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Last 3 Posts @ May 17, 2008 6:34:01 PM EDT

NOT BRASSED OFF..... (23 hrs, 29 mins ago)

Apologies for not blogging earlier on but today recovering from Mayor-making last night in Mytholmroyd. Thanks to Hebden Bridge Junior Band for saving the day and pra...

Grimmer Up North

Transparency = popularity. Apparently (23 hrs, 53 mins ago)

The good ol’ High Court seems to have had the final word on whether the details of MPs’ expenses claims are published. Well, transparency is what it’...

And another thing...

Rangers riot aftermath (23 hrs, 54 mins ago)

<!--Mime Type of File is image/jpeg --> Manchester United fans are to pay the price for the Glasgow Rangers riot, which took place here in Piccadilly Gardens not tw...

Stephen Newton's diary of sorts...

Friday, June 30, 2006

Compass - 16 comments

There is a lot of talk about Compass at the moment, and I had planned to write a piece before, having worked through their introductory statement from 2003 a couple of months back. Now, though, the 'open letter' (via) from Neal Lawson - a name we're hearing far more than we ought for a organisation that prides itself upon democracy, and which declared that 20 'key authors' contributed to the aforementioned document - to Tony Blair, has intensified the campaign against the Labour leadership.

Almost all the discussion concerning Compass seems to have been within the Labour ranks and has an unpleasant reek of factionalism. This explains the rather spiteful reactions from a number of those Labour bloggers who oppose the new group, but if the approach Lawson has taken here really is a sign of things to come, then (a) attitudes for and against will only harden, in an unseemly manner, and (b) he will be doing a disservice to his more thoughtful supporters.

Why? There's the personalised nature of the letter, the sanctimonious tone, the idea that a political project (i.e. 'New Labour') that won three General Elections (one way or another) and still speaks to many within the party, can be reduced to a 'closed conspiracy' in comparison to the simmering ragout of positive and principled ideas that makes up the as-yet-unpublished, and entirely untested Compass manifesto. And finally, there's the A-level-essay economics that permeates every Compass document I've seen, the obligatory digs at neo-liberalism (I used to use that a lot in essays - it meant The Enemy), the casual dismissal of the enormously significant but 'corrosive' Iraq intervention, and even the 'why can't we be more like Sweden?' lament that was all the rage in the early 90s.

What I'm keen for Compass to do in preparing their Manifesto is analyse what policies work and what can be achieved, rather than simply aggregating the preferred policies of, presumably, thousands of contributors. What depresses me is the analysis that stands out from all their so-far published documents, which is pretty much the following: "the most obvious failure of Thatcherism was its neo-liberalism, and its under-funding of public services. New Labour succeeded insofar as it spent more public money on public services - quality and performance being directly proportional to expenditure, expectations remaining constant, and yet complete public satisfaction remains elusive". The thought that New Labour might have realised, at some point - and this is not to deny the underfunding that really did occur pre-1997 - that public satisfaction was barely related at all to either the relative or the absolute levels of spending on the relevant services, and that - even if ham-fistedly - breaking down the barriers between the public and a centralised, impervious producer might be one way of managing expectations and increasing the public's choice, barely seems to have occurred to Compass at all.

Let's consider 'markets' - a word of power if ever there is one on our side. Markets sometimes-to-often fail to produce a mutually satisfactory outcome for economic actors, depending on your outlook. How might an organisation with new ideas (like Compass?) deal with this? They might encourage markets to work better, tackling inequalities and barriers to entry, and Compass suggest that this is indeed a concern of theirs, if not to secure that particular outcome. They might try to curtail the power of heavyweight private and public actors (monopolies, say) from interfering. They might add or improve regulation to a market, strong enough to prevent abuses, but with a light enough touch not to squash it. Unfortunately Compass confuse the issue, seeing free markets and big business (with attendant political power) as necessary companions, rather than a contradiction. If New Labour are tied to big business, then I'd like to see others advocate greater exposure of links, and greater investigation of monopolies, rather than rely upon the morality of individual politicians and an ideology that casts the two groups as implacable enemies.

There are so many ways in which the New Labour approach to public sector liberalisation has failed, and yet Compass is not pledged to correct those failures, but to play to its membership and eschew markets altogether in favour of business as usual - politicians at various levels, and civil servants, spending public money in as benevolent and insightful way as they can, in the hope that, some way down the chain, a citizen will feel the benefit. A model of democracy that empowers people for fixed terms, rather than one that actually gives a day-to-day responsibility to an individual or group, one that can be taken away if it is not carried out.

I should link to this excellent Stumbling and Mumbling article on the public and private sectors, before I forget:
Humankind has stumbled upon a technology which can often transform bad motives into good outcomes. It's called the market.

The important question is: how can we import this technology into health and education?

In this context, the public-private dichotomy is woefully misleading. Private sector monopolies are as bad as public sector ones; this is why Serwotka and Sinnott are right to complain about the PFI.
Instead, the important components of the market technology are feedback and competition. Success in reforming public services requires that these be used, not private companies. How far this is possible is, of course, another issue. But it's the big issue.
What also comes across from Neal's piece is the insularity, fear of economic change, and fear of globalisation:
When even white collar jobs can be outsourced to India insecurity and anxiety permeate every level of society ... this fixation with economic efficiency and globalisation ... tides of globalisation you show no desire to manage. What is the point of political leadership if it is not about dealing with the forces that help and hinder people's lives?
No, Neal, that is 'time warp stuff'. It's ludicrous to think that India and China are going to stop developing and allow our tiny nation to remain one of the world's largest economies just because our workers are frightened, having been convinced that international trade is a conspiracy by Big Business. Is it the fate of these faraway nations to remain poor, fed on our handouts, and denied access to our markets? Of course there is international regulation to be decided upon, agreements to be worked out, trade and aid to be increased, economic challenges, and economic opportunities. This is why it's unacceptable to push a programme based on a cosy 'socialism in one country', fear of the very forces that increase and spread wealth, and suspicion of - rather than partnership with - the USA.

The need to achieve equality - in some shape or form - motivates all within the Labour Party, yet there isn't much detail within Compass' declaration of aims, just as there hasn't been a sense of urgency from the past Labour administrations. It's ironic that one of the two policies Lawson gives these administrations credit for is the minimum wage, which, as useful as it has been, is an inadequate and potentially counterproductive approach to tackling poverty, as we have covered here. The question is whether Compass-ite Ministers would have the guts to tackle the benefits system and consider policies like Citizens' Incomes and carefully weighted flat taxes, which have all been thoroughly analysed on the blogosphere, instead of sticking with the cherished minimum wage policy, bumping up the rates, and seeing what - if any - improvement is seen in the Gini coefficient before rising unemployment takes its toll. It is the thought that Compass might at least try radical measures, even if they have to 'reclaim them for the Left' in the process, that might convince me they could succeed in a narrowing of income inequalities. Perhaps they are working on other innovations as we speak.

I don't think what I've written can be construed as a paean to, or an apology for New Labour - none is needed. Nor should it appear to be cynical, or hostile to new ideas. But if the mainstream Left were in such a state that it was incapable of generating ideas that don't sound dreadfully familiar - and a reliable delivery mechanism for putting them into action - how can we be blamed for looking further afield? It's unfortunate that the indications are that Compass is more concerned with winning over past/present Labour people than learning from the many changes, successes, and failures since 1979, and producing something fresh that might actually start to win supporters back from other political parties.

If Neal Lawson found himself unable to participate in a forward-thinking organisation of that ilk, recent evidence tells me that too would be a progressive step.

P.S. Apologies for the references to 'New Labour' - I'm using this usually pejorative term to encapsulate the political views of the leadership of the Labour Party since 1997, not as a straw man to 'big up' some alternative faction. Note that I've tried to avoid falling into the trap of labelling Compass as 'Old Labour', an entirely pejorative term I don't think I've ever used.

Update (02/07): Thanks for all the comments - was away over the weekend and have just approved them all. Will read them shortly.

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Labour Home II - 1 comment

Late as ever, but in case you haven't seen Labour Home yet, it's, well, how would I describe it? A pro-Labour, group-blogging effort, that gives the like-minded the chance to have their say (under a mask of anonymity if they choose to wear it), and which promotes the most highly rated articles to its front page.

There's a fair amount of stuff there already, and quite a few contributors. If you have any ideas for how we can help Labour Home, and vice versa, please get in touch with one or other of us. Not that we don't already have some ideas...

eDemocracy Update has mentioned LH, and B4L for that matter, in its article New Labour cranks its Web 2.0 offerings up a notch.

"Web 2.0" is, of course, a buzzword that's open to particular abuse, but it's still a handy way of grouping together:
... weblogs, linklogs, wikis, podcasts, RSS feeds and other forms of many to many publishing; social software, web APIs, web standards, online web services, and others.
All part of our grand scheme to bring existing social networks online, to create online social networks where they don't already exist, and let informed debate flow from that.

Monday, June 26, 2006

Sporting relief - no comments

After watching approximately six hours of attritional football between Switzerland and Ukraine this evening, it was a pleasure to read Stephen Pollard's regular summer post detailing his contempt for tennis, and indeed, most sports and sports-participants, other than those that are brown, four-legged, and called upon to carry a rider around an off-rectangular course.

This didn't pass without comment, and Stephen felt obliged to elaborate. The last section is particularly good:
Another commenter however appears slightly over wrought by my having supposedly written about my dislike of New Year's Eve "three years consecutively in The Times". Quite what this has to do with a post about Wimbledon I don't know but, just for the record, it's utter nonsense. I have written about it there once, last December. (I also wrote about it in 2004 in the Mail and in 2003 in the Independent. Unless I am mistaken, they are different newspapers with different readers.)

Sunday, June 25, 2006

Recommend posts at B4L - 2 comments

Every post we show now features a Recommend link. Click it to cast a vote for that article, and then see the results - the most popular articles, and blogs with the most such articles - on the new Recommendations page. Weekly charts will be added in due course.

Just click Recommend and in a moment or two, the link will change to show the number of votes so far for that post. No pages to load, no popups.

You may vote once per article per day, for as many articles as you like, and for your own articles if you absolutely insist. I've deliberately kept things as pure and simple as possible. This facility requires JavaScript to be on, but, for the security conscious, no personal information is transmitted.

Happy voting!

Update: Interesting statistic for you: as of midnight, Saturday, no fewer than 80 Labour-supporting bloggers had posted a total of 228 articles in the preceding 48 hours. That's an extraordinary figure. You might question how much 'influence' the posts had, but it shows once again, for what it's worth, that we're the most active party-political blogging network - certainly in the UK, not sure about the rest of Europe.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Labour Home - 5 comments

WTF??



As seen at Guido's, and mentioned in the comments at Paulie's.

Any information gratefully received!

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Custom Feeds - no comments

Not many people know that the posts Bloggers4Labour aggregates aren't only available on these pages. We actually produce a brand new feed that gathers all posts from the past 24 hours.

If that isn't interesting enough, we now offer the opportunity for members (that is to say, people who have a login, can receive newsletters, etc.) to pick the sites they want to monitor - any number you like.

So, if you only want to monitor, say (more or less at random), Harry's Place, Rob Shorrock, and Snowflake5 - or, perhaps, just Welsh bloggers - log in (you'll need to register first), visit the feeds page, check the sites you'd like, then click the "Generate Feed URL" button at the bottom of the page.

We'll then give you a URL you can paste into Bloglines or your preferred desktop or web-based news-reader. Whenever one of those sites - and only those sites - posts a new article, you'll hear about it.

There's no limit to the number of custom feeds you can set up.

Finally, it's all free - though you can always donate (see link at foot of page)!

Putting It Down - 1 comment

No time for a proper post, but PooterGeek's first full-length piece on the Euston Manifesto - its genesis, and reactions to it - is a very fine piece of work indeed, so please go read.

Incidentally, there are now 2039 signers.

Sunday, June 11, 2006

Top Political Blogs - 13 comments

Iain Dale has selected his top Conservative, Labour, Lib Dem, "non-aligned" (see also), journalist-written, and foreign blogs.

It wouldn't be professional for me to produce my own selection of Labour blogs, but the presence of Recess Monkey (no offence to him) as Iain's #2, suggests that Iain is looking for a very different kind of thing to me. Blogs that offer "scoops" are only interesting to me for making conversation at work, and the investigative/journalistic style of blog is something I feel may be socially useful (or would be if it wasn't so ideologically skewed), but, again, doesn't make me feel I need to be reading.

No, I like and respect the blogs that shattered my anti-Americanism and opposition to the Iraq intervention (back in 2005), that undermined the practical case for ID cards, that got me thinking about Citizen's Income and flat taxes, and that offer insights on interesting, complicated, and under-represented issues. Only one of these blogs is listed.

Only a very small percentage of the anti-Labour blogs I read are actually pro-Conservative, but only one of those Conservative blogs I read only occasionally read is in Iain's top 20. Likewise, only one or two from the Lib Dem's top 10. You can find most of these blogs in the sidebar (quite a way down).

So, we've heard a lot about how the Conservatives/the political right (delete as applicable) have embraced the blogosphere: do any readers fancy putting forward their favourites, or Top Fives? You can also pick Lib Dems, left-of-Labour, and unaffiliated, if you like.

World Cup blogs - 4 comments

As I'm sure you've already heard from the BBC, Harry's Place, and possible even our own links from Friday morning, two Labour figures are blogging about the (football) World Cup: Alastair Campbell and Sadiq Khan.

I'm someone who'll happily watch every match that's on without wanting to read a single word in print about them, so the blogs are not necessarily for me. But if they're done willingly, honestly, and at no great expense, I don't see why they should be condemned.

Clearly there's a hell of a lot more to politics, to Labour politics, and Labour's blogging efforts than this (more on that topic later), but this approach does seem to have attracted comments from people who wouldn't normally participate. That's good, and I really don't have much time for this kind of comment:
The Tories are on the march, are (sic) membership is shot to pieces and they spend our subs on this sexist prat.
Update: This is probably my favourite World Cup post so far. Sublime.

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

The Economist - 4 comments

According to the Economist's Pocket World in Figures (2006 Edition) that came through the post today, no fewer than 179% of eligible children in the United Kingdom are enrolled in secondary education (it is a mere 100% in the primary sector). That's an achievement of which we can all be proud.

Perhaps I'd better cross-check other facts with the Wikipedia in future.

Anyway, the book was free, and my new subscription to The Economist gets me the next 12 copies for just £12, which is pretty sweet. How did I swing this incredible deal? I followed one of the Google Ads on this very site, just to prove they're not entirely ridiculous and irrelevant. The licence to carry out humanist weddings may also come in handy - you never know.

There does seem to be a suspicion of economists on our side of the political fence - large parts of it, anyway - but characterising what is, after all, a social science, as something that legitimises greed, promotes privatisation, challenges benevolent governments, is tied to capitalism or Anglo-Saxon values, is insensitive to other cultures, and which is more concerned with calculation rather than human interaction, does the subject a huge disservice.

Ignorance of economics plays into the hands of the Right - it blinds us to liberal, egalitarian policies we could be promoting, to the limits of Government, and to the abuse of the subject by - to name just one group - political enemies who are most concerned with entrenching their own power.

Monday, June 05, 2006

Bloggers unite - 8 comments

Again, a very late post, but I spent Saturday night in the company of fellow-bloggers from across the political spectrum: Andrew, Dúnadan, Paul, and Tim, in the Coal Hole on The Strand.



All sorts of topics were discussed, but politics played a big part, and it was friendly, civil, constructive, and interesting.

The pub does seem to have attracted some hostile reviews, but the subterranean part was excellent, even I did have to witness American tourists attempting to buy their first and only pint of English beer, and talking loudly about Sherlock Holmes.

These blogging get-togethers are such a good idea, I don't know why more people aren't creating social networks in the blogosphere based upon the many and varied things they have in common - be they large and varied, or small and specific - and developing them in the real world. Seems to me that the life of a blogger's idea is very limited if it merely bounces around the sites before gathering dust in the archives.

I like to think that this awareness is one of the reasons for Bloggers4Labour's success...

Belated JS Mill post - no comments

A slightly strange piece, this, which I was never entirely sure I should post, but what the hell. It was to be my small contribution to last month's commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the great John Stuart Mill's birth.

I'm contributing an essay I wrote - ten years and one month ago - on the concept of a stationary state in the development of an economy - a seemingly obscure topic that interested economists and politicians before the 20th Century, and which may be gaining in interest. It's the only substantial piece I did that covered JS Mill, and you're free to download the newly PDF-ed version. OK, it's not very good, but there really wasn't quite so much food for thought in those distant days, and it may get you thinking.

Friday, June 02, 2006

Link log 5 - 3 comments

Sorry, no time for a proper post - spent most of yesterday in Ducklands - but here's what I have been mostly reading over the past couple of days (roughly in order):

Thursday, June 01, 2006

Pardon us for breathing - 2 comments

North Yorks countryside tops Kent:
The county [North Yorkshire] was praised for "breathtaking countryside" like the Yorkshire Dales and the quality of its stately homes, such as Castle Howard in York.

Kent lies in fifth place with 5.2% of the total vote.

Respondents felt it had lost some of its charm due to the number of London commuters in the county, the impact of Eurostar trains travelling through the countryside and the negative effect of "chavs".

"Chavs" tend to be recognised by their cheap gold jewellery and distinctive dress code, often consisting of a Burberry baseball cap, branded sportswear and trainers.
How much less charming homes, factories, and people are than green, landscaped fields and stately homes.

P.S. I don't hail from Kent.

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