Ten years ago, I was part of a protest that stormed the headquarters of the Conservative party in Millbank Tower. A ragtag group of school, college and university students, we came together to protest the scrapping of EMA and the trebling of tuition fees. People set placards ablaze and danced around the fires, offices were ransacked, and – famously – a fire extinguisher was thrown from the top of the building.
For those of us who had been attending protests for years, usually against austerity, this one felt different. It was exhilarating, and a far cry from the institutionally organised marches where we forced ourselves through the streets holding the prescribed banners and drearily chanting the prescribed slogans. At Millbank and in the weeks that followed, we were transformed into subjects with our own agency, and the chaos and uncertainty of those days was experienced as the opening of possibilities that extended beyond the protests themselves.
In Capitalist Realism, Mark Fisher wrote that, “the tiniest event can tear a hole in the grey curtain of reaction which has marked the horizons of possibility under capitalist realism. From a situation in which nothing can happen, suddenly anything is possible again,” and this felt like one such event. The next day, NUS President Aaron Porter wrote an article in the Sun in which he described the disorder as “despicable” and that sharpened our swords against the ranks of careerist New Labour bureaucrats (a look at his subsequent CV is dispiriting; this class is still disappointingly employable).
The leftist magazine Tribune describes Millbank as “one of the most important demonstrations in British political history”, striking a blow at “the nerve centre of the British establishment”. They are certainly right that it has taken on “mythic significance”, judging by the numbers who claim to have been there compared to the relatively small number of people who actually stormed the Tower.
For the few weeks following, protests and occupations spread over the country, culminating on December 9 when the bill was passed and we were kettled on Westminster Bridge until gone midnight. There was no food, no water, no toilet, and the rallying cries passed from joy, through defiance and anger, to desperation. As we were finally released into the night, including school-aged children hundreds of miles from home, we had to walk one-by-one through a tunnel of riot police shining a light on our faces and taking our photo. Any face coverings, worn to protect anonymity, were forcibly removed. We had lost, and the government and police had won. We had been humiliated and it felt like the end.
But it was not. Tribune argues, rather meekly, that Millbank’s legacy lives on through its participants: “Many took on important roles as trade unionists, climate activists, Palestine and Kurdish solidarity workers, disseminators of alternative media, organisers of migrant and refugee campaigns, and senior officials in the Labour Party.” This is another way of saying that Millbank did nothing but reproduce the ranks of the professionally ineffective Left. Tribune should be more ambitious: Millbank’s real significance was much more serious. Though we couldn’t see it at the time, it marked the emergence in politics of a class faction that was just coming into view and is even now transforming our country: the graduate without a future.
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SubscribeCompletely forgotten about it. It changed nothing except to confirm once more that violence is the Left’s default mode of protest. One should note that the fire extinguisher narrowly missed a passer by. Pathetic prats.
The whole article speaks intensley to me and my lived experience. I feel the writer is describing a universal political journey virtually all of us go on, and so can deeply empathise with…it’s called growing up.
Mate, I grew up way way back. I’m 69 and a contemporary of all the hard left wankers like that prat Corbyn who have done nothing but try to take down the country for 50 years. Politics fixes nothing and usually makes things worse. I guess so many Lefty blokes go into it as they can’t get girlfriends.
Luckily, from my point of view, there are other ways of growing up and thus many of us didn’t have to experience what you term a “universal political journey”.
Universal my arse. Have you ever been outside north London?
Old left, new left, red left, blue left – they all miss the point.
For 30 years (indeed arguably since Big Bang in 1986) an alliance has developed, by accretion, between the Big Money people on Earth and the mixed various forces of the Political Left.
‘An ALLIANCE?!!!’ you cry in disbelief.
Yes. Both share paramount objectives in the short and middle terms: mass immigration and unaccountable government.
Big Money wants cheap labour and no-one interfering with its levers of social control (e.g. social discourse networks heavily policed to prohibit awkward revelations).
The Political Left desires to see the traditional demographies of the Occident diluted, then overwhelmed by mass importation of Third World people who will (as in parts of Latin America) always vote Far Left, however much successive Marxian kleptocrats keep ruining their countries.
If anyone wants to champion the Common Man and Woman nowadays, they need to see this as the key battleground – the People versus those extremely cynical and self-serving interests.
Populism is now the politics of the true underdogs.
Exactly, and both New Labour in the UK and the Democrats in the US became enthralled with Big Finance and globalisation, utterly betraying their traditional supporters. I have just read the book ‘Listen Liberal’ by Thomas Frank on this subject as it relates to the US.
Biden was the Wall St candidate and he will tack back towards Big Finance and globalisation etc after Trump at least offered some hope and some jobs to the American working class.
Underpinning a lot of the nonsense Trump said and tweeted was quite a lot of good sense. He was on the right track in so many ways, it is a shame he was such an obnoxious git. America will regret not giving him 4 more years, after which he would have had to be replaced one way or another.
“He was on the right track in so many ways…” name one.
Take your time, details appreciated.
His antagonism to China, his recognition that C-19 is a Scamdemic, and his recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
Surely you haven’t already forgotten these achievements?
Also: Defusing the situation with North Korea, facing down Iran, huge progress in the Middle East, record levels of employment – especially among black Americans – a booming economy (until Covid struck), and no foreign wars.
Not too bad, really.
you missed one…an incumbent POTUS and a LOSER.
From John Adams to George H.W. Bush, ten Commanders-in-Chief throughout U.S. history have run for re-election and lost.
What he said about Islam for one.
His real COVID three pronged strategy for 2
Getting people back to work for 3.
Standing up to North Korea for 4
Confronting Chinese unfair trade subsidies for 5
Encouraging UK to stand up to the EU for 6
Kicking the woke thought policy out of administrative bureaucracies for 7
what specifically did he say about Islam?
what were the three prongs you imagine he had in his Covid strategy?
“Standing up to North Korea for 4.”…HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
WTF is “…the woke thought policy…”
Giving the People a voice, trying to stop vested interests corrupting free speech; calling out political lies; cutting taxes; re-shoring American industries to help the American workers; standing up to Chinese dumping; achieving a peace settlement between Israel and Arab states; standing up to Kim Il Jun; forcing the Iranians to stop creating fissile material; supporting Brexit and democracy… That’s 11 off the top of my head but I could go on and on. And it didn’t take long, either.
At the top of my head..
Before Covid struck, US unemployment rate was 3.7%, amongst Blacks & Latinos it was 4.2%, the lowest for 50 years. The gap between whites & minorities was the smallest on record…
https://edition.cnn.com/201…
. Trump brokered peace deals between Israel & Bahrain, Israel & UAE, Serbia & Kosovo. Israel & Sudan ensuring Israel is recognised.
Except Latinos voted for Trump in record numbers. It’s almost like they’re not mindless zombies solely out to destroy everything you value, or something.
But hey, if you want to keep insulting and alienating an ever-growing demographic, who am I to stop you? I’ll be over here trying to convince my fellow liberals to not do the same.
Biden won 66% of the Latino vote, the exact same number as Clinton in 2016.
Typical NAXALT argument:
“Not all “X” are like that”. Never convincing because nobody was actually saying that they were. As the saying goes, it only takes the vast majority…
Except Latinos voted for Trump in record numbers.
so did blacks and perhaps gays, yet Trump still got nowhere near to majorities of those groups, either. I agree with you that these groups are not zombies, yet the left loves to attack the ones who stray from liberal orthodoxy. It’s funny, really; no one expects white people to vote as a bloc but those same people invariably view minority groups as a herd.
“Except Latinos voted for Trump in record numbers, so did blacks and perhaps gays.”
you sir are a lying sack of trump.
“Manners maketh man”.
He wasn’t insulting immigrants. He was explaining his understanding of the rationale underlying the left’s advocacy of continuous mass immigration.
you really need to brush up your reading for comprehension skills.
anyone who can veer from “Big Money wants cheap labour…” to “The Political Left desires to see the traditional demographies of the Occident diluted, then overwhelmed by mass importation of Third World people…” is clearly not playing with a full deck.
Big money’s desire for cheap labour is in league with the Political Left’s scheme to dilute the demographies of the Occident that is QAnon orthodoxy and certifiably looney tunes.
May I ask, is English your native tongue?
so you are saying you haven’t gotten over being butthurt…you shouldn’t be here if you can’t deal with being intellectually challenged
Is that a no?
“…Third World people who will (as in parts of Latin America) always vote Far Left…”
well that is just wrong…from ProPublicaby Jeremy B. Merrill for ProPublica, and Ryan McCarthy, ProPublica Nov. 12, 5 a.m. EST
“In Florida, where President Donald Trump gained crucial support among Latino voters, his campaign ran a YouTube ad in Spanish making the explosive ” and false ” claim that Venezuela’s ruling clique was backing Democratic nominee Joe Biden.
“YouTube showed the ad more than 100,000 times in Florida in the eight days leading up to the election, even after The Associated Press published a fact-check debunking the Trump campaign’s claim. Actually, Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro expressed opposition to both presidential candidates.”
Quite right. The election of Joe Biden and the “resignations” of Cains and Cummings from Downing Street are both victories for the alliance between big business and the leftist establishment that actually runs governments. We poor, deluded voters have little or no real influence on who runs our countries or how they are run.
“Populism is now the politics of the true underdogs.”
QAnon’s raison d’être and their justification for burning down 5G cell towers which clearly is the cause of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
You only succeeded because the police allowed you to. So then, sensibly, you should ask why did they let you get to the top of Conservative Headquarters? The answer is the Police wanted to send a message to the Conservative Party. So as fired up and enthusiastic and idealistic as you were, actually, you were being used. Which is a shame for you and a deep Shaming of those who led the Police.
‘They pranked the world media into believing Slavoj Žižek and Lady Gaga were close friends.’
My God! The pillars of the Establishment must have been tottering!
Brilliant parody (I assume).
Too many mediocre students completing too many mediocre degrees with a ‘Desmond’ 2:2. Blair set a target of 50% of 18 year olds to go to University without thinking how that would be paid for. The Department of Education comes in behind only the NHS and the various arms of the Welfare State in terms of spending; it’s an enormous budget that can’t cope with the expectation. Time to stop this nonsense of a virtual 18+ education system. Cut the number of University places in half, cut the loans and the rest can study in the evening, after work, if they are so inclined.
If only 2:2’s were that common. Grade inflation means that whilst the ability level of the average student has been in decline for at least the last 30 years, the number of firsts and 2:1s has continued to rise. I am rather embarrassed to admit that I work in higher education and I can see this for myself. Indeed, most of the time when I second mark other teachers’ marking, I feel like I am fighting a battle to maintain at least some sort of decent standard. It may be unnecessary to add that the calibre of teacher has fallen in line with the quality of the student. Maybe if people like the author of this article conceded this reality, we could have an honest debate about higher education.
I did read the whole piece, but was tempted to abandon at Para 2:
“For those of us who had been attending protests for years, usually against austerity, this one felt different.”
This about a demonstration in 2010 – UK Austerity was initiated in 2010!
Is the rest of the thinking in the piece equally loose?
New Labour was the breeding ground and Blair the father of austerity.
Really? Explain please.
New Labour was the breeding ground and Blair the father of austerity.
that is all…
Platitudes, more details please, and do try not to be crude, it is so unladylike don’t you agree?
Blair and Brown were the grandfathers of the most insane levels of spending – on nothing useful or effective – that the country has ever seen. Cameron was the son who made a few cosmetic attempts to rein in excessive spending at the family business, and Johnson is the grandson who will bankrupt the business once and for all.
The ‘useless’ spending was the QE after the banking crash. In effect a colossal stock buy-back. The health service spending and juvenile court spending had a big impact on waiting times and the resultant suffering- for millions of people.
Worked so well we’ve jolly well gawn and dun it again. With knobs on.
Whatever it may have been it was not austerity. We were still spending more than we took in, just less egregiously.
Thinking? These people don’t think.
I wonder if the author would have written the same article had the fire extinguisher hit and killed someone.
Yes, he would have written the same article. Unless, that is, the fire extinguished had killed the writer.
‘Yet 10 years on, the movement Millbank gave birth to has crumpled. Its predictions ““ that scrapping EMA and trebling university fees would put off poor kids from college and university respectively ““ have been proved wrong.’
They have, but not for the misguided ‘noble’ reasons you probably like to think you were fighting for at the time.
Blair insisting that the world and his wife should all go to university played wonderfully into his levelling up, ‘equal opportunities for all’ narrative in the late 90s, but it has proved, like so many of this man’s and his party’s policies, to be a disaster in the longer term for this country.
Playing into the enduring aspirational middle class obsession might well have been a vote winner back then, but it created a generation of ‘over-educated’, over-entitled individuals with forever insufficient commensurate jobs for them to go to and, far worse, a permanent, glaring, but crucial, unskilled and semi-skilled jobs gap which he and his successors would later choose (or be forced) to expediently fill by availing themselves to the max of the benefits of the EU’s so-called free movement.
Little wonder then that we also saw a corresponding explosion in bullsh*t jobs during the Blair years that depressingly continues to this day.
‘White collar’ jobs, a good many that amounted to leeching off those in the productive economy but were rarely of any practical use and jobs that frequently came at huge cost to the public purse, plus a generation of disaffected youth forced to take jobs many now saw, quite wrongly, as ‘beneath them’ due to the debt funded university education that they were reliably informed was supposed to guarantee them of avoiding such an ‘ignominious’ fate.
No one has defined “left” more pithily than one of the Marxist left’s foremost sponsors Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock Inc, Agenda Contributor, World Economic Forum, who spoke with feeling of ‘The intersect between COVID, Climate and Racial Justice: the three great issues of our time.’ Jeremy Corbyn couldn’t have put it better.
“Know thy enemy”.
“They pranked the world media into believing Slavoj Žižek and Lady Gaga were close friends”
Good gracious me, whatever next.
Well Zizek and Gaga make about as much sense as each other, so it wouldn’t surprise me they were very good friends.
I completely agree.
“Ten years ago, when Tory HQ was stormed, a new political faction was born”
RIP new political faction, then. Exactly what difference has it made to ANYTHING?
It destroyed a perfectly usable fire extinguisher.
Haven’t laughed so much in ages. Son the greatest achievement of you and yours is an 80 seat Tory majority and the alienation of Labours traditional supporters. You really don’t get it, very few people are interested in your facile politics.
As I started reading this, I thought, “Here we go again – another smug, self-justifying Leftie trying to find the meaning of life.” By the end of the article, I was happy that he had been forced to grow up as he admits the Left is in disarray. Yet my smiles were nonetheless tempered by the fact that these moneyed, self-satisfied ‘enfants terribles’ are now part of the global Marxist campaign even (or especially, should that be?) espoused by the World Economic Forum. With cancel culture, wokism, gender politics and the assault on free speech rampant, with no recourse to debate or difference of opinion, these clueless nasties are, indeed, taking over the world. Slowly, but still… Biden is the useful idiot who is typical of this trend. Very disturbing.
“Today … That challenge comes from the Right.”
If only.
Couldn’t help noticing that most of this piece is written in the passive voice, e.g.
Consciously or otherwise you are distancing yourself from the events you claim to have taken part in. I wonder why.
I find it depressing that so many of these self-professed and supercilious people end up working for foundations or NGOs instead of doing something productive.
Yes, there seems to be an endless supply of non-jobs for these completely useless people. It is one of the great scandals of our time.
Hannibal kettled the Romans at Cannae.
I think Tobias Phibbs should read Peter Thonemann’s article about the protests in the TLS here. It gives a clear-eyed analysis of why the violent attack on Millbank Tower was such a terrible idea. The students sabotaged their own cause.
Write a book then, start a movement, stick two fingers up to all the modern left, embrace Tom Paine or the levellers show the modern left how full of shit and corrupt it is and reconnect with decent values.
Ah the joys of youth where responsibility and reality have opt outs! I am pleased that the writer acknowledges the tuition fee policies that he and his chums fought against were Gordon Brown govt policy, albeit with bi-partisan support. Why did he not react with such destruction and violence against the person (throwing a fire extinguisher at random targets!) when the Brown govt made and published the plans to stop EMA and triple tuition fees?
“… the graduate without a future.”
our global future when AI joins forces with quantum computing and makes 40 percent of the global workforce redundant.
The reference to Grateful Dead’s lyrics in ‘Trucking’ remind that ‘them and us’ has been going on in this country at least since 1066, yet not just the latest revolution but the one GD rode on were ephemeral. Yet another head of the Left hydra has departed its shoulders. The explanation offered is that the “Left … poses no serious alternative to liberal, capitalist modernity”. This shows the need to analyse why the capitalist model is so tenacious. Maybe expecting mass societies to work like a barter group in the Garden of Eden, where everyone knows everybody and a benign all-knowing all-loving head gardener is always on hand to smooth out the wrinkles, is just fantasy – or worse, in communist, theocratic and other totalitarian regimes. Maybe capitalism’s success lies in that it is, in the words of graffiti I saw in an underpass at Sussex University, “a system based on the denial of people” (I lie, actually it read ‘love’ not ‘people’, although maybe that’s not such a bad alternative). You might ruminate on that.
Dear UH
“R Rate 0.9″ Say Official CSS 😳 WHY Are We In Lockdown Boris?
YOU tubr /watch?v=GIBfzDy2PbU
Should have gone to Tufton St.
A masturbatory article from a masturbatory section of society.
Re the reference to increasing numbers of disadvantaged going to university, they may be going but are all they staying? They are not.
The drop out rate amongst disadvantaged students was 2% higher at the last count according to YouGov. The drop out rate generally is 6 out of a 100 on average, 8.8 disadvantaged drop out.
Beware of looking at one set of figures and ignoring what follows.
I was quite taken by the way the participants eventually made a living on protest platforms. What a waste of talent.
‘This was a bipartisan reform implemented by a generation who had paid nothing for their education’ sorry to say it again, but it was a generation that paid nothing because they did not have access to higher education at all. Only 5% of school leavers went on to university back in the day. Those freeloaders were upper class almost to a man, and a few women. The idea was that tuition fees would make it available to all, and it has.
The old argument sometimes heard from those priveleged with a modern degree education is that everyone else should pay for it, even people who have not gained such an advantage. Instead everyone else without a student loan should really be campaigning for a similar “no win – no fee” loan based on the same terms. Though it may be an indicator of the poor way in which we educate our kids in practical matters such as cooking, basic plumbing, bike maintenence and personnel finances etc. but I really hope the silent majority of kids appreciate that is not too bad a deal and give uni a try if they are so inclined.
Yes, the answer to the problem of graduates without a future is to not go to Uni unless you’re going to gain knowledge that will help you do well at work.
There is a massive blind spot in a society which claims to be so focused on equality, yet still looks down on tradesmen & basically anyone without a degree.
While I don’t regret going to University, a school friend who had to leave after ‘O’ levels to support their family income has worked in the same industry as I do and all through the years our incomes have been very similar. Ironically that friend is currently employed at a Russell group uni and advises the academics on tech.