It currently seems like a gloomy time for the left in the Labour Party. After a two year delay, the - established to investigate the explosive contents of the Partyâs 860-page Leaked Report into the functioning of its Legal and Governance Unit - was finally published in July. It found significant evidence of discriminatory behaviours by Party officials based on religion, race, gender and sexual orientation, which says was âshockingâ.
Journalist Peter Oborneâs led him to conclude that former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn had been the victim of âa grotesque miscarriage of justice.â He warned: âForde has provided Starmer with an opportunity to put this right. He is unlikely to rise to the challenge because Starmer has fashioned himself as the nemesis of the Labour left and not a statesman who can bring together all factions of his great party.â
This was prescient. Apart from a belated, perfunctory , the Labour leadership largely ignored the report.
There is a growing sense of injustice. Every democratic advance made is thwarted by Labourâs factional apparatus. Hard-won rule changes that democratise the Party are overturned. , newly elected to the Partyâs National Executive, was suspended for speaking at an event organised by a proscribed group.
The Party has proscribed several organisations in the last year and some members have been for retrospective association with them.
A number of would-be prospective parliamentary candidates have been removed from the running by the Party hierarchy. , who had already been an MP from 2017 to 2019 and is Leader of the Labour Group on her Council, was blocked from running for the winnable Kensington seat.
Maurice Mcleod was similarly barred from the Camberwell & Peckham shortlist. : âThe exclusion of Mcleod, who is a racial justice campaigner and former editor of The Voice, Britainâs leading Black newspaper, comes amid concern over the number of Black men selected to stand for Labour.â
was removed from the Milton Keynes selection, allegedly for âlikingâ a tweet from SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon, in which she had announced she had tested negative for Covid. Earlier this year , Deputy Leader of Hastings Council, and Stroud Council Leader were blocked from running for parliamentary seats. All the contenders were on the Partyâs left.
Many activists conclude the Party leadership is deliberately creating an unwelcome environment for them. If so, itâs proved an effective strategy over the last two and a half years, with over 150,000 members leaving.
Even sitting MPs are not immune from the squeeze, with Sam Tarry being deselected in Ilford South after being sacked from Starmerâs shadow ministerial team for supporting striking workers and ââ. Apsana Begum, MP for Poplar and Limehouse, is also the focus of a reselection battle.
has raised serious concerns. The Partyâs decision to continue the selection process against its only hijab-wearing MP while she was signed off sick from work led to accusations that the leadership had abandoned its duty of care towards her. , who worked for successive Labour leaders, concluded: âThe widely-held view on the left is that, if Begum were not a member of the left-wing Socialist Campaign Group of MPs, the partyâs response would have been completely different.â
On the other hand, most left wing MPs have been safely readopted. And even open seats have seen some success for the left, with, for example, the selection of in winnable Chingford. At local government level too, there were modest gains in Mayâs Council elections.
At Labourâs Annual Conference, the left still continues to make the running on Party policy, while the right seems more interested in factional battles. And although Starmer tends to ignore Conference resolutions that he does not like, for example, on public ownership and , the rise of industrial action in recent months could push Labour towards more radical measures to tackle the cost of living crisis. That movement will need to be sustained given that, if Labour does win the next general election, it will be in the worst economic conditions it has inherited for over half a century.
Labourâs massive poll lead suggests this is likely. But with two years before a general election must be called, much could change. In April of this year the noted that Labour was âflailing against the calamitous and incompetent Conservativesâ with only a narrow poll advantage.
If Labourâs poll lead shrinks, Starmer will face a dilemma. The strategy of driving out the left assumed that Boris Johnsonâs 80-seat majority could not be overturned immediately. So moving the Party rightwards was the first step in a two-term strategy. Now the next general election looks eminently winnable, Starmer will have to calculate how much support he needs from his grassroots, many of whom currently feel manipulated and mistreated.
Since September, have joined Labourâs ranks. Many of these are not committed to any particular faction, but just want a Labour government. They will not be happy with a leadership that continues similar policies to the Tories. The left will need to be in the Party when those conversations take place.
For those choosing to âstay and fightâ, there are some grounds for optimism. At local and regional level Labour are notching up some significant achievements, in terms of social housing and community wealth-building. Even where Labour is not in control, local Labour Councillors who join picket lines are adding legitimacy to cost of living disputes.
There are still many spaces in which Party activists can do politics differently: âThey need to be completely embedded in the community, they must understand needs and have an activist approach to solving problems,â argues , illustrating in one ward the possibilities of Party activism.
Labour Students and Young Labour remain on the left and Party officers at local level have the scope to organise radical activities. âPeople should proceed until apprehended, rather than assuming they canât do anything,â one long-standing activist told me.
Some of this may look pedestrian compared to the exciting opportunities of the Corbyn years. Yet the conditions that produced the Corbyn surge seven years ago have only intensified. Former Corbyn Director of Strategic Communications argues: âThe incline of the left is up, even if the angle may not be very steep. Thereâs a lot of rebuilding and new work thatâs going on.â
After twelve years of Labour in Opposition, most people seeking a political alternative â especially trade unionised workers now in struggle - will support Labour at the next general election. Labourâs right has a strategy: demoralise the left and drive them out, expelling a few hundred, but hoping that thousands will voluntarily quit. The left should have the confidence of its ideas to fight on where it matters most.
Mike Phipps is a long-term Labour and anti-war activist, whose new book Donât Stop Thinking About Tomorrow: The Labour Party after Jeremy Corbyn is . He writes regularly for the platform .
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