Labour's Broad Church In Action: The social-radical, Dr Martyn Finlay, campaigns alongside the social-conservative, Norman Kirk. A political party must be able to reassure young voters that the ideas, hopes and aspirations of their generation are well represented within the parliamentary system. Without that reassurance, a party risks turning itself into a generational redoubt where the achievements of the past are celebrated constantly, but where the anticipated achievements of the future are either dismissed or deferred indefinitely.
THE STORY may be apocryphal, but it has stayed with me for
more than 40 years. The liberal Labour lawyer and MP, Dr Martyn Finlay,
responding to the fearsome reputation of the recently opened maximum security
prison at Paremoremo, is said to have observed that no prison should be
escape-proof – lest it crush men’s souls.
Even by today’s standards, Finlay’s views come across as
radically progressive. Back in the early 1970s, a time when the Labour Party
was still beholden to its many conservative supporters, statements of such
uncompromising radicalism were astonishing. Unsurprisingly, Finlay’s equally
radical views on abortion, homosexuality and euthanasia made him a controversial
and polarising Member of Parliament. His boss, Norman Kirk, was not a fan.
For a great many members of the “Vietnam Generation” (as
political journalist Colin James dubbed the youthful rebels of the 1960s and
70s) Finlay’s social radicalism was inspirational. His ability to infuse the
political process with urgent ethical purpose acted as an ideological and
generational bridge between the children of the Great Depression and the Second
World War, and the obstreperous beneficiaries of post-war affluence and
optimism. In the language of that long-ago time: Finlay linked the Old Left
with the New.
It was a vital exercise in political chemistry. A political
party must be able to reassure young voters that the ideas, hopes and
aspirations of their generation are well represented within the parliamentary
system. It must also instil confidence that their agenda for change has every
chance of achieving legislative expression – and sooner, rather than later.
Without that reassurance and confidence, a party risks turning itself into a
generational redoubt. An isolated ideological fortress, in which the
achievements of the past are celebrated constantly; but where the anticipated
achievements of the future are either dismissed or deferred indefinitely.
This was the party that Labour had become by the late 1940s,
when the heroes of 1935 told the party’s younger and more radical members that
they should cease their agitating because “everything is done”. It wasn’t until
the much more intelligent and open-minded Arnold Nordmeyer finally succeeded
the deeply conservative Walter Nash, and was joined in Labour’s caucus by
Norman Kirk, Bob Tizard, Bill Rowling, Phil Amos and Martyn Finlay himself,
that Labour’s forward march was resumed with vigour.
Looking at the endless stream of media releases emanating
from today’s Labour Opposition, it is impossible to identify a figure even
remotely comparable to Finlay. In 2017, there is simply no way that Labour’s
media minders would allow an MP to declare, in the name of human dignity, that
no prison should be designed to eliminate the possibility of escape.
The very idea that such an audacious and jarring
pronouncement might provoke the electorate into thinking about the crushing
realities of prison life; or challenge them to decide whether rehabilitation is
even possible for a prisoner from whom all hope has departed; would be
dismissed as politically suicidal.
When David Cunliffe, moved by the devastating evidence of
domestic abuse, delivered his Finlay-like apology to the 2014 Women’s Refuge
symposium: ‘‘Can I begin by saying I’m sorry – I don’t often say it – I’m sorry
for being a man, right now. Because family and sexual violence is perpetrated
overwhelmingly by men against women and children”; the news media (and his
colleagues) tore him to shreds.
But, if Labour is unwilling to tolerate a twenty-first
version of Martyn Finlay, then how can it hope to construct the bridge to the
future it so desperately needs? Norman Kirk may not have welcomed Finlay’s
radical outpourings, but he endured them. Andrew Little is nowhere near as
flexible. While Canada’s Justin Trudeau prepares to legalise cannabis, the
leader of New Zealand’s Labour Party delivers ponderous homilies about its
danger to young people.
While tomorrow’s voters grow increasingly desperate to hear
a Labour MP willing to proclaim, without equivocation, the need to break
definitively from the failed neoliberal experiments of the past, the party
clings ever more tightly to the social liberalism by which it chose to define
itself thirty years ago. With the bloody injuries of class everywhere on
display, Labour stubbornly refuses to select a candidate capable of describing
them.
If Labour wishes to avoid becoming a moribund relic, then it
must learn, again, how to infuse New Zealand politics with Martyn Finlay’s
radical moral purpose.
This essay was
originally published in The Waikato Times, The Taranaki Daily News, The
Timaru Herald, The Otago Daily Times and The Greymouth Star of Friday, 20 January 2017.
4 comments:
Thought provoking, but power has to be gained first to achieve the goals - or does it?
Some of these chasps you mention served their time in the '84 government without mentioning the monsterousness. Bought off? By preference? Warren Frear at least mentioned the 84ists' vileness in his bio. Social liberalism is the vital consort of that coup. No matter its merit.
In retrospect, if Muldoon had held off the election, I would have voted for him. At least he prevented me from ever voting for Labour.
(However I did vote for Andrew Little on David Cunliffe's recommendation; joining this ridiculous (I laughed endlessly) party hoping that Cunliffe would have the bravery to do the necessary of a Jeremy Corbin (but the middle class will be the middle class (mostly)))
I suspect Little is alot like Trump in that he insists on being surrounded by people who only say 'Yes'.
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