Things can only get better

Well possibly - we could lose the Crewe by-election!

We should perhaps start by pointing out that Labour under Tony Blair performed abysmally in the local elections of both 2000 and 2004, yet the party bounced back sufficiently to win general elections in 2001 and 2005. However the truth is that the government has not been making it easy for the electorate to vote Labour with any enthusiasm. On the doorstep the divide between the concerns of core Labour voters and those of a PR fixated cabinet have never seemed wider.

Gordon Brown stood for the leadership of the Labour party on a platform that argued that the renewal that was undertaken in order to gain power needed to be repeated if Labour was to keep power. The fact is that by successfully occupying the centre ground, by modernising and reaching out beyond its own activists Labour ended up turning the Tories into a replica of what it used to be itself – a party with a narrow base, a party obsessed about the wrong things and a party seen as old fashioned and out of touch. David Cameron understands all of this and it is why he has been busy in attempting (with, as last week’s results indicate, some considerable success) to re-brand and re-position today’s Tory party. Conservatives have finally woken up to the fact that in order to be taken seriously they will need to be seen as the future, to be heralded as the bearers of hope and the deliverers of change.

The problem with all of this is takes Cameron and his party into unchartered waters. The history of the Tory party is centred on the core belief that government and politics can't actually change people’s lives all that much. Tory philosophy has long rejected any talk about the strength and virtue of common endeavour or about the need to ensure that wealth and opportunity are placed in the hands of the many not the few.


This is why the real challenge to the continuation of the pursuit of a progressive agenda comes not from a resurgent Tory party but from the defeatists, pessimists and cynics that exist within the Labour party itself. If Labour is to secure an unprecedented fourth term then it must set about renewing itself, its message and its organisation. A renewed party needs to reflect the aspirations of ordinary people but it also needs to be realistic about the challenges that lie ahead.

Telling the electorate that things are much better than they were in 1997 simply does not cut any mustard anymore (in fact it hasn’t done for several years).
Public services in Britain are in the process of being revived but there are still some Labour MPs, councillors and members who wish not revival but reversal.

If a fourth term is to be achieved Labour must continue with its progressive reform package, stop fretting about the opinion polls but above all it must not (as so often it has in the past) end up defeating itself.




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Re: Things can only get better (#1)

I think this is a particular problem: The Tories are now in a position where they can say what they will do when in power (which is err...very little). Brown needs to stop dining out on what we have done, and must say what we are going to do.

Re: Things can only get better (#2)

Just started a facebook for Tamsin, I feel she do with all the help she can get and now we need to rally around as a party.

Wiseman

Re: Things can only get better (#3)

She will win, people need good Labour party candidates

Re: Things can only get better (#4)

Well, they can't get any worse. Or can they? Where is that unit in No 10 to keep an eye on any potential banana skins. It should be working 24 hrs a day. We need much better communication with the Media as well, particular the Media hostile to us.