The death of Thatcher has opened up a
lot of old wounds and a lot of old debates. The news narrative was
dominated by North Korea and IDS claiming he could live on £53 a
week, then all of a sudden we were dragged back to the 1980s to
debate the miners’ strike and the poll tax riots. Again and again,
I have heard the same justification for Thatcher's actions: that the
unions controlled the country in the 1970s, and that they used
collective bargaining to bring the country to a standstill.
Clearly there was public outrage
following the Winter of Discontent, which Thatcher effectively
harnessed to pursue her own political agenda. Even many of those who
disagreed with her cure for the problem agreed that ‘something had
to be done’. Most politicians are opportunists and this was a once
in a generation chance to change the agenda. Thatcher's success leads
me to ask: why are we so bad at this on the left? Could we not use
the banking crisis in the same way to achieve our aims?
Anti-banker sentiment is at an all
high. Bankers are derided across nation, from cartoons in broadsheet
newspapers to Carling commercials. Their popularity is located on the
scale somewhere below politicians and above benefit claimants -
firmly near the bottom. However no-one is making a strong attempt use
this anger to effect any change, unlike the Thatcher government was
able to in the early ‘eighties when it capitalised on anti-strike
sentiments.
Essentially, the main reason for this
is the entire political establishment is broadly in favour of letting
the banks off the hook. Neither side wishes to be publicly viewed as
in the banker's pockets, but the general consensus in Westminster is
that we need the elitist, tax dodging money swallowing black hole
that is the City of London more than it need us. This is of course
not true, and will remain untrue until the Square Mile takes off and
flies above us in a disgusting parody of a Douglas Adams novel.
Britain isn’t the Isle of Man. We have an economy that exists
outside the Square Mile and anyone who works in chemical engineering,
software development, games & high tech arts, aerospace or any of
the other industries in which Britain is a world leader should be
greatly offended by the idea that we dependent on the bankers.
It doesn’t have to be this way.
‘Bashing the bankers’ is just tabloid stuff – in and of itself,
rhetoric doesn’t achieve much. What it could do, however, is
provide the ground work for creating a broad consensus for more
intelligent regulation, and above all an end to the morally redundant
idea that rampant inequality is somehow good for everyone.
Anti-banker sentiment could be a starting point for a debate
challenging the assumptions of our pro-greed, anti-collectivist
consensus, just like Thatcher challenged the political consensus of
the post war era. It’s a debate we badly need to have, but neither
the Labour Party nor anyone else in mainstream politics seems willing
to have it.
Thatcher, for all her innumerate
faults, stood for a clearly defined ideology. She had a vision for
what society should be liked and set about making it so, manipulating
anti-union sentiment and patriotic feelings over the Falklands war
whenever public confidence in her plan faltered. Thatcher genuinely
believed that the whole country would be better off if labour markets
were less regulated and the unions were less powerful. At the time
most of the country did not believe this as strongly as she did
(although now it is now an almost universally held political opinion)
but popular anti-union sentiment allowed her to pursue her
ideological objectives. The reason the same thing is not happening to
the bankers today is that it is no longer consider appropriate for
politicians to have strong ideological view points. Instead both
sides tend towards varying degrees of acceptance of the neo-liberal
hegemony.
The Conservative Party under Thatcher’s
leadership were not united in their support for her policies and she
had to fight off a few leadership challenges before eventually be
ousted in 1990. Still to most people she stood as a strong unifying
figure bringing together a diverse movement around a single set of
goals. This is something the left sorely lacks. After the banking
crisis the left is more divided than ever. This is especially true
when discussing how we respond to the problems presented by this new
era of capitalism. The left has always been fractious and divided
but there is no consensus on how to best use the popular dislike of
bankers to achieve any political goals.
Thatcher was an astute politician who
used the public’s anti-union sentiment to great advantage in order
to accomplish her political goals. The Left could learn a lot from
her in how to respond to the banking crisis and in finding a way to
snap out of this ideological paralysis we find ourselves trapped in.
The public hates the banks almost as much as they hate benefit
claimants. This is because most people who work hard resent people
who they feel have got something for nothing. The Right is expertly
using this feeling to roll back the welfare state. The left should be
thinking the same if they want to make a dent in the power of
international banking conglomerates.
No comments:
Post a Comment