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What Roger Scruton can teach Starmer Britain needs to feel like home

Starmer needs a vision. (Credit: Christopher Furlong/Getty)

Starmer needs a vision. (Credit: Christopher Furlong/Getty)


July 17, 2024   8 mins

Not long into David Cameron’s first term as Prime Minister, the conservative philosopher Roger Scruton refounded an old Tory dining club that had, for a short time in the Seventies, exerted an outsized influence on British politics. The Conservative Philosophy Group had been a meeting place for some of the greatest conservative intellectuals, journalists and politicians of the 20th century, from F. A. Hayek to Milton Friedman, Harold Macmillan to Margaret Thatcher. It was, professor John Casey later wrote, “a very odd moment in the history of the Tory party when it decided to lie back and enjoy ideas”. By the time John Major had taken over, ideas were less in vogue.

Scruton had the gnawing sense that the Conservative party had wasted its time out of power. “During 13 years of opposition the Tory Party had the opportunity to think,” Scruton wrote despairingly. “[But] the Party entered into coalition government with virtually no intellectual contribution of its own.” By resurrecting his club, he hoped to recapture some of its original energy and purpose and inject some intellectual vigour into Cameron’s Tories. “He did not succeed,” his friend Paul Goodman, then editor of Conservative Home, noted dryly.

Perhaps this is the fate of all restorationists, romantically driven to recreate long-lost worlds which cannot be brought back from the dead. Either way, I could not help thinking of Scruton after speaking to some of the new Labour MPs, ministers and aides enjoying their first taste of power in 14 years, bouncing from summit to summit, press conference to press conference, excited by it all but not yet quite sure what they are hoping to achieve or how.

In one sense, this is only natural. We are not even two weeks into what might yet be a decade of Starmerite rule. Nevertheless, I have already been struck by the strange sense of disorder lurking just under the surface of this government — the sense that the struggle to settle the hierarchy in the court of King Starmer is still playing out. This confusion about who really holds the authority in No 10 is fuelling a strange unease among Labour aides, even a paranoia about their own prospects. And so soon.

One charitable explanation is that it is little more than the inevitable result of the sudden transfer of power. Unlike many other countries, there is no formal transition here: it takes place in an ill-defined and ad-hoc fashion and a period of mild upheaval is the inevitable result.

Remember that barely two months ago, almost everyone in British politics — including the Labour Party and the civil service — expected the general election to take place in November. Instead, it is July and Labour is in power and being asked to negotiate communiques at Nato summits it never expected to attend and to host European Political Community summits at Blenheim Palace it played no role in preparing. For all the sugary homilies to the beauty of the British political system compared with the chaotic scenes in the United States or France, there is also a case for saying this is not a very sensible way to run a modern bureaucratic state.

Another explanation, however, is that the uncertainty within No. 10 and the Government overall is the result of an ongoing power struggle taking place between Sue Gray and Morgan McSweeney, Starmer’s two most important aides. This was certainly the analysis of at least two senior figures I spoke to. They maintain McSweeney has Starmer’s ear, reporting directly to the Prime Minister as his chief political strategist, responsible for setting the direction of the Government. In his team are some of the most important figures in the new Downing Street: Paul Ovenden, Vidhya Alekson, Henna Shah, Claire Stewart. Those who know McSweeney well say since the election he has remained purposefully in the shadows, less visible than Sue Gray, but that he has emerged with his influence enhanced.

Everyone, it seems, is figuring out what to do. This is the transition period. In the Treasury, Rachel Reeves is working out how to break the bad news that taxes will have to rise, while in the Justice Department, Shabana Mahmood is locked away trying to work out what on earth to do about the prison fiasco she has inherited. In defence, John Healey has commissioned former Nato general secretary, George Robertson, and ex-Trump administration official, Fiona Hill, to come up with the framework for the government’s security policy, while the new Foreign Secretary David Lammy has begun working out how to change the “vibes” in British foreign policy before moving onto any substantive changes.

All of this might be sensible, but it is striking how little actual policy has been pre-prepared in opposition, other than Reeves’ changes to the planning laws and Ed Miliband’s tweaks to make it easier to erect onshore wind turbines and build solar farms. These might be important reforms, but they are not defining policies — and certainly not on the scale of Bank of England independence announced shortly after Labour’s election victory in 1997. Nor do they tell a wider story about the ideals of this Government.

“For politics to tread more lightly on people’s lives, as Starmer has repeatedly declared as his aim, people need to feel at home.”

On the question of Europe, for example, despite some more excitable headlines, the ambition is limited — at least in the short term. There are clear red lines: no rejoining the EU, no single market, no customs union, no freedom of movement and no unpicking the Windsor Agreement managing the Irish Sea border with Northern Ireland. As long as these boundaries remain in place, there is not a huge amount that can be done to radically reshape Britain’s relationship with the EU.

The ambition, in effect, is to create a new post-Brexit relationship. Beyond that a lot still remains up in the air. Should the new defence review prioritise Britain’s relationship with the EU over a global role? There is a push among some of the Cameron-era diplomats for this, but it quickly runs up against substantive new developments which have happened since 2016: AUKUS, say, or the growing security partnership with Japan. There is little in the biographies of George Robertson and Fiona Hill to suggest they would recommend anything which jeopardised these developments or the ties with the United States. And there is little in it for the French in opening up the EU’s procurement rules to British defence firms.

More important, though, there is no obvious overarching narrative tying these various challenges together in one clear story about the mission of this government. The closest Keir Starmer has come to telling this story was at the Labour party conference last year when he reached into the Labour party’s past. “If you think our job in 1997 was to rebuild a crumbling public realm; that in 1964 it was to modernise an economy left behind by the pace of technology; in 1945 to build a new Britain out of the trauma of collective sacrifice,” he declared: “Then in 2024 it will have to be all three.” This was a neat summation of the challenge, but did not dwell on the moral of the story he was trying to tell: why Britain needed rebuilding and upon which principles it should be rebuilt? Was Britain too unequal to succeed before or just too poor? Was it too open to global markets or too closed; too short-termist in its outlook or too bloated and inefficient? Was the state broken, as Dominic Cummings and Tony Blair have argued in different ways, or simply underfunded? What was the fundamental cause of Britain’s problems and the moral failing at the root of this failure?

The Tories, in their last few months, attempted to narrow down the mission of government to a single word: “growth.” The problem for Labour is that “growth” alone is not a political mission and in one sense is actually profoundly anti-political, devoid of any moral content. For Margaret Thatcher, for example, growth would come once the moral defects of the state were cured. What was needed was strength and thrift: Methodism in practice. For Harold Wilson, growth would come once the amateur gentleman running things moved over for the clever men of tomorrow to take charge. What was needed was national planning: Socialism in practice.

When Scruton refounded the Conservative Philosophy Group he hoped to prompt a re-examination of “the core beliefs and assumptions of Tory politics”, so the party could take the lead on what he saw as the big issues of the day: “The environment, marriage and the family, the place of religion in the public square, press freedom, policing, the armed forces.” What are the core beliefs and assumptions for either party on such issues and into the next generation as we attempt to manage our demographic decline, build social cohesion, ensure safe tenure of housing and protect the beauty in our country while building the houses we need? What are the Labour or Tory positions on these questions — and based on which principles?

Though Scruton was a conservative, his writings have useful lessons for both parties. In 2017 he wrote Where We Are, which he described as “a personal response to the ‘Brexit’ decision”. The book, Scruton argued, was neither an argument for nor against Brexit, but rather an attempt to understand how to “bring the ‘leavers’ and the ‘remainers’ together” in a new national endeavour. In many senses this task has fallen to the new Labour government: to Make Brexit Work.

One of the problems facing Remainers in the referendum, Scruton argued, was that too many “sounded like people who could settle anywhere and always be on top of things”. For those who did not feel like that, the question of who governed us and from where was more important. In Scruton’s view this was because there were simply more important things than economics or geopolitics, most notably people’s sense of identity: “Who are we, where are we, and what holds us together in a shared political order?”

Labour would only regain its status as a party of government, he thought, “if it recognises the residual patriotism of its traditional voters, and concedes that it is possible to be a working-class socialist, a believer in national sovereignty, and a normal decent human being, who is neither racist nor xenophobic when it comes to dealing with the wider world”. Morgan McSweeney might well have uttered this at any time since Starmer became Labour leader in 2020.

Growth, while helpful for ensuring national stability, was not the most important thing, said Scruton: “It depends far more upon this sense that we belong together.” Such an observation should not be controversial for the socialist who believes in solidarity and collective action. But his analysis also demands the intellectual curiosity of the Conservative. If the job of a national government is to conserve a sense of national unity, as Scruton wrote, then the free market is not enough.

One way to understand the role of government in Scruton’s view, then, is to create a sense of “home” where people become at ease in the shared comforts and rules governing them. This, in a sense, was the Scrutonian answer to the question of “populism” which Labour MPs are already defining as the central mission of this government. “When human beings cease their wandering and mark out a place of their own, their first instinct is to furnish it with things which have no function — ornaments, pictures, knick-knacks,” he had written in England: An Elegy published in 2000. “This instinct for the purposeless has a purpose — namely to make these objects into an expression of ourselves and our common dwelling place, to endow them with the marks of order, legitimacy and peaceful possession.” If this were true of our personal lives, it was true of our national life too: he believed in the knick-knacks of the state; the black rod and the King’s speech; archaic parliamentary language and oddities of the House of Lords. For politics to tread more lightly on people’s lives, as Starmer has repeatedly declared as his aim, people need to feel at home — comfortable in the predictable order of the nation.

“When people feel at home, they allow themselves freedoms, hobbies and eccentricities,” Scurton wrote. “They become amateurs, experts and cranks. They collect stamps, butterflies or biscuit tins; they grow vegetables so large that nobody can eat them, and breed dogs so ugly that only Englishman could look them in what might charitably be called the face.” And they stop being so angry. In Scruton’s view, it was only when such contented order began to be lost, that people began to understand what it was that they were losing—the fate we are now living through in our age of disorder. “‘The owl of Minerva spreads its wings only with the gathering of the dusk,” Scruton liked to quote of Hegel.

The mission of Keir Starmer’s government, is to find a post-Brexit settlement in which the tensions which have roiled the country for so long finally settle into a more peaceful national contentment where populism and separatism are no longer so attractive to voters. To do so, Starmer does not need to make Britain great again, he needs to make it feel like home. Bring forth the doileys of State.


Tom McTague is UnHerd’s Political Editor. He is the author of Betting The House: The Inside Story of the 2017 Election.

TomMcTague

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David McKee
David McKee
2 months ago

Excellent work, Tom.

And McTague is right. Labour has come to power without having done its intellectual homework. If it thinks it can throw something together now, amid the deluge of red boxes, it is in for a disappointment. So it is reasonable to predict that Labour will drift, just like the Tories did for 14 years.

Thatcher did her homework in opposition, and it paid dividends in office. Her government always looked as though it was in power, as opposed to being in office. It’s no accident she won three elections on the trot.

Christopher Barclay
Christopher Barclay
2 months ago
Reply to  David McKee

Much of what you say about Thatcher can be said about Blair. Brown however had no idea what he wanted to do as PM and Cameron was just a Blair tribute act.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  David McKee

The so called intellectual heritage of Thatcher ruined everything it touched, when Thatcher governments did anything.positive, for busines for example, it was against the dogmatic grain. They spent money on human capital formation for example, funded people to retool, extend their reach and improve their effectiveness. From the community programme level up to postgraduate, the invested in human capital with public money. And they allowed people seek suitable work not just any old job. Essential also for building the nation’s capabilities.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

I think you rather destroyed your own thesis there?

Phil Day
Phil Day
2 months ago

As labour is driven by identitarian politics l see no hope of them doing anything except creating divisions.
A very disfunctional ‘home’ is the best we can hope for now.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  Phil Day

Not up to date. Labour has been invaded by identities like all else. Funny isn’t it how identitairian always had to do with someone else’s identity not your own. But surely that just one identity sharpening itself against another..

Andrew R
Andrew R
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

Nice try, conflating personal identity with the loony group identity.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

Identity politics is what you get when middle class leftists get rich and no longer want to talk about money. Labour is particularly prone to this because, as the Sunday Times analysis of the vote distribution quite clearly showed, it’s a party of the home counties middle class.

Katharine Eyre
Katharine Eyre
2 months ago

I do not believe that Labour is going to succeed in “making Britain feel more like home” or anything else other than making perhaps small inroads into solving the numerous dumpster fires blazing away that the Tories left behind. (And managing the dumpster fire that is David Lammy. Those past comments about Trump are going to come back and savage him now – not a good look for the UK’s top diplomat. Enjoy that new headache, Sir Keir.)
Even if Labour had spent its time in opposition with its thinking hat on, stroking its collective chin while staring off wistfully into the middle distance and now had some kind of philosophical underpinning to its actions – they have very little trust left in the bank to implement the plan in the real world.
Over the last 10 years, they have treated voters like they are stupid, racist fools for having the concerns that they do and having voted in a certain way. To now rock up to people’s doors and say “Hi, here’s our big new plan” will probably elicit a response along the lines of “Fill in the potholes, make sure I can see my GP when I need to, stop the small boats. You can stick your philosophy where the sun don’t shine.”
There needs to be a basic functionality to the state before people become receptive to bigger ideas. I’d say restoring that basic functionality to some degree is the best that Labour can hope for in its term in government. Comforting to know that you have brains like McSweeney’s bobbing around in the background though.

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

I agree. This is Mission Impossible. The Left have shattered the social contract in two ways. They have specifically made war on that idea of Home and the nation state. They are divisive internationalist identitarians who damn all whiteys as closet raycists and have via State Equality Laws given warped privileged status to different unassimilated minority groups. Result – overt sectarianism in the general election, four Muslim For Gaza MPs, JKR alone defending Womens Rights, teachers in hiding, no stop and search, Birmingham City Council bankrupt. A Home on fire. Starmer wants to project an image of Queeny-Tony like technocratic mangerial order. But he is a 1950s dirigiste socialist and he is a hardcore on your knees human rights progressive. Progressive ideology like hard religion does not unify. It seeks to expel all those who do not share the virtues of the London/SE Elect and class (who have enriched themselves via a gargantusn rigged property heist and put their class interests before the Nation in the foul Brexit civil war). Brexitty working classes, climate sceptics, Nimbys. The list of the Damned unwelcome in their House of Chaos is long. There will be no unity in the House of Starmer. Winter is coming.

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
2 months ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

I’m no fan of Labour, but I’m not sure you can blame the left when the Tories have been in Downing Street for 14 years. If they left Blair’s infrastructure in place then that’s entirely on them

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
2 months ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

Thats why I am not a fan of the wet Fake Tories who were neo Blairite stoodges and Quislings. They reinforced the baleful progressive Revolution. And this is why Starmer is left huffing and puffing devoid of ideas to restore vitality to our economy ar some stale socialism and a limp effort to use the busted Property Bubble Boom to make the ruling and rentier class feel rich.

Deb Grant
Deb Grant
2 months ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

It’s the kids innit. Advertisers, media and politicians are all chasing younger customers, for perfectly obvious reasons. The young, apart from a few nutty young men, aren’t buying right of centre any time soon – as evidenced by the election vote statistics. Brexit cemented that mindset drift.

The right has a lot of selling to do to win them over. A Labour disaster won’t be enough.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
2 months ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

“Rentier class” – so you are in fact some kind of socialist?!

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
2 months ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

That’s an impressive amount of buzzwords you’ve managed to cram into a single sentence I must say!

David Harris
David Harris
2 months ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

The last 14 years have been wasted by pretend Tory govts, almost as Left wing as the Labour party. Notice that Sunak’s nanny state smoking ban is back in the King’s Speech, this time from Starmer’s gang. For true Conservative principles vote Reform.

Deb Grant
Deb Grant
2 months ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

There were the small issues of mopping up after the Global Financial Crisis, Covid aftermath and Ukraine War energy, commodity and labour shortages to deal with – which Tories didn’t cause. Then there’s the self-inflicted wound of Brexit, which the majority voted for.

Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher
2 months ago
Reply to  Billy Bob

I don’t always agree with you but I totally do so on this point. And unfortunately for the Right, despite the fact that politics is very volatile at the moment, you simply can’t go back in time to that lost world that you wistfully wish would return.

In many ways it is true the 1950s were a remarkably stable time of in Britain’s history, with low crime rates etc. On the other hand – and I’m a gay man – they were they would have been hellish for me. If anything like post liberal conservatism is going to gain a place in our society it needs to stop sounding like just outright reactionary fogeyism, demonising successively immigrants, anybody to the left of them, and especially young people, who quiet obviously are the only future Britain has. It’s completely obvious that so many of the comments I hear of by people of a certain age (which includes myself!).

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
2 months ago
Reply to  Andrew Fisher

No one is arguing for a return to the grey bombed out Fifties – irs an anti Faragist myth of deranged Rejoiners!! What about the Eighties??? Bit closer! The years up to 1991 before the EU/Blair progressive Revolution of that decade, when the worst of the Socialist legacy horrors like BT BA BG and insane trade union overreach had been quashed; the economy and society were confident buzzy booming revived; there was a thing called growff, there was freedom for gay men and living/housing was affordable because 10 million unplanned migrants had not yet arrived to crash the entire public sector and the Pol Pot eco nuttery was not spreading its poison so we had cheap energy too. No internet no SM too!!! Nostalgia for the 80s kinda makes sense!!

AC Harper
AC Harper
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

Whole heartedly agreed. That Labour have no over-arching view of what should be done is disappointing – you might even say that the Labour government is defined by things they believe cannot or shouldn’t be done. Apophatic politics. And this leaves them open to ‘events’ that Labour have no political instincts to fall back on.

Was the state broken, as Dominic Cummings and Tony Blair have argued in different ways, or simply underfunded?

The reduction in the relentless growth of in the ‘state’, that is pushed beyond democratic control or funding, could be a political aim – yet Labour seem to make feeding the Beast one of their ‘unique selling points’.
Sadly I don’t think the Loyal Opposition are any better.

Richard Calhoun
Richard Calhoun
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

The elephant in the room is the ‘State’.
It’s far too big and until it is reduced in size we will not achieve growth or lower taxes for working people.

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
2 months ago

More than must Big. It is still an Activist highly regulatory EU Legacy State which is dirigiste law mad top down and – most alarmingly – coercive force. Lockdown revealed its innate bullying bossy and anti democratic nature. Starmer is a progressive so the invasion of our freedom and liberties will march in step with Mad Millibands & Ange’s invasion of our green lands.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

Lockdown was a great expression of civil liberty and the common moral purpose on which any meaningful liberty depends; it’s perversely self contradictory to set the one against the other.

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

Er – see what the Baroness has to say about that ludicrous jaw dropping post. The first report is out.

Julian Hartley
Julian Hartley
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

Lockdown was an expression of liberty.
War is Peace.
Freedom is Slavery.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago

Ridiculous assertion to make after our common estate has been hacked about and raffled off for years. Even when the cupboard is bare some still mindlessly demand giveaways.

Labour will rebuild the common estate to the evident benefit of most. That’s a mission at once practical and full of meaning for social being. You’ll see richer discourse around citizenship which connects rights and responsibilities and makes clear how our liberties depend on and derive from our common weal..

Deb Grant
Deb Grant
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

What common wealth? Who is going to create it when Socialist dogma removes any incentives to go the extra mile, better oneself and not be dependent on the state – that is, reliant on other people’s money.
It’s Cloud Cuckoo Land.

Dennis Roberts
Dennis Roberts
1 month ago
Reply to  Deb Grant

Your argument is out of date – neoliberal economics for several decades has removed the incentives to go the extra mile – why work harder when the effect will be to increase your rent?

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

I’d love you to be right, but their platform is simply too incoherent for their spell in office to be anything but disastrous.

Create growth whilst de-carbonising the grid and loading small businesses with yet more regulation? Not doable. Fix the housing crisis without limits on immigration or major new property taxes on their middle class voters? Absolutely not doable. Fix the NHS without fundamental structural change? No chance. I could go on all day.

Thanks to a compliant media Labour have been elected without any examination at all of their policies. The price will be very high.

Alicia Sinclair
Alicia Sinclair
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

Some great comments here
Basically, the ” leopard doesn’t change it’s spots”.
A biblical line , which clearly will upset many.
That Trump survived his assassination by God’s grace divine intervention won’t even be acknowledged by our churches will it? Let alone the likes of the BBC.
And here’ my point.
A people get the governance it deserves, here in the decaying west. Bin God. Get Shapps and Mandelson in effect.
We are without excuse, simply seeking the peace of the graveyard until we croak, leaving any grandkids as sacrifices to Communalism in Mao pantsuuts, albeit with a tie dye soul patch on the chin
Scruton was as gentle a soul ,as courageous as we deserved. And we got the likes of George Eaton and Johnny Mercer to destroy him.
Get your bibles out, you’ll be needing them.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago

Sort of. Or try reading Emmanuel Todd. He’ll tell you how much God societies actually need.

D Glover
D Glover
2 months ago

That Trump survived his assassination by God’s grace divine intervention won’t even be acknowledged by our churches will it? Let alone the likes of the BBC.

No, it won’t be acknowledged by me either. What about 50-year old family man Corey Comperatore who was shot in the same burst of fire? If God’s omniscient He knew Corey. If He’s omnipotent He could have saved him.
It looks more like blind chance than intelligent intervention.

General Store
General Store
1 month ago
Reply to  D Glover

That’s a rather tedious and human understanding of providence. Corey is in heaven now. Who knows how human agency and GOd’s divine plan will unfold. God isn’t ‘intelligent’ like some other ‘creature’. God is the ground of all being – outside all of those parameters.

General Store
General Store
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

You don’t leave your door wide open unless you live in a tight knit community where everyone knows each other.

Susan Grabston
Susan Grabston
2 months ago
Reply to  General Store

We leave our doors and our cars open in IOM. One of our many delightful surprises since coming over last year.

General Store
General Store
2 months ago
Reply to  Susan Grabston

IOM? My door is always open, but we’re miles from anywhere

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  Katharine Eyre

‘Westminster or Davos?’

‘Davos’

Every time.

Liam F
Liam F
2 months ago

Interesting article.
Many governments that we now view as transformational invoked a “cause” that allowed people to see a difficulty ahead which gave a purpose to be collectively overcome. The act of striving brought about the collective contentment of ‘Home’. (Eg Kennedy’s moonshot , Thatchers push for individual thrift striving against broken socialist models, Regan’s by defining the US’s purpose against USSR)
Today the atomisation of discourse brought about by social media has unwittingly prevented the very thing it was set up to do : how to socialise new ideas for the collective good.
Perhaps the task for Labour, if it’s brave enough, is to identify the problems created by unrestricted BigTech (increased loneliness , anger , teenage mental health, woke policies et al) and offer a happier, more contented life with less drama . This could give it the cover needed to tackle Google Facebook etc who are now far more powerful than individual governments.

Andrew R
Andrew R
2 months ago

It’s very straightforward, people want competence but they get ideology instead.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  Andrew R

Fortunately now we’ll have the opposite.

Andrew R
Andrew R
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

Half of Labour’s policies are incompatible with the other half, doesn’t sound competent to me.

I suppose you’re half right, Blair’s New Labour was competently incompetent thanks to its ideology.

Andrew R
Andrew R
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

You don’t live in Wales then.

Jonathan Nash
Jonathan Nash
2 months ago

It is worth remembering that less than 10 years ago Sir Keir wasn’t even an MP. Although he’s always been interested in politics, that is very different from being a practising politician (as Mussolini’s granddaughter once observed). It is why, about 2 years ago, he started bringing in the Tony Blair Institute: he needed a plan for government and the TBI has one which is, ahem, oven-ready.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
2 months ago

If i enter someone’s home and every surface is crammed with knick-knackery, my instinct is to recoil and think there won’t be an interesting conversation to be had here, since the ability to think just isn’t compatible with the need to enclose the eye and the brain with objects; with ‘stuff”.

The task of government should be to fulfil an agenda thought through in opposition. Whether you’d call it a philosophy or just a manifesto, it seems as if the Labour Party has entered government after 14 years with neither. They’ve been living in a house filled with knick knacks, incompatible with the process of thinking.

Trying to rebuild Britain in its image, where “the culture war has ended” by diktat, they need to do some serious thinking, and quickly. It’s all very well outsourcing the task to such as George Robertson on defence; why weren’t they doing this five or more years ago? Too busy with Corbyn’s mind-deadening knick knacks, acquired in the tat shops of Eastern Europe during his motorbike tours with Diane Abbott riding pillion.

Good article by Tom McTague. If Labour don’t wish to take heed of Scruton, they might do well to take heed of him, but drop the knick knacks.

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
2 months ago

It is worse than an intellectual void. Starmerism is dangerously schizophrenic. It is the Party of EU Hyper Interventionist Regulation. It is the Party of the Nutrient Newts that stops new reservoirs new Heathrows new roads and reforms even a few months ago. Yet to win power it has put on a Truss mask, yelping madly about Top Down Growff!! They are the Party of Devolution and Mayors and the joys of yet more white collar bureaucratic layers of government siezing powers from the centre. And – opps – now say – FU local Nimbys and farmers ,- we will coat your land in useless Chinese wind and solar farms and box houses few can afford. The Big Lie that there was no connection between Open Borders and free movement and 10 million extra people has finally been punctured by Farage. The more people see the link the more angry and powerful local resistance will be. UK = GDR. None of it will work. They do not like or respect the wealth creative private sector and so they and we are doomed.

Steven Farrall
Steven Farrall
2 months ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

Exactly.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  Walter Marvell

Ridiculously ill informed. Britain’s rulers of both parties chose to subordinate the normal EU rules concerning free movement and residence to British free market dogma, opening doors and windows no other EU state did. Open Borders was a creation of Thatcherite dogma, the exact sort of thing Tice and Farage champion.

DenialARiverIn Islington
DenialARiverIn Islington
2 months ago

Easier said than done.

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
2 months ago

Britain is and always will be riven with such class snobbery and spiteful disdain that there can never be a single sense of home, in Scruton’s cultural sense or otherwise. At least this was made transparent again after the EU referendum.
I actually believe that our American cousins have copied us here in their hysterical classism since the Obama administration. Meanwhile, ramped up British communitarianism has been a blessing for those who like to pour disdain on their cultural inferiors. They will always have that reassurance and revenge for the EU vote not going their way.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  Tyler Durden

And Scruton considered considered such snobbery an essential social characteristic. So much for a shared sense of home.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  Tyler Durden

Britain is and always will be riven with such class snobbery and spiteful disdain.
The difference now is that it is the state-employed, Labour-voting graduate class, not the old aristocracy or capitalist class, who display these characteristics.

Chris Whybrow
Chris Whybrow
2 months ago

Perhaps we should keep the United States more at an arm’s length, given how importing their culture wars over here has done us no favours.

Raccoon Whisperer
Raccoon Whisperer
2 months ago
Reply to  Chris Whybrow

Maybe the problem was the selective importation of issues and ideals that the left love and ordinary people really don’t?

0 0
0 0
2 months ago

The opposite. It’s the importation of market mishmash that investors love but ordinary people don’t.

Harry Child
Harry Child
2 months ago

If this Labour lot are anything like Blair’s 10 years it will be a deluge of new laws. It has been reported that his decade produced over 127,500 new pieces of legislation and as a judge said in 2010 it would take years to work through the implications. A definition of the rule of law is ‘“the government and its officials and agents are accountable under the law; the laws are clear, publicised, stable and fair, and protect fundamental rights, including the security of persons. The idea of the rule of law which politicians boast about in this divided country seems to me to only provide work for lawyers.

Walter Marvell
Walter Marvell
2 months ago
Reply to  Harry Child

Correct. I wonder why our prisons are so full…

Richard Calhoun
Richard Calhoun
2 months ago

Britain will not feel like home to it’s people when clearly the ‘Big State’ will be expanded.
‘Welfarism is destroying our economy and our values’

0 0
0 0
2 months ago

Au contraire. Expand the state to make room for all. House room, so that no one needs to feel excluded. If you belong you’re no longer alienated. The state is part of your being rather than something ‘over there .’ A Commonwealth.

Matt M
Matt M
2 months ago

At the risk of sounding like a broken record, the obvious answer is reducing immigrant numbers to a level compatible with our infrastructure and with integration.
The thing that makes a country feel unlike home is new people arriving all the time with their own customs and beliefs.
Labour should have a national crusade to reduce our over-reliance on imported workers encompassing education policy, housing, training, tax incentives for automation, etc. It would be a very popular and a very socialist thing to do. The unions would also love it.
On top of that they need to jettison all the woke stuff which really makes people feel alienated from their national institutions. They need to replace this with a patriotic celebration of our history and culture.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  Matt M

Labour has historically been the party which aims to run the country for the benefit of workers and the Tories have been the ones who seek labour market flexibility including immigration. Of course there are some Tories who see where their open borders tendency leads and make a show about Borders but they’re a side show like the International Socialists who imagine all workers of the world can actually work together.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

The most consequential act undertaken by New Labour was to deliberately break the link in monetary policy between housing costs and interest rates. That’s why you and I have got richer every year since 2004 while rent payers and wage earners got poorer.

‘The benefit of workers’ my @rse.

Deb Grant
Deb Grant
2 months ago
Reply to  Matt M

Labour and the Left in general disregard the importance of incentives and deterrents on human behaviour. That’s why Socialism/Communism has never worked.

Steven Farrall
Steven Farrall
2 months ago

Rachel Reeves and the author are wrong. Completely wrong. Taxes do not have to rise – at all. OTOH spending has to, and must be, cut. And taxes too.

Raccoon Whisperer
Raccoon Whisperer
2 months ago
Reply to  Steven Farrall

We need more transparency about how our taxes are spent and why money is allocated in the way it is.

Steven Farrall
Steven Farrall
2 months ago

Tom, Hayek was not a conservative. He said as much https://press.uchicago.edu/books/excerpt/2011/hayek_constitution.html

Norfolk Sceptic
Norfolk Sceptic
2 months ago

“Ed Miliband’s tweaks … ”

Some tweaks!

If you thought our Energy Industry was broken, you ain’t seen nothing yet.

John Riordan
John Riordan
2 months ago

Good article, though I’d probably say that about any article that gives the ideas of Roger Scruton a fair hearing.

While I agree with the sentiment of course, I do not believe it forms the defining mission of this government. I contradict the point in the article that claims growth isn’t that mission – I say that it very much is exactly that, and I say so as an erstwhile Tory voter who accepts that the Tory government of the past few years has failed, utterly, to do that one thing voters tend to expect of a Tory government: make the economy grow and get the country’s finances in order.

Can this Labour government succeed in this? I have my doubts, frankly. Even though Tony Blair is helping in the background and can reasonably claim to have been the only successful Labour leader still alive, and that this was only possible because the New Labour Blair era of 1997-2007 had strong economic growth, that’s an easy observation to make, but represents a set of conditions very difficult to bring about. Blair openly accepted the legacy of Thatcherism, which might have raised a few incredulous eyebrows amongst the Labour Party’s true faithful at the time, but in reality was simply a concession to the fact that political leaders who make a majority of voters wealthier, as a rule do not get themselves thrown out of office.

The problem for Starmer is that, unlike Blair, there is no successful economic legacy to inherit, because the Tories of the last 14 years have governed as social democrats, and this has damaged the economy while simultaneously proving that the same approach, if now taken by Labour, will produce the same effect. And this approach, importantly, is pretty much what Labour wants to do. So if the government does more of the same, the economy will do more of the same. High taxes and destructive capital allocation in energy markets and the regulatory state have already done damage: higher taxes and even more expensive boondoggles will simply make things worse.

But it might feel like home, alright. Lots of people are already feeling poor, cold, and under the constant meddlesome beady eye of the state, so making this even worse at least won’t feel unfamiliar.

0 0
0 0
2 months ago
Reply to  John Riordan

Good beginning. But the last fourteen years haven’t been polluted by social democracy but by austerity in the service of financial orthodoxy cronyism and and small state mantras. The challenge is how far Labour can break with these to achieve a more dynamic mixed economy. The easy part should be shedding financial orthodoxy and treat money as a public utility as China and now Russi have shown how to do. The more didficult rebuilding of capabilities public and private will depend on massive efforts in education and training.

John Riordan
John Riordan
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

Austerity?

Nonsense. Britain hasn’t had austerity since the 1940s.

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
2 months ago
Reply to  0 0

Whilst the Blairite Tories may have paid some lip service to ‘small state mantras’ you can’t really accuse them of having pursued small state policies. Cameron conservatism vs New Labour is a distinction without a difference.

Stephen Feldman
Stephen Feldman
2 months ago

Yes suddenly surrounded by rain bow flags in your neighborhood and not being permitted to feel uncomfortable .

Paul Thompson
Paul Thompson
2 months ago

Check on flammability.

Angus Douglas
Angus Douglas
2 months ago

What a lovely tribute to the great Roger Scruton.

Adam K
Adam K
2 months ago

For those who disapprove of mass migration, Britain feels less like home with each passing day. How can one feel that Britain is their home, let alone the pleasant Scrutonian view of it, when the political class will not state who and what Britain is for? How can Britain feel like home when it is constantly in demographic flux? No ideological programme can escape the reality that these problems of belonging stem from demographic change.
https://theheritagesite.substack.com/

0 0
0 0
2 months ago

Sorry, have to spoil the Scruton luvvies party. Dear old Roger S considered snobbery and class hierarchy fundamental characteristics of British, especially English, society. So much for any shared sense of home. So much for ethnography served up selectively as political philosophy. Better off taking it straight from McSweeney.

Bob Ewald
Bob Ewald
2 months ago

We could use a dose of “home” here in the USA as well.

Malcolm Webb
Malcolm Webb
2 months ago

The author, like Starmer, denigrates populism. In doing so they both ignore the hopes and fears of ordinary folk – or the “deplorables” as they might also privately regard them. . Good luck with that. The “deplorables” vastly outnumber the Elites and they are becoming increasingly fed up with the state of British politics. If the right of centre can unite 2029 could be fascinating to behold.

Peter Mott
Peter Mott
2 months ago

Great piece though I would quibble with one thing. “Growth” is not ❝devoid of any moral content❞ because there is a climate faction called “Degrowth”, more prevalent in the US than here I think, who hold growth to be immoral.

Gordon Arta
Gordon Arta
2 months ago

In simple terms, we don’t need a ‘loyal opposition’, we need an ‘alternative government in waiting’, replacing obstructive criticism with constructive policies and measures.

Michael Clarke
Michael Clarke
2 months ago

It would help if Cabinet Government was restored. The development of a presidential system (an “all of government” approach, we call it) is an inevitable development of the complexity of modern government but a functioning Cabinet system where the PM is primus inter pares must reduce the power of the Sue Grays and the Morgan McSweeneys, or rather Cabinet Ministers must have the backbone to tell the PM that they won’t be dictated to by Gray or McSweeney.

Santiago Excilio
Santiago Excilio
2 months ago

That picture of Starmer is amusing. A man squinting into the distance, trying to see the sunlit uplands to which he thinks his socialist ideology will lead everyone . . . except he can’t quite make it out through the haze and, marching forwards, falls instead into the gaping pit of despond and despair that socialism always creates. Perfect. The light at the end of the tunnel is an oncoming train.
I will be surprised indeed if labour get more than one term, let alone a decade. Only 1 in 5 people voted for them and when they fail to deliver a large proportion of those will turn their heads.

leonard o'reilly
leonard o'reilly
1 month ago

“The owl of Minerva spreads its wings only with the gathering of the dusk.” Such a beautiful metaphor, beautifully put. The truth of the day is only fully known just as night falls. Too late. Tant pis pour nous.

Howard Clegg
Howard Clegg
1 month ago

When I was an accountant, working for a big glossy publishing company, myself and various functional managers would look at our various, shared problems and routinely spot obvious inefficiencies and inconsistencies. We would say “what if…?” and trot off to our big, glossy superiors and say just that; “what if…?”

Usually the answer would come down, “no no, there’s a generic solution in the pipeline, hold your horses.” Which never came. The relevant “generic solutions” department would get restructured, or fall out of favour, or just be shit at producing “generic solutions.”

So myself and my “functional” peers would shake our heads and suck our teeth. Again.

This is the problem with “ideas” they are easy and fun. But so far removed from the messy reality of actually fixing stuff that needs fixing. Gather enough of these ideas together, connect them all up with contingent assumptions and you’ve got yourself an ideology.

Ideologies are even more fun and even further removed from the messy business of actually fixing stuff. Plenty of space for untethered musings and grandiose plans; also known as magical thinking. I’ve lost count of the number of senior managers who’ve said “Oooh, I love policy work!” Whilst simultaneously not appearing to care about fixable problems in the here and now.

So I applaud Labour for hiring Fiona Hill and George Robertson; people who appear to care and actually know what they are doing. f**k ideology and big ideas. We’ve had enough lazy thinking by the likes of Truss and Johnson and the craven cowardice of the conservative party in general. Preferring idiotic tribal orthodoxies to actually engaging with the actual problems.

I wish them luck. Both Hill and Roberson have experienced how badly untethered thinking can go wrong. Hill with the Trump Whitehouse and Roberson with the Iraq war. I think Starmer may be on to something.