before they can claim to be 'one of us' and expect our solidarity.

=========================================================

Oliver Kamm has the full text of Tony Blair's statement regarding the eviction of Walter Wolfgang from the Labour Party Conference, and it's really quite extraordinary. I found it difficult to believe Blair was capable of such a piece, but, in the absence of any other reports, I have to accept it is true. Take this final section:
The party that I lead played a noble role in establishing the post-war institutions and alliances that preserved collective security and eventually liberated Eastern Europe from tyranny. I am proud of the tradition of militant anti-Communism that my party has, at its best, embodied. That position is a prerequisite for a democratic party of the Left, in the same way, and for the same reason, that militant anti-fascism is. Walter Wolfgang has dedicated his political life to another cause. His ejection from the Labour Conference yesterday was a belated recognition of the party's failure to eject him from membership at any time in the previous five decades. For that failure, I apologise once more.
Contrast it with these, from the comments of BBC web site readers:
It must have felt for the 82-year-old chap quite frightening, and to imagine that he may well have experienced the same thing during his young years as a citizen in Nazi Germany. Has this not proven at long last the type of society we are living in and what remains for the future?
At this rate New Labour will simply abolish all other "dissenting" political parties, arrest those disagreeing for anti-state activities, and run the country for the benefit of the governing elite, much like East Germany, for example. Still glad you voted Labour?
For the first time I felt a little frightened about the way our politics is going. There is more than a hint of the Orwellian vision [?] creeping into this country.
Nice to see people have a clear idea what life must have been like under fascist/totalitarianism regimes.

Thursday, September 29, 2005

B4L meeting in Brighton - 2 comments

Thanks to everyone who made it to the B4L get-together last night, braving the wind and torrential rain that make the British seaside what it is!

I had a great time and I'm glad everyone else enjoyed it too. We all got on really well, exchanged gossip, and had interesting discussions on politics and the state of the blogosphere.

Other Andrew (aka. Skuds) turned out to have a far better camera than mine, so he became chief photographer and produced this little gem. It must have been well past 11, so you could say we were going strong. Jo also has photos (eek) so I'll link to those when she's posted them.



From left to right: Damian, Antonia, Jo, myself (trying not to smile), Tom, Jonathan, and Skuds behind the lens. Lovely bunch of people.

Damian missed his last train, but everyone seems to have made it home OK, public transport being what it is, and despite the deluge that hit us (one umbrella between seven isn't really practical). I managed to completely immerse one foot in a small, inland sea that had developed on Windlesham Road, but survived to tell the tale.

Given the success of last night, I guess we should try to do this again. It won't be quite so easy to get so many people in one place without the Conference in town (especially when it's 5 minutes from my home), but it's worth thinking about. Perhaps a blogging hotspot like London (or Oxford, for that matter) could be the base?

By the way, I do still have the little "B4L" sign I made (on the back of the Joan Armatrading postcard), but I've mislaid my own camera's USB cable and so can't get it on the computer right now.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Go to the pub - 2 comments

Last call for Brighton-residing Labour types to head up the road to the Bloggers4Labour Autumn get-together at 7.30 this evening!

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

Not again! - 2 comments

BBC: Veteran former Labour MP Tony Benn is said to be "comfortable" in hospital after falling ill at the party's annual conference in Brighton:
Mr Benn stepped down from Westminster in 2001. His illness is not understood to be life threatening but he is being kept in hospital overnight.

Mr Benn is reported to have fallen and banged his head at the conference centre.
Let's hope he's OK - we can't keep losing respected Labour politicians (whatever our differences). There are few enough characters in British Politics as it is (OK, there are some we could do without).

Monday, September 26, 2005

Brad Pitt and Hove again - no comments

The BBC are once again covering the Brad Pitt comes to Hove to help design some towers story that the Guardian (as did I, albeit wearing a different hat) picked up on back in May.



Here's another artist's mockup of the two towers - 21 and 25 storeys tall - that will abut an indoor leisure centre, complete with three swimming pools, surrounded by 754 flats, 40% of which will be "affordable" (we're told):

Its approximate location will be slap bang on top of this (below). Not the best view of it, I concede.

Naturally, there's opposition to the plan from local Tories, who made the issue central to their campaign back in Hove in May, and got thumped. It continues to this day, with yellow "NO TO HOVE TOWERS" posters appearing around the town.
Vanessa Brown, one of six Conservative councillors who voted against the project, claims the Labour group had been "dazzled" by the idea of having a Gehry building and had overlooked several flaws in the scheme.

I doubt if anyone could be so shallow as to think that repeatedly covering Brad Pitt-related stories is a shameless ploy to gain search-engine traffic, but if anyone is here because of a teenage affectation, here's Brad in person:

And here's his horoscope chart. What it says, in a nutshell, is that he'd be a perfect love-match and you really should keep sending those letters. And those photographs.

Who needs the Labour Party? - 1 comment

A slightly different take on the Labour Party democracy / engaging activists discussion from Stephen Pollard in his article, A party conference of one:
Nothing that happens at Labour Party conference now matters. So what if Blair's speech is a triumph or a damp squib? It matters neither more nor less than any other speech he makes. So what if the unions defeat the Government over employment rights or public service reform? The Government will simply ignore it.

The real triumph of the Blair Project is not its domestic policy record, which has been a failure. His lasting achievement has been to render irrelevant the views of the gathered hordes of Labour activists - views that kept the party out of power for nearly two decades. And he has done that by no more subtle or developed a means than that of simply deciding to.
And that, in just two stubby columns, is that. 300 words - not even a side of A4 (actually it was 299, but I'd feel bad if I cost him money).

There's a grain of truth in the point he makes in the second paragraph, but people who invest more of their time and brain capacity than churning out a short-sighted, blustering, and otiose rant for a site like The First Post (whose pockets appear deep, and their standards low), will have at least thought of, say, "political legitimacy", "accountability to those whom elected you", "the need for activists to spread your message", "loss of connection to the real world", and so on.

The belief that Labour Party members and delegates, however sentimental and wedded to the past some may be, are uniquely incapable of voting on - let alone developing - new, relevant, and popular policies is too ludicrous. Even if it was, wouldn't this incredible premise be worthy of future research?

What a waste of everyone's time.

Cheek - no comments



Must be that anti-Labour bias again.

Dead Socialist Watch - 1 comment

Virtual Stoa fans will no doubt be familiar with the Dead Socialist Watch series, in which the anniversary of the death of a famous socialist is marked. Well, commemorated in some cases, noted in others.

We've been kindly given access to the full list of names, and can make them available to you. It's not a definitive list: plenty of well-known socialists must surely be missing (please drop us a line or leave a comment to fill in the gaps!), people have their own interpretations on what constitutes a socialist, and the list does include some people who predate the socialist era, but who we think fit the bill.

Anyway, we've got two things to offer you: firstly, a "calendar" of all the socialists in our list, and secondly, little snippets of JavaScript that'll let you display the details of people whose anniversary is either today, or this week. There'll be links back to the original Virtual Stoa article in many cases, as well as links to the Wikipedia so you can find out more about the people.

We've got an example in the sidebar on the right (just below the list of bloggers). That's the "styled" version. If you know your CSS you can go for the "plain" version and style it yourself.

This is a member-only feature. If you've already got a username, or want to register (free, obviously), here's the login page.

Let me know if you have any new ideas, or think you can improve the appearance of what the script produces. I do intend to collect the details of as many socialists as possible and make sure they're included.

Friday, September 23, 2005

The limits of Government - no comments

Advert: Labour bloggers, click here for details of the Bloggers4Labour Autumn get-together in Brighton.

======================================================================

According to the BBC:
Jordan, K'tee, Kloe and Bobbi-Jo are all names to make some teachers' hearts sink, apparently.

Teachers have confessed to making snap judgements about children from their names on the register. [well, duh]

In a light-hearted debate on a teachers' website, they have listed the names they associate with problematic and charming pupils.

Poppys are seen as hyperactive, Kayleighs as a pain and Ryans as hard work, according to chat on the website of the Times Educational Supplement.
There's plenty Government can do to help children on the road to success, but if a vindictive parent has inflicted the name K'tee upon you, I'm afraid you're doomed.

Well, there is one way out ...

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

PledgeBank / Unseating MPs - 1 comment

Advert: Labour bloggers, click here for details of the Bloggers4Labour Autumn get-together in Brighton.

======================================================================

The Hove Labour blog, which I used to maintain but have sadly had to neglect, continues to receive occasional embittered or paranoid, anti-Labour/anti-Blair comments from people without the guts to leave their own name. However, the latest contribution is interesting.

It seems somebody named David Harris has started a pledge to unseat Hove and Portslade's MP, should she decide to vote for ID cards:
Celia Barlow, Labour MP for Hove, is in favour of ID cards. She also has a slim majority of 500 [actually, 420]. Hove voters have a key opportunity to protect civil liberties by getting rid of her if she refuses to listen to us. If Hove voters agree to vote tactically, probably for the Tory candidate, her sacking is achievable.
If she abstains or votes against ID cards then she can avoid this fate.
Only 3 people have so far signed up, but David has generously given himself an entire year to garner the remaining 497 pledges. Perhaps he won't need this long, for local legend, Chicken Yoghurt, is on the case, and he's far more persuasive than I.

Celia Barlow was elected just 18 weeks ago, backing - as her constituency party members intended her to do - a Labour manifesto that stated:
We will introduce ID cards, including biometric data like fingerprints, backed up by a national register and rolling out initially on a voluntary basis as people renew their passports.
What's changed? Why the new campaign? Many, if not all, of the pledgers must surely have opposed her back in May, given that the case for ID cards was already shaky at best, and we haven't seen hide nor hair of any positive arguments since (or indeed, ever). Can we be reassured that some of those backing the pledge will reconsider their vote if Celia Barlow herself decides to vote against?

The impact of this campaign must be limited, given that the issue was debated extensively before the last General Election and hasn't taken-off since, and that, in order to switch 210 Labour votes to a rival party, a huge number of Hove and Portslade voters will need to pick up on it.

I'm sure we'd all be happier if Labour MPs kicked ID cards into the long grass, but can this campaign make a difference?

Sunday, September 18, 2005

B4L Autumn Meetup Reminder - 2 comments

As I mentioned (blimey) three weeks ago, all Labour bloggers are invited to a get-together in Brighton, on the evening of Wednesday, 28th September, to coincide with the Labour Party Conference.

The venue will be The Earth and Stars, a local environmentally-focused pub, complete with organic beers, wines and spirits, and wireless internet.



It's only a couple of minutes walk from Brighton station - here's a map.

I don't know anything about the times of Conference events, but, for simplicity, let's meet up around 7.30. Feel free to drift in later, as fringe events or trains permit.

By the way, if anyone fancies taking photos, or blogging the proceedings (and has never seen the damage an entire pint of London Pride can do to a laptop), you're very welcome to.

Hope to see a lot of you there.

Update: Forgot to mention, it'll be upstairs.

Friday, September 16, 2005

Democratiya / LabOUR - 3 comments

Everyone's talking about Alan Johnson's new think tank / bi-monthly online review of books, Democratiya:
Democratiya aims to contribute to a renewal of the politics of democratic radicalism by providing a forum for serious analysis and debate. We will strive to be non-sectarian and ecumenical, and our pages are open to a wide range of political views, a commitment to pluralism reflected in our advisory editorial board.

Democratiya believes that in a radically changed world parts of the left have backed themselves into an incoherent and negativist 'anti-imperialist' corner, losing touch with long-held democratic, egalitarian and humane values. In some quarters, the complexity of the post-cold-war world, and of US foreign policy as it has developed since 9/11, has been reduced to another 'Great Contest'...
I do think the name is pretentious (in it's not "we're smarter than you" Classical Greek, but one of those 'international' words that several languages have latched onto [thanks, Chris]), but that's a trivial point.

There are already 6 academic articles/reviews, plus an editorial.

Finally, here's the home page of the LabOUR Commission, the organisation we mentioned a couple of days ago. It seems you can / will be able to submit evidence yourself:
The Commission invites all Labour Party stakeholders to register their interest in its work and submit any papers already prepared and submitted to Head office about Membership, the National Policy Forum, Partnership in Power and the 21st century party or contributions to the Big Conversation.

Word verification - no comments

Due to the number of inane spam comments left at Blogger blogs recently, many people have been turning on word verification to prevent these.

However, I'm keeping it turned off here. Some of the comments have been hilarious (who needs a comedian when you have a spammer with a poor command of English?), and I'm happy to spend the time deleting the odd stupid one that gets through.

Update (26/9): OK, I give up. Word verification is now on.

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Making Labour our party - 7 comments

Peter Kenyon, on behalf of the 'LabOUR Commission' has started a pledge to fund an investigation into the decline in Labour Party membership since 1997. Here's more about what they have in mind:
An independent commission of Labour Party members chaired by Michael Meacher MP, a prominent backbencher and former government minister, has been meeting since the General Election in May to inquire into why Labour has lost so many members [200,000 souls] since 1997, and more recently 4 million voters; and make recommendations.

As a first step a formidable academic team has agreed to undertake fresh research into Labour Party membership, and report on why Labour is finding it difficult to recruit and retain members when millions are willing, for example, to take to the streets in support of Make Poverty History campaigns and Stop the War.

Leading national polling organisations have submitted tenders to support this work. To do the job properly we need to raise £25,000 to pay for the first phase. This will focus on the aspirations of members past and present; both when they joined, during membership and if they are one of the 200,000 plus that have resigned since 1997, why they left and what Labour will have to change to encourage them to rejoin. We are also keen to find out more about the millions of politically active members of British society - men, women, young and old - who are NOT members of the Labour Party, but, given their interest in the world we all live in, ought to being targetted to join the Labour Party.
Bob Piper has also picked up on this, and a healthy 11 comments can be found on his article.

Bob pins some of the blame for the losses on 'luvvie-friendly' policies like foundation hospitals, PFI, and the scrapping of Clause IV. This may be true, though I'd rather the team avoided the temptation to jump on the anti-Blair bandwagon and bring the 'ideologically pure' (but hopeless) Labour Party of yore back from the dead. I didn't feel too optimistic after seeing this comment at the Pledgebank:
This represents a start in the rolling back of the black tide of 'monetarism.'
That's nearly 30 years back already. But I'm optimistic, and if the team can come up with something new and progressive, that's entirely to be welcomed.

The UK Today has plenty more information on the project, including information on how you can add on of those white banners to your site (Bob's site is sporting one already). Well I'm sure he won't mind if I spill the beans here...

For a banner on the left:

<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.theuktoday.co.uk/labourleft.js"></script>

For a banner on the right:


<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.theuktoday.co.uk/labourright.js"></script>

Finally, allow me to plug, once again, our earlier post on membership.

Three out of the seven comments are my own, but I do think some really good points were made, and we should try to advance beyong the hackneyed:
"members are vital; we depend upon our members"
... without at least asking if this is true, and also consider whether there's a purpose for Labour Party members that is "higher" than going to a meeting and helping a Government choose a policy. Is there something Labour members can do for society that doesn't depend upon us being in power, either nationally or locally?

Really hope there is the imagination to look further than we've looked in the past.

Shot by all sides - no comments

John Band's Shot by both sides is no more, and the main man has jumped ship to the Sharpener.

Update: David T at Harry's Place tells the full, shocking tale of what brought about the end of SBBS here - I'm sure we'll all sympathise with John's words:
For those of you who lied, twisted, cheated and bullied until the least worst choice available to me was to close the site, congratulations. You've won. I hope it was worth it. It would be ungracious of me to hope that bad things happen to you in return, so I'll merely take solace in my knowledge that you have to go through life having a personality like that... Good work, fellas.
Every post seems to have been hidden or zapped, but Google's cache has preserved them all for posterity.

Update 2: Lots of people are talking about this. Backword Dave has collected many of them here.

Yet more on Flat Tax, Economics, and Politics - 4 comments

Some more fairly recent articles from...
  • Bishop Hill on the BBC's alleged attempts to rubbish flat tax with a carefully selected example, and a Liberal Democrat proposal that's not half as radical as it seems. Meanwhile his list of pro-flat tax bloggers continues to grow.
  • Lee Gregory backs the "progressive" taxation consensus.
  • Panchromatica sees flat tax as part of a campaign against public expenditure and for big business.
  • Oliver Kamm, argues flat tax is a distraction and a potential political suicide pill for the Conservatives, and he answers Shadow Chancellor (if you credit it) George Osborne's retort here.
  • Stumbling and Mumbling present estimates from Spanish economists as to the impact of possible flat tax structures on Spain's economy, based upon a reasonable-looking economic model.
  • and grouping these together is this from Tim Worstall, who, while not adding an interpretation of his own, fancies Stumbling and Mumbling have Ollie beat on this one.
Meanwhile, Owen defends his left-of-centre "progressive flat tax" proposals from all comers - 25 comments and counting. Warning: some economics knowledge is required.

If anyone's still following this, I suppose I should try to reach some sort of conclusion by saying that, while I don't have an objection to a flat tax per se (being keen to shine a light on the so-called 'progressive taxation' consensus), the issue of tax flatness pales in comparison to the issue of what constitutes taxable income, and is heavily influenced by whether or not you believe in a smaller, or even a minimal state (which I don't).

Besides, is it fair to tax merely according to one's economic assets, blind to their non-economic ones (mental, cultural [did you pick up on this, folks?], or political), and the impact these have on the individual's overall "economic capability"? Capability - the ability to apply one's talents and resources for one's own economic advancement - is surely what the authorities ought to be watching/equalising/taxing, rather than merely one's income, let alone one's wealth.

Furthermore, if we work on the basis that easing the 'poverty trap' through the simplification of the benefits system is merely a case of removing exemptions and making the system less 'intelligent', we have a political decision, with a role for political reform measures. Alternative approaches, for example, the replacement of monetary benefits by payments-in-kind (e.g. funded job training, or paid medical treatment, as opposed to unemployment or disability benefits), while traditionally seen as more 'right-wing', could nonetheless alleviate the poverty trap, yet would remain political rather than market-led solutions - flat tax would not help us here.

Continuing the economics theme, and sticking with Owen, here are the results of a little experiment that casts doubts on whether economists really know the basics of their own subject: "Dismal economists don't understand opportunity cost"

Unfortunately I can't say for sure that I would have picked the right answer, for the simple reason that it's revealed at the end of the question, not printed upside-down at the bottom of the page. Bah.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Stevenage calling - 1 comment

Paul at Mars Hill is looking for help in the upcoming Shephall county council by-election in Stevenage, Herts., next Thursday, 15th September.

Shephall was, until recently, a three-out-of-three Labour area, but is under threat from the yellow peril. So, if you want to help:
... contact Brian Mitchell or Joe Sherry on 01438 222299, or via their email addresses: joseph@barbara-follett.org.uk or brian@barbara-follett.org.uk

I can personally add that the Stevenage CLP are a great bunch of people and you will be welcomed and appreciated for any contribution you make!
Stevenage may have a lot to answer for as a place, but inflicting Liberal Democrat councillors on its population would be going too far, so please find out if there's anything they need that you can do.

Update (19 Sept): Labour wins in Shephall.

Meanwhile, in Derbyshire (see comments), Labour wins in Whitfield, while the Conservatives win in Dinting. I'm not sure if that represents a change or not.

That other sport - no comments

When I think about the England football team, and its management, I can't help but remember the last few years of the John Major era: how bad does it have to get before we're put out of our misery? Change may be difficult, but, as with Major, the very presence of Eriksson's face on our screens saps hope and erodes morale. It's especially sad that the players feel they have to join in the damage-limitation exercise, and protect his own tarnished reputation.



Update:
Just noticed that Harry has also posted on this topic. He proposes Sam Allardyce as a replacement - seems like a good choice to me.

Shame to be talking about this at all, when the other England team seems to have the world at its feet (famous last words, mind you).

Wednesday, September 07, 2005

Labour: activism, democracy, MPs, and experts - 8 comments

I didn't get time to post this at the weekend, but hopefully people haven't got bored, or have moved their attention over to even weightier issues...

The deaths of Robin Cook and Mo Mowlam have focussed Paul Anderson's mind on the generation of Labour politicians from which both spring: their mortality, and who (if anyone) is following in their footsteps:
No fewer than 19 of the 23 members of the cabinet today are, like Cook and Mowlam, in their fifties, born in the first postwar decade, brought up on the welfare state and the Beatles and the Stones and that revolution stuff. Perhaps most importantly they were formed politically by the implosion of the Labour Party in the wake of the 1979 defeat by Margaret Thatcher.
And goes on to question whether the Party has.
... But parties need to rejuvenate themselves, and Labour is going to find it difficult to do it, just as the Tories have since the late 1980s. Most of the PLP is of the same generation as the cabinet. There has been little turnover of personnel in the past couple of elections, and there are few undiscovered stars. A handful of old-stager MPs might retire next time just as they did in 2001 and 2005. But the party in the country is hardly brimming with enthusiastic activists in their twenties and thirties:the replacements for retiring MPs are likely to be uninspiring apparatchiks, just as they have been for the past decade or more.
Spirit of 1976, writing for the Drink Soaked Trots, is less than optimistic:
I keep getting asked by my comrades what interests young people in politics... If I'm feeling honest, I generally reply that what they're interested in is what the Liberal Democrats have to say. Young, independent-minded, talented individuals just aren't getting involved with Labour politics ... My guess is that come the next election Labour's activist base will be pretty much gone, the progressive vote will be hopelessly split between a dried-up Labour Party and a resurgent Liberal Democrats, and the Tories will be back in power.
I'm sure everyone who's had a position within their local CLP is well-used to talking about membership strategies and "engaging" with young people. I can't say I've come across anything that's really worked. Thing is, what is there for activists to do? What are the pressing needs of local people and how are you helping them by sitting in a room above a pub, talking about £50 party fundraisers?

You can socialise; you can try to talk about politics (but generally not in meetings, only in the pub afterwards with a small subset of members closest to your age, and with the leadership having already left). You can pencil yourself in for the next meeting, seven Wednesday evenings hence, but without elections in the offing, what actually is there to do? It's not as if it's actually the responsibility of all Labour Party members to work for their community, doing good deeds, maintaining the social fabric, or 'spreading socialism'.

Perhaps this is an answer: encouraging Labour members to build their confidence and engage with real people by encouraging them to put Labour values into practice. Perhaps this could be done alongside local Labour councillors, where present. Not carefully thought-out, but perhaps it's more sustainable than trying to bribe young, politically-minded people to turn up to meetings with the promise of socials and quiz nights, then fail to deliver any actual politics.

I can't say party democracy is a big issue for me. Well, not as much as it "should be". At the last count I have, I think, no fewer than four positions within the local CLP (one or two of them jointly). Few people in the CLP probably realise this, and I suspect only a few would notice if I wasn't carrying them out satisfactorily. That's a recipe for disaster in any organisation. With enough positions for most people in a branch to have one, and with incumbency or apparent enthusiasm the only qualifications, respect for some posts can only be weakened. Under these conditions, local activism can merely seem a glamourous term for a self-established and self-perpetuating bureaucracy: a gravy-train of votes, committees, and conferences.

Perhaps it's unfair to add in the Fabians as yet another opportunity for Labour types to warm a few conference-room chairs without ever having to meet a radically different view, it's just that the people I've met who've associated with the Fabians seem to spend an inordinate amount of time at 'events'. It seems even 30-year-olds count as 'Young Fabians' : I'll let you draw your own conclusion from that.

Antonia has also picked up on these issues:
That relentless towing of the line at university, in the fetid atmosphere of national student politics, through a liberal-ish succesion of two or three jobs working for MPs / think tanks / trade unions / non-offensive NGOs / as a political advisor or SpAd, seems to produce identikit young politicos, with carefully-cultivated quirks and nice shoes, a regional accent, strong links to an area outside their current domicile of London, maybe a coke habit fastidiously concealed, far more interested in process than issues, and hung up on the proximity of power.
I have to say I've only limited experience of student politics: I wasn't involved with a student Labour Club until my fourth year of University (I had even gone so far as to opt-out of NUS), and my experience thereafter was not encouraging. I like to think there would have been more activity and more enthusiasm if I had got involved earlier (I mean, Labour wasn't in power then, so we must have been up for it). I'm sure I'd have acquired "contacts", but then Antonia's far from being alone in her view.

One thing I would say in defence of the young politico is that perhaps they're more likely than the horny-handed son of the soil to have a knowledge of politics, economics, and philosophy, these surely being essential for anyone who wants to understand contemporary issues and ideologies, as well as what works, what has failed, and what is practical. With this knowledge it should be easier (in principle) for an MP to be independent, question the party line, and go beyond what they read in the newspapers or see on TV.

This does matter. It does seem that the Left has lost the ability to talk about, for example, economics. Perhaps the UK's macroeconomic performance (i.e. headline unemployment figures; interest rates; inflation; etc.) has just been so much better than Labour people dared to dream that they can only latch onto what seems to be working. Quite what we'd do if we inherited a ruined economy from the Conservatives, I don't know. Even if there's no immediate possibility of radical change, it's important to at least know about economic theory so that, for example, contemporary issues like the flat tax can be discussed, and not left to conservatives.

Final twist: perhaps it's too much to hope that MPs can be on the one hand the great thinkers of the age, while on the other, committed workers on behalf of their constituents. In the latter case, I doubt that the 'ability' (in the cloying sense the media uses it) of an MP helps the constituent one iota. Perhaps a solution would be two elected chambers. One for thinkers, orators, and experts; the other, for problem-solvers, and community representatives. The former decides policy and strategy, the latter implementation, and the satisfaction of constituents' needs.

Anyway, I'm out of time, so that's it for now.

Monday, September 05, 2005

Bush / Hitler - 5 comments

Fairly banal post this one, but a more interesting one on Labour activism will follow, time permitting.

Anyway, as you can see in the picture, courtesy of Dissident Voice ("A Radical Newsletter in the Struggle for Peace and Social Justice"), and via Bob from Brockley (though I don't take his point that it shows there's something wrong with the Left as a whole), George W. Bush's America is equivalent to Hitler's Germany, the Stars and Stripes having the same connotations as the swastika.



Well, fine. Who could possibly have an objection to that? Not sure where the picture is taken, though presumably it's in the USA.

Update: I was being sarcastic.

Thta can't be that difficult can it - 1 comment

A marvellously illiterate email newsletter has just reached me from Labour South East (actually it was over an hour ago, but lousy Blogger was playing up).

Perhaps it's beastly of me to criticise someone who, in their passion for The Cause, let grammar and spelling go out the window. On the other hand, show me a schoolteacher who doesn't amuse their own children with the assorted funnies perpetrated by the pupils under their tutelage.

Anyway, here's the offending section of the email. You can also see it on the web here.
Membership continues to rise fllowing the general election but...

... you can help it grow even more. Everyone knows a member of their family, or a friend or colleague who supports Labour but has yet to join. Between now and conference everyone should get just one more person to join. Thta can't be that difficult[,] can it[?]

Crawley and Chatham & Aylesford constituency parties have been leading the way recently, with organised recruitment activites. They've found it pretty easy to recruit new members and they've been talking to complete strangers [yuk!]. So think how easy it would be to rfecruit someone you know already who wants to join.

They're justing waiting for you to ask.

You can get them signed up by getting them to call 08705 90 200 or by visiting https://secure.labour.org.uk/joinbydirectdebit today.
At least the link works!
Reproduced from an email sent by the Labour Party, promoted by ...
Reproduced, perhaps, in the same way that school canteen burgers are reproduced from a prime piece of beef, or golden breadcrumbs from the floor of an animal's cage.

It's just not very professional - tut, tut.

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Flat Tax - 17 comments

I'm afraid I hijacked a discussion about free trade at Pub Philosopher yesterday to take up a point somebody made about the so-called flat tax, or, to be more precise, a system of income tax that consists of a personal allowance, and a single, proportional tax rate (actually both could be either positive or negative, but let's keep it simple for now).

Read the later comments on the original post, or check out the Wikipedia article above for background.

I suppose an initial left-wing reaction might be to say: "it's one of those things dreamed up by the Adam Smith Institute, or some guy with a bow-tie, tried out in some pro-American country in Eastern Europe, and just an excuse to release the rich from their tax burden."

Maybe it is, but as the comments show, this can be played in a number of ways: it can give people greater or lesser allowances; it can be progressive, or less so. It can be applied across-the-board (one single rate of tax on incomes, capital, and on sales), or it could (as I claimed) be the economic basis upon which more political or moral taxes could sit (e.g. energy taxes, sales taxes, 'exploitation' levies). With generous personal allowances (which you could even call a Citizen's Income), it could even be used to simplify the benefits system and minimise the so-called poverty trap.

Haven't got time to add any more tonight, so what do you think? Simplicity or sell-out?

B4L Running Costs

£2,115.46 spent since 2007, which could be met by a donation of £4.18 per blogger.




Join the Labour Party
Sign the Euston Manifesto
We Are ZCTU: Defend unionists on trial in Zimbabwe


Locations of visitors to this page Politics Blog Top Sites Get your Google PageRank
Check out our Frappr!
Southampton FC
TheyWorkForYou.com