politics.co.uk

Ed Miliband is more dangerous than you think

Mon Sep 27 09:43AM
Moving left isn't the problem it used to be. The new Labour leader is the right man in the right place at the right time.

By Ian Dunt

There's a lot of nonsense being talked about Ed Miliband since his Labour leadership win. He's Red Ed, too far to the left. He's too geeky to be elected.

If it sounds rehearsed it's because it is. The right wing press, Blairites and the Tories have been practising these arguments for months. Like journalists preparing two different stories for the result on Saturday afternoon - one for Ed and one for Dave - they were ready to be deployed as soon as the announcement came. The conclusion is always the same: Ed Miliband can't win a general election. This is Labour retreating to the left, as it did in the eighties.

It's nonsense. Firstly, Ed Miliband is tough. He stood against his older brother, who was widely regarded as the natural successor. He demolishes Commons opponents.
He is able to articulate a given message well - particularly on immigration, a key weak spot in the Labour armour. He is likeable, which has an effect on the journalists who will try to tell readers what to think of him. He is not a left-wing radical. He was responsible for the last Labour manifesto, which was hardly a little red book. His policies are not extreme, unless you think Iraq, 90-day detention and ever-rising inequality constitute a centre ground. He has said nothing - precisely nothing - during the campaign which deserves the 'Red Ed' moniker which the tabloids are trying to anoint him with.

There is something geeky about him, to be sure. But we are not in the business of reducing politics to showbusiness just yet. We have been down that road with Tony Blair, if you remember, and the messianic turn he took should not be disassociated from it.

Ed Miliband is to the left of his elder brother, who the media and the parliamentary party wanted to win. The Tories were said to be more fearful of the centrist older brother, or at least that's how they briefed the press. This is an old and exhausted political assumption. In fact, the British political centre point has shifted to the left. The establishment, and certainly the media establishment, has been slow to realise, but since the financial crisis voters do not accept arguments about the efficiency of the market or the inequality of society. We have consistently underestimated the game-changing nature of this event. To brand Ed Miliband's approach 'old' Labour is ironic, because it's a view that's behind the times.

Many right-wingers secretly understand this. The financial crisis banished forever the view that the market was more efficient, more modern, than any alternative. It also brought the issue of social justice to the forefront of political debate in a way it simply wasn't during more certain economic times. When people's sense of aspiration is challenged, they are more likely to take a critical view of the rich. The view that any move to the left, no matter how moderate, is politically fatal is simply wrong. But it is in the interest of many of the people who propound that view that we continue to believe it.

The next election hinges not on charisma, or left and right, but on the 2010 Budget. If its forecasts are accurate, Britain will be recovering by 2015 - when we next go to the polls. If the coalition got the economic argument right, the public will re-elect the Tories (the Lib Dems won't get the credit - it's one of their many problems). If the coalition got it wrong and the economic malaise drags into 2015, Labour will benefit - but not if it is too consensual on the economic agenda. Ed Miliband can unite the left against cuts in a way his brother simply wouldn't have been able to. He can use the rhetoric and the momentum of public disenchantment in the most natural and vigorous way. David Miliband would have been more cautious, for fear of being labelled a leftie. If the coalition gets the spending cuts argument wrong, he is the candidate best placed to take advantage.

The mock anger about the unions' role in getting him over the finish line is similarly misguided. These are not dark union barons in secret smoke-filled rooms anointing a Labour leader. These are members, paid up, making up their own mind. They are not somehow exempt from constitutional standards of political association. The tone taken towards unions by much of the broadcast media over the weekend seemed to suggest they were innately malevolent forces.

In the Commons, Cameron is going to have some very tough times with his new opponent. Ed Miliband is an impeccable parliamentarian, able to use logical arguments, lucidly expressed, to reduce an opponent to rubble. As William Hague found out against Tony Blair, success at PMQs does not necessarily translate into success in the country, but it is a vital arrow in the quiver. It nudges voters one way while watching the evening news, if anyone does indeed still watch it.

His victory is also good for the country. Ed Miliband's views on civil liberty rule out a return to the bad old days should Labour win the next general election. For those of us who care about such things and who spent the last decade or more tearing our hair out at the way New Labour treated British freedoms, we can breathe a sigh of relief. We won't be returning to the darkness anytime soon. We should stay vigilant, but the battle is well on the way to being won. Break open the bubbly.

The leadership decision also marks a more significant shift in the political history of Britain. The defeat of David Miliband means there will be no return to Blairism, the strategy which consciously robbed political debate of meaning and reduced it to triangulation and strategic manoeuvres. Left and right are words which designate views about the allocation of resources, not tags to be avoided. We are tantalisingly close to returning to an era about ideas and debate. It won't be pretty, but with a coalition in power and Labour taking a more principled, left-of-centre stance, we are heading towards something more healthy and appetising - or so it appears.

Let's be clear. There are faults with Ed Miliband. He switched from Labour manifesto writer to civil liberties advocate a little too quickly for my liking, suggesting some chameleon tendencies. He comes across much better in person than he does on TV. He has not developed that intangible but vital quality of appearing prime ministerial. The first might be wrong and if not wrong, irrelevant. The second is surmountable. The third may change given four years of opposition.

The attacks will soon begin. The media will savage him, as it does anyone succeeding on the left, in a more vicious and aggressive manner than he had imagined. All intellectual arguments fall to nothing when the media succeeds in these tasks, because they create reality. If they convince enough people he's a limp leftie incompetent, then people will vote on that basis.

But my hunch is they will fail. If the Tories couldn't win an election against Gordon Brown, they shouldn't be cocky going into one against Ed Miliband, following massive spending cuts. Ed Miliband may just prove to be the right man in the right place at the right time.

Comments1 - 10 of 326

  1. But all he will do is shuffle the pack of discredited ex Ministers and Union cohorts to help him run the country. Has any of them got real world experience, other than 2:1 degrees in fiddling expenses?

    luludoodie From luludoodie on Mon Sep 27 09:58AM

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  2. As David Cameron eventually overcame the legacy of Margaret Thatcher so must Ed Miliband overcome the legacies of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown. He knows what he hs to do. Lets hope it does not take as long to deliver. It wont be easy

    dnmccarthy From dnmccarthy on Mon Sep 27 10:07AM

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  3. My gut instinct was that Ed Miliand was the right man for the job so now I hope he proves to really stand for the right things. The two main problems of the UK economy and society are at one extreme the uberrich people that got there through less than orthodox means and by avoiding to pay tax and who are allowed to play by different rules to everyone else, and at the other extreme the healthy but lazy people that got used to staying on benefits forever. This means that middle Britain has been squeezed the most. Ed seems to be the first to recognise this problem and to intend to address it. It's true - it's no longer so much about left and right politics as it is about fairness and justice! Something that has suffered a lot during Blair and which Camerom is perpetuating.

    jamesw211 From jamesw211 on Mon Sep 27 10:13AM

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  4. My gut instinct was that Ed Miliand was the right man for the job so now I hope he proves to really stand for the right things. The two main problems of the UK economy and society are at one extreme the uberrich people that got there through less than orthodox means and by avoiding to pay tax and who are allowed to play by different rules to everyone else, and at the other extreme the healthy but lazy people that got used to staying on benefits forever. This means that middle Britain has been squeezed the most. Ed seems to be the first to recognise this problem and to intend to address it. It's true - it's no longer so much about left and right politics as it is about fairness and justice! something that has suffered a lot during Blair and which Cameron is perpetuating.

    jamesw211 From jamesw211 on Mon Sep 27 10:14AM

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  5. "The financial crisis banished forever the view that the market was more efficient, more modern, than any alternative."
    Totally wrong Mr Dunt ! This was a BANKING crisis not a Market crisis. The markets remained remarkably stable in the aftermath and recovered healthily from the impact. Every alternative system was experimented with in the 20th century and everything else failed to compete with the western market economies on quality of life.

    paul_williams100 From paul_williams100 on Mon Sep 27 10:15AM

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  6. I am 80yrs. of age
    Do not have a great command of the English Language and not able to articulate well in discussions.
    So thank for your article which reflects my own conclusion about Ed Milliband. Your observations are comprehensive and accurate and can with stand scrupulous criticism.
    I am a floating voter who likes to analyse for myself what is constructive criticism and not be railroaded by
    press and media offerings who generally have their own agenda for sensational head lines.
    You are right to highlight the nonsense about unions swinging the vote for Ed. What about all the other votes who swung it for Ed. My fingers are getting tired with all this typing therefore must close
    John the Pensioner

    sidneymockler236 From sidneymockler236 on Mon Sep 27 10:19AM

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  7. "Ed Miliband may just prove to be the right man in the right place at the right time." To spend all the money we will be allowed to borrow after the tories finally get the countries spending back on track?

    andyfear From andyfear on Mon Sep 27 10:25AM

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  8. quality of life, way over mr. dunt's head...hit and run banking de stabilised the economy, the markets followed suit

    m.reeves13 From m.reeves13 on Mon Sep 27 10:26AM

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  9. Ed Millipede just is another communist dressed in a suit. I think we've had enough of them for one generation. They have nothing to offer, just how to leech from others.

    mkierznowski From mkierznowski on Mon Sep 27 10:31AM

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  10. Good article Ian. Though when you speak about 'the media', which parts are you reffering to? After all, you, and this site, and this article, could all be considered part of 'the media' and yet you align yourself against it...

    restayvien From restayvien on Mon Sep 27 10:34AM

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