Ralph Miliband and sons

For Ralph Miliband governments could never tame capitalism. New Labour thought otherwise – and then came the financial crisis. But what will David or Ed do if they gain the leadership?

John Gray
The Guardian, Saturday 4 September 2010

Viewed from one angle Ralph Miliband was a theorist of revolution who failed to notice the radical transformations going on around him. A lifelong Marxist, he never doubted that the future would be shaped by the struggle against capitalism. In fact it was capitalism that proved to be the revolutionary force in the late 20th century, consigning socialism to the memory hole. By the time Miliband died in May 1994, the Soviet system had been replaced by a type of resource-based authoritarian capitalism, while China’s Communist party was overseeing the development of an unbridled market of a kind that Milton Friedman could only dream about.

In Britain in the 1980s Miliband managed to convince himself that Labour, which he had always bitterly attacked, might, under the influence of Tony Benn, turn into a genuinely socialist party. In fact Labour split, which more than any other single factor enabled the continuing dominance of Thatcher. Probably only the battles fought by Neil Kinnock prevented Labour disintegrating altogether. When John Smith became leader, the party began the “prawn cocktail offensive”, a rapprochement with the financial sector pursued through private lunches with leading City figures, which formed the prelude to New Labour. Only weeks after Smith died (in the same month as Miliband) the party would start burying any trace of its socialist past.

When he gave the Bennite wing his intellectual support, Miliband was colluding in the politics of make-believe. Yet in one vital respect this intractably oppositional Jewish refugee from nazism had a firmer grip on reality than the social democrats who eventually prevailed in Labour’s internecine conflicts, and when he ridiculed Anthony Crosland’s vision of a domesticated and pacified capitalism, he left the party with a dilemma it has not been able to resolve. Like Marx, Miliband understood that states and governments are never autonomous actors; their options are shaped, and often foreclosed, by the distribution of power and resources. This was the central theme of Miliband’s The State in Capitalist Society (1969), a penetrating assault on social-democratic thinking in which he developed and extended the argument against revisionism of his earlier Parliamentary Socialism: A Study of the Politics of Labour (1961).

In The Future of Socialism (1956), Crosland had argued that Labour must distinguish between means and ends (a theme pursued later by Blair). Capitalism had changed fundamentally, and rather than opposing it Labour should use the market to advance socialist values. Properly managed to ensure steady economic growth, free markets could be used to promote an egalitarian society in which everyone could live the good life. Against this rosy vision, Miliband urged – rightly, I’ve always thought – that the world had not changed as much as Crosland and his fellow-revisionists imagined. Capitalism remained an unruly beast, and the idea that governments had learnt how to tame it was just an illusion.

The oil shocks of the 70s were an early warning of the fragility of the postwar order. The shocks were not fatal, and capitalism survived the crisis (as it will survive the present crisis, in one form or another). But it was already becoming apparent that while governments could withstand upheavals in the global economy, the state was not the directing agency social democrats imagined it to be. As Miliband saw it, the state was a servant of these forces rather than their potential master. Of course he exaggerated. The interests of capitalists are often at odds, and in any case politics is driven by far more than class conflict. Even so, Miliband’s view that the state is constrained, reactive and hemmed in by market forces has become increasingly plausible with the passage of time. But if this is so, what role can there be for a party that aims to make capitalism a force for the collective good? Can a future Labour government succeed where past governments have failed and harness capitalism to a vision of social improvement? Or should Labour accept that it is capitalism itself that must be changed?

These are precisely the questions that face Miliband’s sons as they contend for the Labour leadership. The clash between the two has an undeniable drama, and it is not just a matter of sibling rivalry. It occurs at a time when the world economy is in a crisis the founders of New Labour believed to be impossible. Lacking the Marxian insight that capitalism is inherently volatile and constantly mutating, they never doubted that the deregulated finance-capitalism that developed in the US towards the end of the past century would last. The left had to overcome its suspicion of the free market, and accept that only by exploiting its productivity could government improve society: social democracy and neo-liberal economics were actually complementary.

Just like Crosland, though without his Keynesian grasp of the dangers of recurring boom and bust, New Labour believed capitalism had been tamed. But as Ralph Miliband suspected and events have confirmed, the anarchic energy of the free market is not so easily controlled. The fall of communism was celebrated as a triumph of capitalism, which now became practically world-wide; but the effect was to make capitalism more unstable, as disturbances in one part of the system were rapidly transmitted to all the rest. The fragmented world of the cold war was more resilient to shocks, and also more hospitable to social democracy, than the world that ensued. Governments found that few of the levers they used to control the economy worked as they had before. New Labour did not want to control the market. A feature of the understanding it reached with the City was that financial markets would continue to be deregulated. In part this was accepted as the price for power, but it also reflected New Labour’s Fukuyama-like faith that market capitalism was the final stage of economic development; the future lay with the self-regulating market.

As could be foreseen, things turned out rather differently. With regulatory controls relaxed or scrapped the financial institutions whose support Labour had wooed became predatory, raking in vast profits from strategies whose risks they did not understand. Inevitably this hubris led to their downfall, and the financial system imploded. The market millennium lasted hardly more than a decade, leaving a legacy of unsustainable debt.

The happy conjunction of neo-liberal economics with social democracy on which New Labour was founded is now history. This is the truth evaded in Tony Blair’s autohagiography. If New Labour is obsolete it is not because of the personal defects of Gordon Brown, Blair’s delusional moral certainty and incessant war-mongering or even the dysfunctional relationship between the two leaders. It is because American finance-capitalism, the model for virtually everything that New Labour ever did, has blown itself up.

The problem with the debate between the Milibands is not that it risks turning into a public family feud. It is that neither of the two contenders has come to terms with the bankruptcy of the New Labour project in which each of them was involved. Neither has acknowledged, or perhaps fully understood, the implications of the financial crisis for a future Labour government. It can only mean an erosion of the very foundations of Britain’s social democratic inheritance. Yet in different ways, each of the Miliband brothers still sees government as capable of controlling market forces – the illusion their father presciently exposed.

In his Keir Hardie lecture in July, David Miliband spoke eloquently of moving away from state paternalism and reviving Labour traditions of mutualism. The state can no longer be the centre of knowledge and initiative – its function is rather that of empowering society. Top-down Fabian control must be replaced by open democratic relationships. No doubt these are desirable goals, if very much in the spirit of the prevailing conventional wisdom and perhaps not so different from Cameron’s fluffy “big society”. The larger difficulty is that Miliband is harking back to Crosland (whom he recently cited as his political hero) at a time when Crosland’s thinking is no longer applicable.

Crosland’s vision was based above all on economic growth – steady, continuing and robust. Following Keynes, he believed that wise economic management could create a society of abundance. But the effect of the financial crisis has been to curtail growth, at least in developed economies. Even if the economy recovers, governments will not have the largesse he assumed would be available. Bailing out the banks has passed the burden of debt on to the state, and no British government can expect to avoid large-scale cut-backs in borrowing and spending. Instead of the market generating wealth that could be used by governments for collective purposes, the resources of government have been pre-empted for the repayment of debts incurred by the market’s excesses. Against this background, the post-paternalist state is likely to mean higher unemployment and cash-starved public services.

Unlike his brother, Ed Miliband has chosen to define his candidacy explicitly in terms of New Labour’s failings and argues forcefully for the need to remodel capitalism. “Britain’s big question of the next decade,” he has written, “is whether we head towards an increasingly US-style capitalism – more unequal, more brutish, more unjust – or whether we can build a different model, a capitalism that works for people and not the other way around”. Once again these are noble aspirations but far removed from reality. Globalisation is an idea that has been greatly over-hyped, yet governments’ freedom of action has without question been reduced as capital has become more mobile. Even the US may soon find it difficult to fund its ballooning federal debt. But if American capitalism is entering a crisis zone, Britain will not have the luxury of forging a new economic model; it will have trouble just staying afloat. Ralph Miliband’s pessimistic assessment of the future of social democracy could well be vindicated.

If one of the Miliband brothers wins the Labour leadership and becomes prime minister he will confront in an acute form the constraints on the power of the state his father astutely identified. Rather than controlling or reshaping capitalism, a Miliband government would find itself struggling to preserve Britain’s social democratic inheritance in the face of capitalism’s renewed disorder. Ralph Miliband seems never to have lost the Marxist faith that history would eventually open the way to a truly socialist society. He would surely have appreciated the curious dialectic through which it has fallen to his sons to defend the social democracy he so fiercely attacked.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/sep/06/ralph-miliband-brothers-john-gray?INTCMP=ILCNETTXT3487

ATOS

Time for Labour to denounce that they were wrong with ATOS

ravenswyrd1's avatarRamblings of a Fibro Fogged Mind

 This letter is now closed to comments, if you haven’t had you comment approved yet don’t worry as I’m copying everything to give to sonia its taking a little time to copy and approve everyone but it will be done before the letter goes to mr Milliband… Thank you everyone for your support… Dxxx

Dear Mr. Miliband,

I am a UK-based journalist and broadcaster. Here is a link to my website. www.soniapoulton.co.uk.

On my site you will find all the media outlets that I contribute to across print, TV, radio and internet, nationally and internationally.

I am prompted to write to you having just watched these two programmes on the subject of ‘fit to work’ testing for sick and disabled people: Channel 4’s Dispatches (‘Britain On The Sick’) and BBC2’s Panorama (‘Disabled or Faking it’).

This year, as a writer, I have been made painfully aware of how…

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Protesters should not look to once-red Ed for support

Ralph Miliband’s theories on Labour explain why his son will be a lukewarm ally for those mobilising in defence of public service

Ed Rooksby

guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 2 March 2011

There’s always a strange sense of unreality in the calm that comes before a political and social storm. The storm we’re facing is set to break in April, when the government’s planned £81bn in public sector cuts will take effect. One doesn’t need clairvoyant powers to predict that such slashing of public services and the accompanying wave of mass redundancies and pay cuts will provoke a surge of social unrest.

Inevitably many people will look to the Labour party to provide organised political support for the emerging movement against the cuts. Many will be hopeful about the prospects for such support given that the Labour leader is considered to be a left-wing figure. Such people are likely to be disappointed. It’s ironic that no one has ever explained more precisely than the leader’s father, Ralph Miliband, why the Labour party is incapable of articulating radical political demands, much less providing a serious challenge to capitalist power structures.

During the Labour leadership contest the media made much of the radical views of the Miliband brothers’ parents. For some quarters seeking to portray Ed Miliband as a dangerous lefty, the fact that his father was perhaps the best known Marxist intellectual in Britain apparently provided “evidence” to back up their tenuous assertions. However, even a cursory glance at Ralph Miliband’s work would have been enough to disabuse them of the notion that he believed that one could be, at the same time, leader of the Labour party and a serious threat to the established order. Ralph Miliband was one of Labour’s most trenchant leftwing critics. In fact, Miliband senior’s analysis of Labour ideology provides us with compelling reasons to believe that Miliband junior will not assist, in any serious way, popular struggles against cuts.

Ralph Miliband produced many seminal works of political theory and political science. Possibly his finest work is Parliamentary Socialism(published in 1961), which explains why the sort of parliamentarism to which Labour is committed means that it can never present a significant challenge to the established order and will, in fact, always function to dampen down rather than bolster any movement that threatens to bring capitalist power into question. There are lessons here for the current political situation.

Ralph Miliband’s main aim in Parliamentary Socialism is to explain why the Labour party simply cannot build socialism and must in practice help to maintain, indeed strengthen, capitalism by “playing a major role in the management of discontent”. It may seem a rather quaint idea in these post-New Labour times that anyone might actually associate Labour with socialism – in this respect Miliband wrote in a very different political climate to the one we inhabit today. But Miliband’s account of why Labour could not be regarded as a serious vehicle for socialist transformation also demonstrates why the party cannot present any sort of meaningful challenge to the powerful, let alone transcend capitalism.

Miliband’s view of socialism, as Hal Draper said of said of Marx’s, “can be most quickly defined as the complete democratisation of society” and this radical expansion of the sphere of democracy would include, centrally, democratisation of the economy. Labourism, however, is based on a much more restricted view of the proper limits of democracy. For labourism the sphere of politics and that of the economy must be kept separate – democratic decision-making should not be extended into the latter sphere and, further, politics must remain the preserve of the parliamentary party. Political activity, in this view, is not about day-to-day deliberation and collective decision-making on the part of ordinary people, but is simply about electing elite representatives to parliament who are then left to get on with the business of government on behalf of, and with little input from, those who have elected them. For this reason Labour has always been suspicious of extra-parliamentary activity, protests, direct democracy and self-organised street and workplace level struggles. Above all, Labour has always been careful to reject industrial action in pursuit of “political” objectives.

Clearly this kind of parliamentarism could never lead to socialism understood as the radical democratisation of society. Further, the party’s horror of extra-parliamentary campaigning and political strike action ensured that Labour would act as a brake on such activity whenever it threatened to occur.

None of this has changed. Few people today see Labour as a vehicle for socialism, but many do see it, and will see it in the coming months, as a vehicle for popular resistance to the cuts. Ralph Miliband’s account of labourism, however, provides good reason to believe that the party will be, at best, a lukewarm ally of those seeking to mobilise in defence of public services and jobs. The leadership of the Labour party will seek to discourage extra-parliamentary mass struggle or, at least, to keep this struggle within manageable limits. It is far more interested in appearing respectable, credible and responsible in the eyes of the media, the CBI, the financial markets and Middle England than it is in providing assistance to a militant anti-cuts campaign. Indeed one of “Red Ed’s” first announcements upon becoming leader was to proclaim that he would have “no truck” with “irresponsible strikes“.

This is not to say that anti-cuts campaigners should steer clear of Labour altogether. Many ordinary party members will throw themselves into the heart of the campaign and, indeed, admirable figures such as Tony Bennand John McDonnell are already deeply involved. The Labour leadership can be pushed leftwards by mass pressure – it cannot be seen to stand wholly aloof from a movement in defence of public services. Nevertheless there are limits to how far the leadership will be prepared to go. Already Ed Miliband is seeking to maintain a delicate balancing act between appearing to be broadly supportive of a respectable campaign against the cuts on the one hand, without looking too much like a radical on the other. It seems, for example, that he will be speaking at the rally after the TUC’s March for the Alternative, but will not attend the march itself. Marching, one imagines, would not look like the sort of thing a responsible political figure would do.

Those who want to fight these cuts have much to learn from what Ralph Miliband had to say, without knowing it at the time, about the limits and constraints of his son’s politics.