Almost everywhere in Europe the centre-Left is in crisis. In the year 2000, social democrats or socialists were in power in 10 out of the 15 countries that made up the European Union of the time. Today, only a handful of recognisably Left-leaning governments hold power. It is against this backdrop that Jeremy Corbyn’s rise should be seen.
The vacillating, ‘third-way’ social democracy of Tony Blair was predicated on the idea that only compromise could win at the ballot box. For many years Left-wing activists would swallow their ideological objections – or at least soften them – on the back of electoral success. “We have to do this stuff to win”, an activist friend used to shrug whenever New Labour briefed against the trade unions in the right-wing press, or announced some draconian policy targeted at asylum seekers.
But electoral expediency is just one of the reasons for the centre-Left’s embrace of politicians like Tony Blair. The decline of the industrial working class is the other. By the 1990s, the Left had been shorn of both its historical agent and narrative.
This generated a centre-Left politics which pitched itself largely to the middle classes – with a nod to the poor through policies such as increased social security payments. When Tony Blair boasted in 1997 that under New Labour Britain would retain the toughest anti-trade union laws in the western world, he was consigning Labour’s hitherto electoral base to the dustbin of history.
Corbynism is both a response to this as well as its logical conclusion. The return of the Corbyn project to uncompromising simplicity – anti-austerity, anti-war, nationalisation – is a rejection of the previous three decades of Labour policymaking.
But the Corbyn project is also a response to changing electoral realities. During the Blair years, the centre-Left fashioned a rod for its own back by hanging everything on electoral expediency. Thus, when the compromisers of the third-way stopped winning elections after the financial crisis, their project was an empty husk. If Labour was going to lose anyway – and the centre-Left has been doing that just about everywhere of late – then better, surely, to lose on its own terms and with policies activists actually believe in.
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