Let The Party Speak: Only by striking down the blatantly self-protective rules with which the parliamentary wing of the Labour Party has surrounded itself, can the rank-and-file and affiliate members recover their autonomy and rebuild their organisation into a political force capable of rescuing the nation. (Painting by Paulo Zerbato)
LAST WEEKEND, Labour’s governing body, the New Zealand
Council, endorsed a comprehensive overhaul of the party’s constitution. These new
rules have the potential to revolutionise left-wing politics in New Zealand –
but only if Labour’s rank-and-file membership and its trade union affiliates summon
all their courage and imagination to the party’s annual conference in November.
That is the moment to reclaim the Labour Party from an ideologically suspect, intellectually
moribund and morbidly self-protective Labour Caucus. If the moment is allowed
to pass, then the Review Committee will be remembered only for giving Labour MPs new rules for committing old trangressions.
The rule changes on affiliation to the party, for example,
could see a host of advocacy groups bringing political commitment, membership
and, most importantly, bold, evidence-based policies, to the process of
constructing Labour’s new election “platform”. Imagine Mike Smith and his
Fabians as fully-fledged affiliates, with votes to cast, debating economic
policy. But, why stop at the Fabians? If left-wing activists with
interests ranging from the arts and public broadcasting, to urban
planning and industrial democracy, decide to get their act together they’ll incorporate a
society or institute, affiliate it to Labour, and feed their ideas directly
into the party's deliberations.
A party offering potential members vibrant regional forums
where new and radical ideas are debated and refined for presentation to the electorate,
and where opportunities for effective, street-level political activism abound,
is likely to grow by leaps and bounds. The party’s national leadership would be
able to identify in potential parliamentary candidates qualities
more substantive than assiduous personal networking, ruthless back-room vote-trading
or three years as a parliamentary researcher or communications manager. Men and
women entering Cabinet with practical plans for social and economic reform would
offer a welcome contrast to past Labour cabinet ministers who were content to let
civil servants tell them what was and wasn’t possible.
What Ms Coatsworth and her team of reformers have done is
devise a set of Twenty-First Century mechanisms for resurrecting the Labour
Party of the 1970s and 80s.
Labour had expanded rapidly in the late-1970s as New
Zealanders, horrified by the authoritarian instincts and philistine excesses of
the Muldoon-led National Government, flocked to the Opposition’s banner. Though
there was no formal opportunity for affiliation, members of the
extra-parliamentary anti-apartheid, anti-nuclear and feminist movements joined
up in their hundreds and swiftly applied their expertise to the task of turning
activist aspiration into party policy. There was of course considerable overlap
with the trade union affiliates, whose organisers provided important logistical
and voting support at annual conferences. By 1984 this proudly independent and
fiercely democratic Labour Party had more than 85,000 branch members and close
to quarter-of-a-million affiliated trade union members. There was an active
party presence from Kaitaia to Bluff.
A party this strong took a lot of breaking, but break it
Rogernomics did. The Parliamentary Party has always presented the
organisational wing of Labour with problems. Labour MPs are more than mere
party “delegates” in the House of Representatives, they are also the nation’s
legislators and, when Labour is in office, Cabinet Ministers with all the
responsibilities of Government. But these perennial structural tensions look trivial
when compared to the open enmity that divided the rank-and-file and
affiliate membership from the Caucus, and ultimately split the party.
It was a scoundrel time, when loyalty and treachery traded
uniforms on an almost daily basis. A time when a Cabinet Minister, Richard
Prebble, could injunct the governing body of his own party to prevent his
political enemies from taking over his electorate committee. A visit to the
current Labour Party website, however, discloses only a single bland reference
to this awful period (which saw Labour’s membership plummet from 85,000 to
15,000 in less than six years):
The Fourth
Labour Government (1984-1990), led successively by David Lange, Geoffrey Palmer
and Mike Moore took difficult and long overdue decisions necessary for the modernisation of the New Zealand Economy.
The
constitutional changes proposed by Moira Coatsworth and her team will,
hopefully, bring into being a Labour Party capable of seeing that sentence for
what it truly is. Not simply a deliberate elision of all the brutalities and
betrayals of Rogernomics, but a refusal by all subsequent Labour leaders and
presidents to acknowledge (let alone mourn) the loss of the mass social-democratic political movement the Fourth Labour Government destroyed. A party
unable, or unwilling, to tell the truth about the 1984-1990 period is a party
in the deepest denial.
Helen Clark was
the perfect person to lead such a party. She was so unquestioningly of the
Labour Party that the membership felt unable to challenge her all-too-obvious
unwillingness to repudiate the Roger Douglas legacy (many of whose champions
remained in her caucus). Traumatised by the Rogernomics experience and the bitter split with Jim Anderton’s
followers, the bewildered rump of members who remained were happy to see their policy-making
role diminished and the power of the Caucus strengthened in return for the cessation
of factional strife and a semblance of party unity.
Helen Clark as Miss Havisham: That which is prevented from growing, decays.
It was a bad
bargain. Like Dickens’ Miss Havisham, Helen Clark refused to clear away the
detritus of her party’s ill-fated nuptials with the New Right, allowing it,
instead, to rot and fester throughout the party. Meanwhile the splendid social-democratic
wedding-gown she had worn to her never-consummated “Third Way” marriage, faded slowly
to rags on her back. In departing New Zealand for New York the best she could
offer by way of a successor was one of Roger Douglas's earliest converts.
The painstaking
reconstruction of a (nearly) independent Labour Party organisation has been the work of a small but determined group of activists. It was they who drove a reluctant Phil Goff steadily
to the Left and compiled the most progressive Labour election manifesto in
fifteen years. Their latest gift to the party is a draft set of constitutional
reforms – the scope and potential of which are marred by just one,
Caucus-driven, defect.
The democratisation of the procedure for electing the Party
Leader has been effectively sabotaged by the suggestion that the deposition of a
clearly unpopular and/or ineffective leader may be vetoed by just 34 percent of
the membership of the Labour Caucus. A minority of MPs is, thereby, invested
with the capacity to thwart the will of a clear majority of their colleagues –
and the entire party organisation.
In the words of a Guest Commentator on the Labour-supportive
blogsite The Standard:
At base the reforms presume there is
a beautiful pyramid of power, with the Leader in Wellington at the top. The
constitutional proposals entrench the Leader so that even if they only have the
support of 33% of caucus, no challenge to the leadership is possible.
Only the most naïve Labour Party member could construe this provision as
anything other than the Caucus Right’s SAAC (Shearer At All Costs) strategy
elevated to the dignity of constitutional principle. All Labour MPs know that
if the Shearer/Cunliffe choice was put to the party under the new rules, the
proposed Electoral College (40 percent Caucus, 40 percent Members, 20 percent
Affiliates) would deliver the leadership to David Cunliffe.
Rather than see that happen the unholy alliance of the talentless, the
jealous and the ambitious that makes up the ABC (Anybody But Cunliffe) clique
are only too willing to repeat the “crab antics” described in the New Zealand
anthropologist, Professor Peter Wilson’s, famous study of the same name.
According to reviewer David Vital, Professor Wilson’s book “tells us much about
the harsh traditional method by which small peasant societies of the Caribbean
maintain a primitive form of equality within themselves. In effect this is
achieved by holding others back by attacking their reputation and claiming a
false respectability to which all must conform. As a result few people dare to
break out or think outside the box and so the status quo remains in force and
everyone remains the same. It is a kind of forced equality where people do not
want anyone to succeed, ‘all ah we is one’, but the society gets nowhere.”
If Labour is to get somewhere its members must use the upcoming November
conference to strike down the blatantly self-protective measures with which the
parliamentary wing of the party is attempting to surround itself, and afford its
leader no more in the way of armour than his predecessors were content to wear. Both the Caucus and the
Party must be empowered to test the legitimacy of an incumbent by formally petitioning
for a Vote of Confidence. And if 51 percent was good enough for Mickey Savage,
Norman Kirk and Helen Clark, then it should be more than good enough for David
Shearer.
This posting is exclusive to the Bowalley Road blogsite.
10 comments:
Something must eventually spring up to resist the lunacy of the current administration and its selfish short term attitudes and operations. Unless Labour reinvents itself as a party of the social contract one will have only the Greens as a place to go, for all their shortcomings.
Labour's NZ Council was either asleep at the wheel or browbeaten/befuddled to pass these rule changes. It is natural for politicians like Jacinda Ardern and Grant Robertson, who learned their craft in the PMs office, to want to control all the levers of power.
It is the NZ Council's Job to challenge and modify this impulse. They failed miserably.
Suddenly the old Rules look very good. Those who want an open party with a healthy membership will reject the proposed changes. The membership have to take control. Shearer and those around him have misread the mood of the membership.
Thank you for this article. The cran analogy is perfect.
Miss Harversham is right, Chris, how long are you going to engage / indulge ( I could not choose the most fitting word) this dreary political necrophillia with te Labout party?
There are other options you know, sure none of them very flash, but I think it has got to the stage where you are being willfully silly.
As an older person I recall your spot on post about Labour's ghost ship with Helen at the helm - that was before her makeover. You were right then . You are still right today but not in the same sense.
I've completely given up on them. The excellent policies of last year gave me a last desperate hope but it is clear that they have learnt nothing from the last twenty-eight years of dismal failures and so, after nearly that long as a member, I have resigned. Gladly. Oh the relief!
Mmmmm....trouble is old son, replace Shearer with Cunners or Beiber or Baxter or Alfred E or Jesus H fucking Cripes him fucking self and it still won't really matter a fat farting fig.
The crucial 10% who decide our future will still see neither from one day to the next: their current and abiding since dog knows when political opinion will be entirely determined by the sight of a rich white youngish dead-eyed dork shot sympathetically sauntering and confidently simpering as Maori leaders - whom he recently kicked viciously in the groin - fellate him, and the repetition of polls that reflect this blatantly contrived kiwiana bonhomie.
Wrong target mate: only bolsters their sole weapon - divide and conquer.
Why not go frit instead. Hit em in their media bias cojones with all the ammo you've amassed over the years. Yes they'll certainly dump you, but you'll die intact and vital. With Leveson you might even succeed. And Cunny might one day make the 6 o'clock news.
We can dream on these blog things. No one will ever know about them.
ak
When Labour's policy of no GST on fruit and vegetables was announced I knew that they didn't have a chance of winning the election. That policy announcement said it all. They had no policy no ideas and in head office were just dancing on the edge of a pin.
"A party offering potential members vibrant regional forums where new and radical ideas are debated and refined for presentation to the electorate, and where opportunities for effective, street-level political activism abound, is likely to grow by leaps and bounds."
Such a party already exists - it's called the Greens...
When Labour party trade union affiliates assemble a verifiable measure courage and imagination single malt whiskey will drift across Holloway road in a fine mist.
National are doing a great job at awakening the masses. After less than 4 years we are seeing an awakening of political consciousness that have been comatose for years.
Give it a few more years and the people will be out on the streets demanding real substantive change.
What is needed is system change - not regime change.
The last thing we need is the social democrats getting organised and diverting people up their dead end alley again.
It would seem that you too, Chris, are against a peasant economy. Pity. My argument is that viable alternatives to current doctrines fully deserve reasoned consideration in a thorough-going political analysis. Where else are we going to go for help ? Or is it really your view that the only hope is to pump life back into Labour’s Left? (Good on those who try, I say). Seriously, Chris, where else? The Republican movement in Spain, maybe. Orwell is still good on that.
I thought it might help to recall that there is a respectable political history to a line of thought that would advocate, rather than reject, the idea of “a 21st century peasant economy”. For example, might this quote help to address your current concern about the sparcity of people’s participation in anti-asset-sale demos?
"[...] in political rallying, peasant doctrine does not approve of the financial oligarchy's political domination, and strives to promote a truly democratic government, based on the freely-expressed will of popular masses, whose political awareness it seeks to awaken."
Virgil Traian N. Madgearu C.1920.
It will be the pressure of events that directs political outcomes. I propose the formation of the K.P.P. In full, the Kiwi Peasants’ Party. Matt McCarten as party boss. You as Minister of Propaganda. Watch that apostrophe, though. I also quote you.
“A party offering potential members vibrant regional forums where new and radical ideas are debated and refined for presentation to the electorate, and where opportunities for effective, street-level political activism abound, is likely to grow by leaps and bounds”.
No, GreatGonzo, not the Greens. Silly boy/girl. New and radical ideas? Have another look. All you bloggers out there, all my new friends, welcome, welcome to the Kiwi Peasants’ Party. Together, we can make it happen. I shall prepare a banner at once.
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