Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is

I've just read a News of the World report suggesting that Government Minister Ivan Lewis thinks Labour is out of touch. He doesn't in fact say that in those terms, but his article produced for Progress resonates with my own thoughts. It's definately worth a read.

We must show we're on the side of ordinary people if Labour is to win again
By Ivan Lewis MP 

In conversation with colleagues last week we were agreed that despite current political difficulties in reality we have been rather a good government. If only the electorate understood all would be well!


It is a great irony that the party which revolutionised political communication has failed so dismally to persuade people that new Labour's values, policies, and investment have led to the major advances which are so evident in every community in public services and living standards.


However, any suggestion that a developing sense of disillusionment and angst amongst the electorate is simply a failure of communication would be the surest route to opposition. Instead, we must face up to the reality that the New Labour coalition which has delivered our unprecedented three terms is now under severe strain. Contrary to the debate between the ultra Blairites and the anti-New Labour left it is both the permanent Labour voter and those who signed up to New Labour who want reassurance that we are still on their side.

New Labour's success has been based upon a coalition that rallied around fairness, individual aspiration and the need for national renewal and a new generation of political leadership. After the wilderness years of CND badges and loony councils, New Labour spoke for the mainstream majority who work hard and play by the rules. We were on people's side because we focused on the issues which affected people's standard of living, quality of life and hopes for the future. We looked and spoke like people who understood what it is like to bring up a family, struggle to pay the bills and cope with the stresses of a rapidly changing world. We wanted to change Britain but loved Britain too. With a record number of women MPs we looked like Britain. We were the refreshing, energetic antithesis to the arrogant, smug and out-of-touch Tories.


In the teeth of fierce Tory opposition, we introduced a minimum wage and tax credits to support low paid workers. Our investment in nurseries, schools and the NHS connected with the priorities of all families.

Eleven years on new Labour is now the party of the establishment; the party in government when the electorate's respect for Westminster politicians is at an all-time low; the party which frequently has to justify decisions which emerge from the unavoidable and constant struggle in government between idealism and realism; the party which will always live with the stigma of an unpopular war; the party which is telling people that the global credit crunch means things are going to be tough for hardworking families in the period ahead.


So the challenge now is: can we be both the party of the people and the party of government? People know that, like life, government is not easy. Headlines come and go, but at a time of growing insecurity their anger is ignited when they feel the government is losing touch with what fairness means to the mainstream majority who work hard, play by the rules and are feeling squeezed by rising utility bills, the cost of petrol and rising council tax. We cannot afford to be reticent or selective about what fair means in today's Britain. Being treated with respect by central and local government and their agencies and your fellow citizens also matters but not as a Whitehall unit or smart branding exercise but the manifestation of our country's values and character.


Fairness means everyone paying an appropriate level of tax. It is true there is nothing wrong with being ‘stinking rich' providing you pay a significantly higher proportion in tax than your fellow citizen with a modest disposable income and accept your moral obligation to make a significant contribution to the elimination of child poverty. Fairness means a Labour government not remaining silent when any company rips the consumer off or directors of poorly performing organisations in the public or private sector receive extortionate bonuses. Fairness means if you go out onto the streets with a gun or a knife and get caught you should serve a minimum of ten years in prison. Fairness means if you are a foreign national who is breaking the law by being here illegally you will be deported with immediate effect. Fairness means our first assumption should be that parents are responsible for the behaviour and wellbeing of their children. Off-licenses or adults allowing children inappropriate access to alcohol should face automatic prosecution. Fairness means equal treatment and opportunities for women and ethnic minorities in the workplace, not skilled white men denied career opportunities in the name of equality. Fairness means a dialogue about the responsibilities of British citizenship with the powerful as well as the unemployed, disabled people and ethnic minorities. Fairness is young people who work hard having the chance to own their own home.


Respect means public services which offering a personal service, organised around the lives of the citizen not the bureaucracy and enable you to exercise maximum control and meaningful choice. Frontline public service workers feeling valued and inspired by managers and leaders of real calibre. Respect means older people being treated with dignity on NHS Wards, in care homes and in our neighbourhoods.


Respect is recognising that an active state is essential in the pursuit of fairness and security but that empowered citizens and communities make the most difference. In the context of recent controversies, respect is also accepting that people of faith have the same right to their convictions and principles as assertive atheists.

It is right we focus on the great challenges of climate change, globalisation, security and poverty at home and abroad and the nature of public service reform. However, we are too often silent on the daily realities facing hardworking families.


In his historic address to the first Parliamentary Labour Party meeting following our 1997 landslide victory Tony Blair cited the famous quote ‘we are the servants of the people not their masters' – and said the day we forget that, we are finished.


Gordon Brown's challenge now is to persuade people that we truly are the servants of the people. The coalition of permanent and potential Labour voters demand fairness and respect as fixed points of security in an uncertain world.


‘On your side' is no longer a slick political slogan; it will be the key factor which will determine whether we can persuade the electorate to reject David Cameron's seductive, ‘time for a change' Conservatives.


Ivan Lewis MP is MP Bury South and minister for care services


This article first appeared in Progress magazine



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Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#1)

He's right.  Whenever I have warned on this website that this is why Cameron is dangerous, people here have dismissed me as a Tory troll but from I where I sit Cameron is completely doing a Blair and I'm terrified it's going to work.  Labour MPs need to have a serious think about who we want to lead us into the future.  Brown is not the man.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#2)

Fairness is also about recogniasing when assylum seekers have a genuine fear of persecution. It is not right to send assylum seekers back to Zimbabwe. Thats not Respect.

Fairness is giving proper rights to agency workers.

It also meansd not bowing down to the corporate lobbyists (and their well paid paliamentsry representatives) who are pushing for nuclear at the expense of renewable energy.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#3)

A strong article by Mr. Lewis. Maybe Gordon should spend more time listening to him rather than the usual Brownities in Number 10.

But above all else, a Labour government needs to be radical in the areas where the public will support us. Constitutional reform, far greater devolution and the separation of the Church and State are all areas concerning fairness where the public would support us. So why have we not done it?

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#4)

'a Labour government needs to be radical in the areas where the public will support us. Constitutional reform, far greater devolution and the separation of the Church and State are all areas concerning fairness where the public would support us. So why have we not done it? '


I'm sorry I think you've lost me there,I always thought that a 'Labour ' govt, was there to help ordinary working men and women,oops sorry this govt is not a 'Labour' govt ,its a grotestque parody,the sooner it is finished the better for all of us.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#5)

Can't Northern Monkey's suggestions be ways of helping ordinary working men and women?

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#6)

Lewis may be voicing the same message as M Hodge MP for Barking, but I don't think it helps pandering to that section of the electorate too much. We have in fact already done a great deal in helping poorer families out of poverty and in opening up job opportunities for them, and increased benefits. There is only so much you can do; its now up to them to act on the Govt initiatives.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#7)

"Fairness means if you go out onto the streets with a gun or a knife and get caught you should serve a minimum of ten years in prison."

Serve ten years? Does 'fairness' mean that carrying a knife is a more serious offence than manslaughter? Or rape?

Does Mr Lewis really think this? Is he sure?

It seems fairness will involve lots of new jobs in the construction industry building young offenders institutions.  

 

 

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#8)

Hi all,
You are, in my opinion, missing the point.

Labour has spent too long navel gazing and pandering to its client base benefit scroungers.

Well its too late to change that and Essex man has finally realised that Labour doesn't represent him anymore, if it ever did?.

Labour is a busted flush and will be lucky to win any seats in the May elections.

Bring on the revolution!!!! 

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#9)

Well thank you for that fascinating insight into the British political spectrum.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#10)

Yes, as far as I know Labour would have to have around, well, below the support of the BNP to 'not win any seats' in say, the London elections.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#14)

You got that right

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#15)

yes i did, that's, quite my point, stew.
Labour will not go away with a couple of councillers after May. That would be so unrealistic.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#16)

And my point was that the way Labour is going they will be beaten into 4th place by the BNP - look at what happened in Barking!!

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#11)

"Labour has spent too long navel gazing and pandering to its client base benefit scroungers.

Well its too late to change that and Essex man has finally realised that Labour doesn't represent him anymore, if it ever did?."
 
Well, Labour certainly hasn't represented people who don't support the welfare state since the mid-1930s so the kind of Essex man you're thinking of obviously hasn't been concentrating very hard for at least the last 70 years.  

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#12)

"Labour has spent too long navel gazing and pandering to its client base benefit scroungers.

Well its too late to change that and Essex man has finally realised that Labour doesn't represent him anymore, if it ever did?."
 
Well, Labour certainly hasn't represented people who don't support the welfare state since the mid-1930s so the kind of Essex man you're thinking of obviously hasn't been concentrating very hard for at least the last 70 years.  

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#13)

Traditionally, a more work-ethic based Socialism, would not look kindly on 'benefit scroungers', so I'm not sure that it is Labour's client base.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#17)

The problem Labour now has is that in order to win an election you have to convince Essex man to vote for you. Thats how Maggie and Tony won.
Now Gordon - forget it - his supporters are all Scottish.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#18)

Its not so much Essex Man, but Essex Girls that hold the key to the door of No 10.

Re: Ivan Lewis Says It How It Is (#19)

Yep and I don't think they'll vote for Gordon either