Tag: labour party

Obama and the Labour challenge

Labour has come under fire from the Chair of the Equality & Human Rights Commission, Trevor Philips, who said "If Barack Obama had lived here I would be very surprised if even somebody as brilliant as him would have been able to break through the institutional stranglehold on power within the Labour Party".

writes Labourhome Editor Alex Hilton in PR Week


Remembrance is not enough

At church on Sunday, I observed the minute's silence to remember the fallen in war, just like so many times before. This year it occurred to me that just remembering is not enough.

It is completely right to remember our fellow human beings who have been killed in battle. It is completely right to remember the recent casualties among our armed forces in Iraq and Afghanistan. It is also completely right to remember that these two wars were started, not for the defence of the realm, but for the financial gain of the few.


The End of Life Long Tenancies?

Inside Housing magazine reports here that Housing Minister, Margaret Beckett, is actually considering proposals by the Chartered Institute of Housing (of all people) to end lifelong social housing tenancies.

I covered this appalling suggestion here last month. The idea is that all tenancies should be flexible and subject to review. So if you are a social housing tenant (an ugly term, I wish we could think of something better?) gets a better paid job or their kids leave home, they face eviction? Leaving aside for now, that this would result in modern day social housing ghetto’s which are only inhabited by the very poor and the desperate.

Ending boom and bust: GB vs banking casino

Briefly, political debate between the ruling Labour Party and Britain's opposition parties about the wisdom/folly of ending boom and bust seems to have been mangled by the pressures of the 24-hour news cycle.


Labour Party website: relaunch proposed

Progress is carrying an article by Luke Bozier proposing a relaunch of the Labour Party website. In my capacity as a newly-elected member of the Party's national executive committee, I think this is an issue that needs to be dealt with as a matter of urgency. A policy stance that refocuses attention locally, enabling rather than dictating, seems more appropriate that the current offering. Is Luke right?

Labour's web strategy must change

Article on Progress website by Luke Bozier, former e-campaigns manager  for the Labour Party, on why its web strategy needs to change. Here's the link...
 
http://www.progressonline.org.uk/Magazine/article.asp?a=3430 

Bank bailout: will Labour voters get it?

Mind-boggling sums of money summoned to recapitalise Britain's banks take some explaining. There are inevitably calls for total nationalisation from the left. Tomorrow morning's papers are reporting at least two more UK banks, RBS and HBOS will be taken into majority public ownership.

42-days: 1st test of Labour Party unity?

MPs returned to Westminster today and already rumours are circulating about the 42-day detention provision of the Counter Terrorism Bill. I am not up to speed on the precise timetabling of remaining Parliamentary business. But I am aware this could be the first test of the Labour Party's new found unity.


'Save the planet, save the party': Ed M keeps manifesto role

Ed Miliband will remain in charge of the Labour Party manifesto, combining it with his new Climate Change and Energy role in government. Can Labour now put together a coherently 'red and green' fairness manifesto?

Upbeat conference, with mass membership back

Gordon Brown's make or break Conference speech contained this tantilising paragraph: "United we are a great movement led by hopes not fears, gathered person by person - one individual, and then a few more, then hundreds, then thousands, then finally millions strong, a movement where I want each of us to say to each other:This is our country, Britain. We are building it together, together we are making it greater; Together we are building the fair society in this place and in this generation." For me it followed a week punctuated by media chat shows, TV interview and doing a running commentary on Sky on the PM's speech with former MP Chris Leslie, and Manchester Withington PPC Lucy Powell. I've been lobbying No.10 ever since GB was elected for a commitment from the great man to start rebuilding membership. This sounds like a clarion call, don't you think?

Why we need a Labour Capital Stewardship forum

Okay, I ’m not going to argue that the only reason for our present day global economic crisis is down to there being no forum for Capital stewardship in the Labour Party.

But... I am pretty sure that it didn’t help and its absence won’t help stop or mitigate the next inevitable financial scandal.

Our collective failure to take responsibility for our own money is a glaring modern day political and social failure.

JK Rowling and the Labour party

Labour thrilled at her donation and endorsement, Tories infuriated.

Crash, Bang, Wallop - United we stand, Divided we will fall

As much as I am loathe to make any reference to The Sun, on the way home last tonight I saw this front page banner headline (crash, bang & wallop) and the by-line "We will all pay a price for unscrupulous bankers who threw caution - and our money - to the wind."

Quite true I thought. But please can we in the Labour Party also ask certain junior ministers and MP’s to stop being politicians who are throwing caution away (never mind there I say prudence) - into the call for a "Perfect Storm"... A divisive, bloody leadership contest a mere 18 months before a probable general election.

Do I really have to spell it out any further?

Crash, bang, (and then) wallop – would sum up pretty well what will happen to us unless people start to unite.

Nothing, repeat nothing is inevitable in politics except defeat due to division.

We do not want the Tories to win FULL STOP This should be our real overriding manta.  A change in leadership is not going to achieve anything.

Conference buzzwords - unity

There is no better time than a holiday to reflect. Today, I started the usual weekend round of radio and television studios to test the political water starting with the Andrew Marr show on BBC 1 TV.

Recovery strategy

We've been weak in terms of strategy in the last year. And now we are in a hole, we need a coherent recovery plan more than ever, if Labour wants a fourth term.



Political lessons for Labour - the Olympics

Basking vicariously in the joys of Britain's continuing Olympic successes, as I hope we all are, the role of Lottery funding is being extolled by media commentators.

In praise of Labour government

UNFASHIONABLE though it may seem, it’s time someone pointed out a fact that most commentators - and certainly most of the blogosphere - have been avoiding: the government has done a good job in the last 11 years and Britain is a far better place as a result.

As Nick Raynsford said in his New Statesman article last week:

Compared with the position we inherited in 1997, today’s Britain is a better, fairer, more successful, more confident and more tolerant society.

He’s right. We’ve been kicked around so much, and so severely, recently that it’s almost easy to forget that we don’t have to take it.

Remember the sky-high inflation under the Tories? The record mass unemployment that was “a price well worth paying” for questionable economic returns? Remember the TWO Tory-built recessions? Remember the millions of workers encouraged to claim incapacity benefits by the Tories as a way of massaging the unemployment statistics? Remember the days before the minimum wage, when employers could pay their workers peanuts, and do it with the government’s blessing? Remember the legions of school-leavers put on the scrap heap instead of being offered training and further education? Remember the double-digit interest rates? Remember the scrapping of the pensions-earnings link without anything put in place to raise pensioners’ living standards?

‘Dave’ likes to gloss over the fact that he is a (whisper it) Tory, because he doesn’t want us to remember his own party’s record, nor the part he played in advising the worst Chancellor in modern history.

Every government faces difficult challenges, as do our own citizens.

But Britain is far better off with Labour than it could ever be with the Tories. Their smug complacency and arrogance - evidenced by some of their members’ comments on this and other sites - helped to shatter our society and our economy before. It would be a tragedy if they were to be allowed to do so again.

It’s been a bruising year so far for Labour. Government is difficult. Life is difficult for many people.

But Labour can win a fourth term.

We can win a fourth term if we believe we are up to the challenge, if we start making the case for Labour afresh, acknowledging where we need to make changes while avoiding sounding defensive about our record in government, which is something we can and should be proud of.

The next election has yet to be won or lost. The people, not the commentariat, will decide its outcome. The prize for Labour as a party is a fourth term in office. The prize for Britain as a nation is growth, prosperity and security, and its deliverance from a victorious Tory Party which has yet to learn from its mistakes in office, and so is doomed to repeat them if it is ever allowed back.

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A Genuinely New Face For A Genuinely New Phase: YVETTE COOPER

However painful it might be to accept, one thing is clear; Labour is currently so unpopular that no single course of action can ensure it's success at the next election. One thing can, however, guarantee it's defeat and that is leaving Gordon Brown at the helm.



Labour Conference guidelines (part) on STLP website

Alongside a highly readable lament by Polly Toynbee in today's Guardian about how the Labour Party's National Policy Forum has effectively stifled debate at this year's Conference in September, official guidelines have been written which will be seen by many as further dampening the possibility of real political discourse.


There is still life after Glasgow East

Okay, okay waking up this morning to news of the defeat in Glasgow wasn’t exactly a great start to the day but it’s happened.  It was not exactly unexpected and such is life – this is after all what happens in politics.  The Nats won by 365 votes out of 25,259 votes cast on a 42.25 turnout.  I’m not going disguise the fact that this is a defeat but it is not unimaginable that Labour could have sneaked in by a similar margin.  Then the headlines would have still been bad but the mood music would have been very different.

I don’t think anything in politics is predictable and I do not think defeat for Labour at the next general election is at all inevitable.  I am not sure that a change of leader will make any difference, change of policies - yes.  There may not have been a local government strike in Scotland in the run up to this election but UNISON are balloting Scottish council staff members over their below inflation (pay cut) offer of 2.5%.  I am sure that there were at least 365 council workers in Glasgow East who had received a strike ballot paper in the last week or so. 

By coincidence last night in West Ham we had probably our most constructive Labour Party campaign committee meeting I have ever chaired.  Despite our difficulties and differences there is still lots of enthusiasm for the Party.

After all it is only just after a year since the stunning Labour victory in Ealing and Southall (19 July 2007).  Mind you I won’t go down “a year is a long time in .....



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