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Edited on Wed Jun-15-11 05:18 PM by LeftishBrit
Well, the LibDems essentially became moderate Tories and are now down at 9% in the polls, so it's not an automatically winning strategy.
'Enterprise' is not necessarily bad in its place; i.e. firmly in the private sector of a mixed economy, and producing something useful, not just making money out of money. However, using business to run public services, or trying to model public services on businesses, is useless. There is an assumption in too many places that private business is automatically more effective than government. In fact - and I live in a place with one of the worst County Councils - I have NEVER come across a government service as inefficient as certain businesses that I've encountered!
'capitalism is the single most successful system in history at creating opportunity, freedom, expression and happiness'- Thatcher couldn't have said it better.
'the future economy demands it: whether we like it or not, by the time of the 2015 general election the British economy will have been fundamentally rebalanced; the public sector will have shrunk significantly and the private sector boosted.'
The public sector will certainly have shrunk if Cameron et al continue to get their way; the private sector won't necessarily be boosted, however. Public service cuts do NOT necessarily boost the private sector, and in bad economic times generally have the reverse effect.
'Jobs will not come easy in the future; nor will they always be secure. Entire business models will come and go, and the business cycle may shorten, rather than lengthen.'
This is a likely consequence of Tory cuts and of allowing bankers and short-termist entrepreneurs to run the economy. However, it's not something that's ordained by God or Nature. Job insecurity is a political and social evil that Labour should be fighting against, not just accepting.
'However, the future economy also creates boundless opportunity. Young British entrepreneurs will flourish and succeed. Some will climb high up the social ladder, and create valuable new jobs for people from similar backgrounds.'
Reagan called it 'trickle-down' economics, didn't he? The point is that entrepreneurship is all very well as *one* part of the economy. But it's not for everyone, nor is it all that the country needs. Well-managed public services have never been so vital. Perhaps the one most crucial area where true *natural* rather than politically-driven change will affect the future economy is that people are living longer; a higher proportion of the population will be elderly; and they are inevitably going to need *public* services. Also, education is more vital than ever in a high-tech society, and considerations about global warming as well as the aforesaid ageing population make improvements in public transport essential. Etc.! Not to mention all the other services that have always been important and are being threatened by this government, notably housing.
'That means a radical new approach to education, where accounting and budgeting are as valued as traditional mathematics, and where business and marketing are offered as core parts of the national curriculum alongside IT and English.'
Budgeting perhaps; but 'marketing as a core part of the curriculum'?
'And it means we must abandon our approach as the party predominantly of the post-war welfare settlement, shackled to the Labour cathedrals of the welfare state and National Health Service,'
One of the most chilling statements I've seen in a long time and I've seen plenty! Even most Tories would not OPENLY express such contempt for the NHS, though we know they have it in practice.
People like these are barking up the wrong tree anyway. They need to consider one question of historical fact, almost never raised.
Question: How much greater a percentage of the vote did the Tories win in their 2010 sort-of-victory than in their 1945 debacle?
Surprising answer:
None. They won an identical 36% of the vote in both elections.
The difference is that the anti-Tory vote was far more divided between different parties in 2010 than in 1945.
Labour should not IMO be concentrating on winning votes from the Tories. Tory votes came mostly from hardcore Tories who will not vote Labour anyway, plus a smaller number who were simply against the incumbents at a time of economic crisis.
What Labour need to do is to win back votes from the smaller parties: mainly the LibDems, but also the Nationalists. They have been fairly successful in winning many of the LD voters back, or rather Clegg has been fairly successful in driving many of us back to Labour. They have so far been less successful with the Nationalist votes. But they won't get the vote of most of either by becoming Tories in all but name, and especially not by rejecting the traditions of the welfare state and NHS. If they go down that path, they may in the end drive many people to choose that political party, all too popular in the United States, known as Why-Bother-to-Vote.
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