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Britain: Browns new politics a cynical cover
for authoritarianism
By Chris Marsden
10 September 2007
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The proposals advanced last week by Prime Minister Gordon Brown
as the basis for a new type of politics show that
his government has continued the anti-democratic and rightward
lurch of his predecessor, Tony Blair.
Brown marshaled virtually every piece of rhetoric and hyperbole
used by Labour since 1997 to once again proclaim a politics built
on consensus and not division that supposedly transcends
party politics, reaches out to the people and does not leave great
social challenges simply to the market alone.
He was clear why this was necessary. He noted that whereas
once 84 percent of people voted, in the last election it was less
than 62 percent, and whereas in the 1950s 1 in 11 people joined
a political party, today it is 1 in 88, with only 1 in 3 people
identifying with a political party.
But, after a decade in office, he chose to ignore the role
of the Labour government in bringing this situation about through
its championing of policies dictated solely by the needs of big
business at the direct expense of the electoratemeasures
that both encourage and demand the alienation of the mass of working
people from the political process and the constant erosion of
civil liberties. Instead, he advanced measures by which this offensive
against the working class can be continued behind a populist veneer
of consulting the people.
Brown is proposing the creation of Citizens Juries,
supposedly chosen independently to discuss specific
policy issues. These initial consultation exercises are to be
followed by a nationwide set of Citizens Juries held on
one day to look at issues like crime and immigration, education,
health, transport and public services.
This will lead up to a Citizens Summit to formulate
a British statement of valuespart of the
wider programme on consultation led by Jack Straw and Michael
Wills on the British statement of values, the idea of a British
Bill of Rights and Responsibilities, rights and duties, the components
of the Constitutional Reform Bill.
Brown will also set up new standing commissions to bring together
people of all parties and outside the party system.
A Speakers Conference would then bring together
all parties to work together with patriotic purpose...to
advance our countrys best interests and ideals.
On the most prosaic level, Browns initiative is bound
up with an effort to tear the ground from under the feet of his
political opponentsparticularly the Conservatives, in the
period leading up to an electiona task made all the more
urgent because the bounce in Labours support
resulting from Blairs departure has already all but vanished.
With the Conservatives deeply divided over David Camerons
somewhat feeble attempt to distance the party from its Thatcherite
image, Brown is seeking to reinforce Labours claim to be
her successor as the natural party of government in
ruling circles. To this end, Brown expressed his admiration for
Margaret Thatcher, a conviction politician like himself
who saw the need for change.
Brown has also continued Blairs efforts to bring his
nominal opponents into government and has previously appointed
former Confederation of British Industry head Sir Digby Jones
and former First Sea Lord Sir Alan West as ministers. His announced
raft of public and cross-party policy discussion was accompanied
by his bringing in Conservative MP Patrick Mercer as a security
adviser to Lord West and fellow Tory MP John Bercow to head a
review of services for young people with disabilities. Liberal
Democrat MP Mathew Taylor will advise on land use.
Matthew dAncona in the Conservative magazine, the Spectator,
expressed the widespread incredulity at the noted right-winger
Mercers appointment. The former Conservative spokesman on
homeland security was sacked from the Tory front bench this year
by Cameron after he suggested that being called a black
bastard was just part of Army life. He writes, Mr.
Blair used to talk about Operation Hoover, his campaign
to recruit One Nation Tories and Lib Dems to the New Labour cause.
Mr. Brown seems to have dumped the Hoover and got hold of a super-powered,
commercial-use Dyson.
Later that week, Swedish businessman Johan Eliasch, who recently
resigned from his post as Conservative deputy treasurer and who
lent £2.6 million to the Tories, is set to become an adviser
to Brown on deforestation and green energy. He will not renew
his party membership and wants his loan to be repaid.
There are clear echoes of Frances Nicolas Sarkozy recruiting
leading Socialist Party figures into his government, though the
traffic is at least formally moving in the opposite direction.
It led Rachel Sylvester to complain in the Telegraph that
Gordon Browns consensus is a one-party state.
But such a movement of MPs from one side of the House of Commons
to the other can only take place because the two main parties
are virtually interchangeable right-wing formations to the point
where there might as well already be a one-party state.
Brown, like Blair before him and Sarkozy across the Channel,
is seeking new mechanisms of rule under conditions where none
of the old parties have the necessary authority and popular support
to impose their common pro-big-business policies. It is not only
that the claim that Citizens Juries et al. will not genuinely
involve the public in government. They are a means by which the
erosion of governmental accountability to the electorate will
be both legitimised and deepened.
Brown claims that Citizens Juries are not a substitute
for representative democracy, they are an enrichment of it.
In reply to his first claim, yes they are, and to
the second, no they are not.
In a representative democracy, politicians are supposed to
present a manifesto of their policies and they are then voted
into office on that basis by the entire electorate. Instead, Brown
proposes to advance policies that have only been put before a
representative sample of 12 to 20 people and proclaim
this as a mandate to govern. What exactly constitutes a representative
sample? One based on past voting preference, class, ethnicity?
A jury of dozen peoplehowever they are selected, has no
mandate to determine political policy. It will merely provide
a pre-selected and pliable tool to legitimise policies presented
solely by the government with no one countering its propaganda.
As to the actual independence of the Citizens Juries,
there is none. Even officially, the position is that the selection
process will be determined by individual government departments,
which are all run by Labour. In practice, the basis of their appointment
has already been worked out centrally and never submitted to public
scrutiny. Two are already meeting only days after having been
announcedone on childrens issues and another on crime
and communities.
The decisions on how the juries are selected and conducted
are declared independent because they are made by a consultancy
firm known as Opinion Leader Research (OLR). Its website boasts
that it is known by Research magazine as the House
of Influentials and that this is because we
are plugged into the people that really matter.
The people that really matter that OLR is plugged
into is the government and the prime minister. OLR is owned
by Chime Communications, in which Browns personal adviser
Deborah Mattinson owns about 2 million shares worth around £1
million. An investigation by the Sunday Telegraph found
that in just the past two years, OLR has won nearly £3 million
worth of contracts across an astonishing array of government
departments and agencies. These include the Treasury that
was run by Brown as Chancellor and the Department of Constitutional
Affairs when it was led by Labours deputy leader,
Harriet Harman, a close friend of Miss Mattinson.
This figure does not include work before 2005 and contracts
awarded by many other public sector clients listed on OLRs
website, such as the Environment Agency, Ofcom, and the Learning
and Skills Council, the Telegraph states.
OLR was recently paid nearly £800,000 by the Department
for Work and Pensions to organise a forum to discuss pension policy
and £153,000 by the Department for Education and Skills
for a similar event. While Gordon Brown was chancellor, the Treasury
awarded the company work worth more than £150,000.
One of its more lucrative contracts was worth £1.25 million
for the Department of Health to conduct a public consultation
called Your Health, Your Care, Your Say in 2005. The
September 5 Times says of the exercise, It was so
unbearably exciting that not a single report was filed from it.
The undemocratic nature of the entire exercise is exemplified
by its culminating in asking these bodies to sign off on a supposed
British Bill of Rights and Responsibilities. The Bill
is a means by which the government intends to further undermine
existing human and civil rights provisions by making rights that
should be universal conditional on upholding supposedly British
values and accepting responsibilities to the
state.
The exercise raises major issues of constitutional principle,
just as do questions relating to immigration, asylum and a host
of other issues that are to be put before Citizens Juries.
But we are asked to trust in a government that has repeatedly
demonstrated its contempt for civil liberties and propensity to
lie and dissemble to present the facts in a way that allows a
dozen people to pronounce on policy after a few days of stage-managed
discussion.
It is an extraordinary example of the erosion of genuine concern
with democratic rights that this has not even elicited negative
comment from pro-Labour broadsheets such as the Guardian
and the Independent. The Liberal Democrats have even tried
to trump Brown, with party leader Sir Menzies Campbell calling
in the Guardian for what would be Britains
first written constitution to be drafted by a convention
whose membership has been half chosen by random lot.
The Guardian explains that this is aimed at preventing
the convention from being colonised by constitutional reform
fanatics.
Even as these measures were being advanced as a broadening
of governmental accountability, the government was preoccupied
with the question of whether or not to call a snap General Electionperhaps
in a matter of days after parliament resumes. To do so would itself
be manifestly undemocratic. It would all but exclude anyone other
than the major parties due to the financial constraints on mounting
a campaign at such short notice and would leave the electorate
to decide between the devil and the deep blue sea. Internally,
Brown is seeking to prevent the Labour Party conference from ever
again voting against the government on policy, by ending the existing
right to move and debate contemporary motions.
See Also:
Britain: Government and media rail against
selfish strikes
[8 September 2007]
Britain: Browns constitutional
reforma smokescreen for right-wing measures
[6 July 2007]
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