Monday, 8 May 2017

Vive la différence

Watching the acceptance speech by the new French president Emmanuel Macron yesterday, I must confess to a tinge of envy because it represented everything which is lacking from the UK scene. The French electorate decisively rejected the knee-jerk politics of division in favour of a more inclusive EU-friendly alternative whilst at the same time electing a man who, at 39 years old, is the youngest leader since Napoleon Bonaparte in 1799. At least for now, Macron represents hope for a more positive future. His election also breaks the recent trend towards right-wing populism, as represented by his opponent Marine Le Pen.

Here in the UK an election takes place in just over four weeks’ time and the choices on offer are nowhere near as palatable. Theresa May represents a continuation of the dogmatic opposition to the EU, with the prospect of the economy moving closer to the cliff edge that she claims to want to avoid. But the opposition offers no choice at all. Even accepting that Jeremy Corbyn probably does get a bad press from a media which is viscerally opposed to the Labour Party, he increasingly appears an ineffectual leader unable to rally centrist voters to his cause and who presides over a party which has slipped so far to the left as to be unelectable. The French, of course, had just such a candidate in the first round of presidential voting two weeks ago in the form of Jean-Luc Mélenchon and he trailed in fourth with less than 20% of the votes.

Over the weekend, the shadow Chancellor John McDonnell denied being a Marxist but did suggest that “there is a lot to learn from reading Das Kapital.” Whilst recognising the importance of Marx’s tract as a seminal work in the field of political economy, it is fair to say that from an economic viewpoint there is more to disagree than to agree with, but I’ll leave that for others to debate.  However, coming just days after Labour suffered heavy losses in local elections, losing 382 council seats across the country whilst the Conservatives gained 563, it seems that this is a message which the UK electorate does not want to hear. Labour does not have a positive message to sell the voters and with UKIP all but wiped out as a political force, losing 145 of the 146 seats it held, it is difficult to see the Conservatives winning anything other than a landslide victory at the general election scheduled for 8 June.

Quite what the Conservatives’ economic policy will look like is unclear, since it has delayed the publication of its election manifesto until next week. It is likely to maintain a pledge to reduce immigration but will almost certainly not repeat the mistake made in 2015 when it promised not to raise income tax, VAT or national insurance contributions. But as Jagjit Chadha of the National Institute points out, this election should be about more than just Brexit. Answers need to be found to the weakness of UK productivity for only this way will we finally be able to make some progress on the vexed question of stagnating living standards.

Of course, Macron will face all sorts of challenges to get the French economy back on track. Like the UK, fiscal issues will be high on the agenda with Macron planning to reduce the tax burden, including a reduction in the corporate tax rate from 33% to 25%, and to simplify the tax system. At the same time, he has promised to cut public spending to a still-high 52% of GDP (though on the basis of the European Commission’s data this is not exactly a high hurdle). The new president also plans to decentralise the labour market in favour of firm-level rather than collective agreements, and a gradual loosening of the 35 hour working week. As I noted a couple of weeks ago, the extent to whether he gets a mandate to push through his plan will depend on how much support he has in the National Assembly following June elections. He will have his work cut out.

Macron’s victory yesterday took my mind back 20 years to the election of another young left-of-centre politician in the form of Tony Blair. Blair was viewed across Europe as a breath of fresh air following the fractious Conservative government of 1992-97. He promised a third way in politics which involved a bit of state intervention and a lot of market forces, and offered hope to social democrats across the continent. He took over as UK prime minister at a time when the European economy was a lot stronger than it is today and he was obviously economically successful for a long time. But the story of how he came to be reviled by his own party should be a lesson to Macron. Today’s fresh face of optimism can just as easily become yesterday’s man. As former PM David Cameron once taunted Blair in 2005, “You were the future, once.” And now Cameron, too, lies on the scrapheap of history. Nemesis is never far away

1 comment:

  1. Cllr Jeremy Preece10 May 2017 at 17:33

    I agree with a lot of Peter Dixon's comments.
    I am, (amongst other things), a serving Labour Borough Councillor. Since I was elected three years ago the political landscape has changed beyond recognition. The EU referendum was a shock; the murder of Jo Cox MP seemed to change nothing and the rise of Donald Trump all would have seemed unbelievable back in 2014.
    Here is my take on what is going on. For many years the number of disaffected non-voters has increased as has disconnected and inarticulate blind anger. This destructive force remained as a background noise so long as there was nothing to unite it. In the meantime there grew the popular myth that everyone involved in politics, especially those who are centre and left of centre are all liars.
    Sadly the EU issue opened Pandora’s Box and UKIP managed to rally these rather dark forces that ranged from retired and slightly barking military officers, real life Alf Garnets and even the odd white supremacist, and these then attracted a huge number of generally angry people who feel left behind by the establishment and hurt by the worldwide banking crash of 2007/8. Of course, papers like The Daily Mail, who in the 1930’s supported The Black Shirts, were also able to whip up daily rants about the EU and spread xenophobia.
    Where there is widespread anger, rational judgement fades and some ordinary people fail to see what is in front of them. So a number of poor white working class Americans see Donald Trump as an ordinary man (non-establishment) and on the side of the ordinary poor man, whereas he is one of the richest businessmen on the planet and he is all about cutting the taxes of the wealthiest to make them even wealthier. In the UK Nigel Farage, an ex-public schoolboy, stockbroker and career politician (joined the Tories at the age of 16 and made three unsuccessful attempts to be selected as a Tory parliamentary candidate), and a man with a German wife managed to convince a number of Brits that he is just an ordinary bloke in the pub, who hates all things European and anything to do with the financial establishment and who never wanted to get into politics.
    In the end the result of the referendum was to show that, in spite the role of the media and in spite of all the Leave lies about ending austerity or freeing up £350 million a week for the NHS, the result was almost 50/50 split down the middle. The millions of Remain voters have to put up with being stripped of their European citizenship, and they are largely the people who usually vote, are not even part of the debate any more. Had the result been the other way around the anti-Europeans and the media would have argued that the result was so close as to justify Euro-scepticism; however once the Leave vote edged over the 50% line the rules are different and Remain supporters have to leave the stage and bow to the angry brigade.
    A much more right-wing Conservative party is managing to attract a large chunk of ex- UKIP votes. I heard from several such people outside the polling station at the local elections last week (and it was not pleasant). While being a loyal party member I would have to admit that our own party’s pro EU core has been silenced and that unless I am proved wrong (as I hope to be) our leadership has not been great. There are now only the fragments of a discredited LibDem party to offer any pro EU narrative.
    Finally, just when I felt that we are drowning in the tide of right-wing popularism that is spreading over the planet, there came the news from France that the centralist Emmanuel Macron has beaten the ghastly Marie Le Penn by two to one. I hope that this is the turning point and rejoice to see that we have someone who appears to be a moderate human adult in power somewhere. Vive la France, and my congratulations to the Republic for making a better choice than the polls suggest that we are going to make next month.

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