Re: Snap General Election called
Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2022 9:54 am
Rees Mogg - "buy British"
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That's very good.twitchy wrote:
I'd laugh except theres some poor bloody food provider who won't get paid as a result of this.Which Tyler wrote:Rees Mogg - "buy British"
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Starmer has today come out against nationalising rail, energy, or water. Literally daring the left wing not to vote for him as he takes an economic political position somewhere around Kenneth Clarke in the face of the Tories abandoning the centre right in favour of Trump-esque lunacy.Puja wrote:This is the crux of everything - it's the Joe Biden manouevre of trying to poach as many disgusted right voters as possible and daring the left not to vote and bring in another right wing government. It did kinda work for Biden, but you wonder whether he would've got an actual workable Senate majority if he'd done something, anything, to excite and energise his base instead of frantically reassuring the other side's base that he wouldn't dream of doing any of the cool shit that the Republicans were accusing him of.Son of Mathonwy wrote:The only way I can see this making sense is that Starmer wants to woo the centre and not frighten the centre right, and - crucially - he assumes the left have no choice but to vote for him, so it doesn't matter too much if he treats us with contempt.
Will it work at all in this country? Depends how terrible a leader the Conservatives elect and whether the manifesto contains even a glimmer of a tack to the left. There wouldn't be the same widespread horror over Sunak as there was over the prospect of more Trump, and if Starmer continues to drive right and dares the left not to vote for him, I think enough will take him up on it that he'll struggle to win.
Starmer is probably just saying what he thinks will get him elected, and then once in power, will not feel bound by it at all. A bit like Nick Clegg. It's what Starmer's approach was to win the Labour leadership elections. Promise healing and unifying the party, and maintaining policies from 2017 manifesto... and then once in power destroying the left's influence through purges etc.Puja wrote:Starmer has today come out against nationalising rail, energy, or water. Literally daring the left wing not to vote for him as he takes an economic political position somewhere around Kenneth Clarke in the face of the Tories abandoning the centre right in favour of Trump-esque lunacy.Puja wrote:This is the crux of everything - it's the Joe Biden manouevre of trying to poach as many disgusted right voters as possible and daring the left not to vote and bring in another right wing government. It did kinda work for Biden, but you wonder whether he would've got an actual workable Senate majority if he'd done something, anything, to excite and energise his base instead of frantically reassuring the other side's base that he wouldn't dream of doing any of the cool shit that the Republicans were accusing him of.Son of Mathonwy wrote:The only way I can see this making sense is that Starmer wants to woo the centre and not frighten the centre right, and - crucially - he assumes the left have no choice but to vote for him, so it doesn't matter too much if he treats us with contempt.
Will it work at all in this country? Depends how terrible a leader the Conservatives elect and whether the manifesto contains even a glimmer of a tack to the left. There wouldn't be the same widespread horror over Sunak as there was over the prospect of more Trump, and if Starmer continues to drive right and dares the left not to vote for him, I think enough will take him up on it that he'll struggle to win.
Puja
In truth there is a lot that can be done before you go so far as to nationalise the energy market. More work should be done on standardising pricing, and making switching supplier easier.Sandydragon wrote:Making Labour more electable every day.
Can't work out if this is sarcasm or not.Sandydragon wrote:Making Labour more electable every day.
Its not. Labour won't win power with just the lefties supporting it. It needs votes from the centre as well. Just a basic electoral fact.Puja wrote:Can't work out if this is sarcasm or not.Sandydragon wrote:Making Labour more electable every day.
Puja
Indeed, but that doesn't sound as catchy. There is plenty of work to be done, the current situation isnt perfect by a long shot. But nationalisation isnt necessarily going to solve the problem.Zhivago wrote:In truth there is a lot that can be done before you go so far as to nationalise the energy market. More work should be done on standardising pricing, and making switching supplier easier.Sandydragon wrote:Making Labour more electable every day.
This is drifting over into righty sort of territory though and, while Labour might not win power with just the lefties (although I'm not sure I'd count that as a truism - leftwards politics under the hugely personally unpopular Corbyn with a divided party and a media firmly against them came pretty close and sprang some surprises in 2017. There's a lot more appetitie for "leftie" policies than has been assumed to be true, especially since most of them are actually fairly centrist and only look left because the Overton window's been so skewed), they also won't win power if they can't get their base out. All very well to court the right voters, but will enough of them turn out to make up for those disappearing from the other side, either defecting to the Libs or Greens or just plain not planning to vote because "Voting for a Red Tory just encourages them."Sandydragon wrote:Its not. Labour won't win power with just the lefties supporting it. It needs votes from the centre as well. Just a basic electoral fact.Puja wrote:Can't work out if this is sarcasm or not.Sandydragon wrote:Making Labour more electable every day.
Puja
Aping Corbyn is a guaranteed way to get most media against you. Blair courted the media by appearing be less threatening and it worked. Many Tories voted for Labour in 97 and if Starmer doesn't have the same charisma to get the same he has a better chance if he can paint the next Tory leader as incompetent (not difficult if its Truss) and pandering to the right whilst he occupies the sensible centre ground.Puja wrote:This is drifting over into righty sort of territory though and, while Labour might not win power with just the lefties (although I'm not sure I'd count that as a truism - leftwards politics under the hugely personally unpopular Corbyn with a divided party and a media firmly against them came pretty close and sprang some surprises in 2017. There's a lot more appetitie for "leftie" policies than has been assumed to be true, especially since most of them are actually fairly centrist and only look left because the Overton window's been so skewed), they also won't win power if they can't get their base out. All very well to court the right voters, but will enough of them turn out to make up for those disappearing from the other side, either defecting to the Libs or Greens or just plain not planning to vote because "Voting for a Red Tory just encourages them."Sandydragon wrote:Its not. Labour won't win power with just the lefties supporting it. It needs votes from the centre as well. Just a basic electoral fact.Puja wrote:
Can't work out if this is sarcasm or not.
Puja
Puja
Possibly true. However, repudiating everything that the left ever stood for may mean that, while Starmer will get many Tory voters, he won't get many Labour voters and he needs those just as much, probably more.Sandydragon wrote:Aping Corbyn is a guaranteed way to get most media against you. Blair courted the media by appearing be less threatening and it worked. Many Tories voted for Labour in 97 and if Starmer doesn't have the same charisma to get the same he has a better chance if he can paint the next Tory leader as incompetent (not difficult if its Truss) and pandering to the right whilst he occupies the sensible centre ground.Puja wrote:This is drifting over into righty sort of territory though and, while Labour might not win power with just the lefties (although I'm not sure I'd count that as a truism - leftwards politics under the hugely personally unpopular Corbyn with a divided party and a media firmly against them came pretty close and sprang some surprises in 2017. There's a lot more appetitie for "leftie" policies than has been assumed to be true, especially since most of them are actually fairly centrist and only look left because the Overton window's been so skewed), they also won't win power if they can't get their base out. All very well to court the right voters, but will enough of them turn out to make up for those disappearing from the other side, either defecting to the Libs or Greens or just plain not planning to vote because "Voting for a Red Tory just encourages them."Sandydragon wrote: Its not. Labour won't win power with just the lefties supporting it. It needs votes from the centre as well. Just a basic electoral fact.
Puja
Worth pointing out, again, that Corbyn's policies were very popular. It was Corbyn himself, and the accusations of anti-semitism that were unpopular.Sandydragon wrote:Aping Corbyn is a guaranteed way to get most media against you. Blair courted the media by appearing be less threatening and it worked. Many Tories voted for Labour in 97 and if Starmer doesn't have the same charisma to get the same he has a better chance if he can paint the next Tory leader as incompetent (not difficult if its Truss) and pandering to the right whilst he occupies the sensible centre ground.
If they aren't then they don't deserve to win. Nadine Dorries is ding a good job of giving Labour as many attack lines as possible.Son of Mathonwy wrote:No doubt these debates are being gleefully recorded by the Labour party for use in the general election.
Some of them were. But taken as a whole with a Shadow Chancellor who wanted to wave Mao's little red book about and Corbyn being, well Corbyn, then its easy to identify them as the comedy vote for a government.Which Tyler wrote:Worth pointing out, again, that Corbyn's policies were very popular. It was Corbyn himself, and the accusations of anti-semitism that were unpopular.Sandydragon wrote:Aping Corbyn is a guaranteed way to get most media against you. Blair courted the media by appearing be less threatening and it worked. Many Tories voted for Labour in 97 and if Starmer doesn't have the same charisma to get the same he has a better chance if he can paint the next Tory leader as incompetent (not difficult if its Truss) and pandering to the right whilst he occupies the sensible centre ground.
As ever, leftist policies are typically very popular amongst voters... until you tell them they're proposed by leftist parties.
It's tribal brainwashing, pure and simple, primarily lead by the right-leaning media.
Thats a big part of it. But equally too many leftish policies lumped together in a manifesto would attract concern regardless of who presents them. Nationalising a failing privatisation scheme would probably get some support, for example, but mass nationalisation based on ideology is a different matter.Which Tyler wrote:So... my point is "leftist policies are popular, leftist people aren't" and your counter is to say that leftist people are unpopular, but their policies generally aren't?
...you don't think energy, water, and trains are failing? Energy especially, since half the firms just went bust and no Western European country with nationalised energy is experiencing the same level of price shocks that we are (and hells, France's energy is subsidised by their national provider generating profuts out of our system!). I would've thought that could be extremely popular, especially packaged in the form of "easy solution to difficult problem" that we know the voting public all love.Sandydragon wrote:Thats a big part of it. But equally too many leftish policies lumped together in a manifesto would attract concern regardless of who presents them. Nationalising a failing privatisation scheme would probably get some support, for example, but mass nationalisation based on ideology is a different matter.Which Tyler wrote:So... my point is "leftist policies are popular, leftist people aren't" and your counter is to say that leftist people are unpopular, but their policies generally aren't?
Water is unchanged in my opinion. Grater investment then when it was nationalised but still not perfect.Puja wrote:...you don't think energy, water, and trains are failing?Sandydragon wrote:Thats a big part of it. But equally too many leftish policies lumped together in a manifesto would attract concern regardless of who presents them. Nationalising a failing privatisation scheme would probably get some support, for example, but mass nationalisation based on ideology is a different matter.Which Tyler wrote:So... my point is "leftist policies are popular, leftist people aren't" and your counter is to say that leftist people are unpopular, but their policies generally aren't?
Puja
I think he is missing the point here in that the issue is state investment, not necessarily ownership. the state could subsidise rail travel and force companies to reduce ticket prices accordingly. If the state nationalised rail travel then either it would charge customers the full price of travel or it would subsidise it and then have to find investment via taxation for improvements. BR wasn't known for its efficiency or comfort as I recall.In our age of crisis, the state has been reawakened, breaking the taboos of the past few decades. But it’s still an uphill climb. Over the past 40 years, there was broad political agreement that markets were not to be meddled with, and that the power of the state had to be reined in. Economists such as Milton Friedman argued that the overbearing nature of the Keynesian state had suffocated the entrepreneurial spirit, making workers lazy and entitled. Much of this situation, they claimed, was the result of intrusive government interfering with the smooth running of the free market.
Then, in the Eighties, Right-wing politicians such as Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan adopted this philosophy, taking aim at the “nanny state” that had supposedly led to the proliferation of “welfare queens”. They were followed by Third Way politicians like Bill Clinton and Tony Blair, who were convinced that the “era of big government is over” and the state’s power had to be reduced. Besides demolishing much of the welfare state, European state-owned enterprises that accounted for a significant chunk of national economies were also targeted. Companies such as British Gas, British Telecom, British Steel, and the railway sector were all privatised. But the aim of these policies was not merely a drive for efficiency; they were also designed to break the power of trade unions, while trying to turn Britain into a “shareholder society”.
Until a decade ago there was overwhelming support for this reining in of the power of the state, and in particular the privatisation of state-owned enterprises. But after the wave of repeated crises we have suffered since 2008, the public mood has changed considerably. According to YouGov, around 60% of British citizens now want to nationalise a UK rail sector infamous for its extortionate fares, and a similar number want to nationalise the energy sector. But it’s not only a matter of changing attitudes but also of political necessity. The current energy crisis is already forcing governments around Europe to consider bringing some energy companies under public ownership.
The Russian invasion of Ukraine has led to a severe rise in the price of oil and gas, with gas prices already increased by 52% by April 2022, and further hikes likely in the autumn. Now politicians are under heavy pressure to find rapid solutions that the market could not provide. Among the measures are releases of strategic reserves to increase supply by importing liquified natural gas from the US, striking gas deals with alternative suppliers from Algeria to Azerbaijan, and fast-tracking new Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) plants.
Governments were also forced to provide subsidies to families and companies to help with rising energy costs. In Britain, part of this was eventually covered through a windfall tax on corporate profits (totalling £5 billion): a common-sense policy given the profiteering going on in the energy sector. But even this intervention was met with disapproval by economists still convinced that the market should take its course, even if it destroys millions of jobs in the process. In preparation for the winter other measures are currently under discussion, including an EU-wide price cap.
Some governments have also been offering free or low-cost public transport to help address rising energy costs. In Germany, the government has launched a nine-euro-a-month ticket to travel across the entire country on local or regional trains during the summer. The initiative has been immensely successful, with train trips increasing by 50% and may even be continued as a “Klimaticket” to fight against carbon emissions. A similar scheme has been adopted by the Spanish government, with 100% discounts on multi-trip ticket journeys on local and regional services from September to December. These measures are all good palliatives, but the war in Ukraine has unearthed systemic fragilities in our economy and highlighted how free-market extremism has put countries’ economic and geopolitical security at risk, while slowing post-carbon transition.
Desperate to reverse this, some policymakers are now turning to more direct forms of state intervention: nationalisations. In France, Emmanuel Macron has launched a plan to bring back the energy giant EDF (which was part-privatised in 2005) under public control, at a cost of around €8 billion. The immediate motivation is to save from bankruptcy a company already laden with debt, which has only grown since Macron forced it to sell energy below market price to avoid an explosion of social unrest. But the nationalisation is also part of a more long-term plan that aims at securing France’s energy independence while meeting its climate transition targets. This comprises the building of six new nuclear power stations over the coming decades.
France isn’t alone in falling back on the state-ownership of strategic companies. In fact, we may well be at the beginning of a wave of nationalisations around Europe, with policymakers forced to reverse Thatcherite policies, by dint of necessity rather than ideology. The UK government has announced that it will part-nationalise the National Grid to help reach the Net Zero targets. Even the German government has mulled the possible nationalisation of energy firms at risk of going bankrupt, including Nord Stream 2. The reason is straightforward: it’s far easier to radically transform the energy sector by owning companies directly than by regulating them.
The real sticking point, however, remains public investment, given the enormous resources needed for the transition to a post-carbon and more secure energy supply that may help reduce prices. In Europe, the 2010s were a “lost decade”, when austerity policies led to a severe drop in public investment in key sectors including energy. But since the pandemic struck, we’ve seen a partial inversion of this self-defeating bean-counter mentality. The European Union Recovery Fund, which totals €800 billion, for instance, was a partial move away from this austerity orthodoxy, and came after a longstanding confrontation with the so-called Frugal Four (Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Austria).
But even still, it’s wholly insufficient to the challenge the continent faces. Worse, fiscal hawks such as Germany’s finance minister Christian Lindner are already calling for another bout of austerity, even while central banks are raising interest rates, which risks plunging our economies into deep recessions. In the US, even though Biden’s $1 billion Infrastructure Bill was passed, it still barely makes up for decades of public disinvestment, while more ambitious plans contained in the Build Back Better bill were scuppered because of opposition from centrist Democrats like Joe Manchin. Manchin, who is bankrolled by oil lobbies, insists that public investment would contribute to inflation, despite the fact that much of it is directed towards creating alternative streams of energy supply that may help reduce prices.
So while state interventionism is coming back, its return is far from complete. As economist Daniela Gabor has argued, what we’ve seen so far can be described as a “green derisking state”, in which governments attempt to guarantee financial markets against the liability of highly risky investments in the “green transition”.
What is instead required is a far more ambitious strategy — what Gabor calls a “green developmental state” — with governments heavily investing in energy transition and using state-owned companies as the driver of economic transformation. However, this requires moving beyond resorting to state interventionism as an emergency measure and safety net for market failure. It would mean rethinking our entire economic model, finally accepting that some sectors are best run by state-owned companies, and devising fruitful ways in which state and market can collaborate.
As the past decade has shown, there is no market solution to a problem that was created by prioritising the short-term convenience of the market over the long-term security of nations. If we want to avoid environmental disaster, economic decline and geopolitical blackmail, we need to move beyond the self-defeating fallacies of anti-statism.
As far as I'm aware, that research hasn't been done; if I'm wrong, then absolutely feel free to correct me.Sandydragon wrote:Thats a big part of it. But equally too many leftish policies lumped together in a manifesto would attract concern regardless of who presents them.
That's... not what the research on the issue suggests; though again, I don't know if that specific has been looked at.Sandydragon wrote:Nationalising a failing privatisation scheme would probably get some support, for example, but mass nationalisation based on ideology is a different matter.