Home » 2020 » November

Monthly Archives: November 2020

Rishinomics and its discontents

Quite a neat summary here (by Elliott Chappell in today’s Labour List email) of yesterday’s spending review based on Rishinomics:

“Our health emergency is not yet over and our economic emergency has only just begun,” Rishi Sunak told us as he launched into his spending review. 2.5 million public sector workers will see their pay frozen – including 90% of police, 80% of fire service and 75% of prison officers, at least 80% of secondary school teachers and 75% of those in primary schools. This, remember, just a week after the PM unveiled the biggest investment in defence since the Cold War. The Chancellor announced a new £4bn ‘levelling up’ fund that will see MPs bid for money in what looks to be the same mechanism that led to the controversy over the Towns Fund – in which the Tories prioritised spending to marginal seats ahead of the last election. He was silent on the £20 uplift to Universal Credit – the emergency top-up grudgingly given earlier in the pandemic. Failing to extend it will slash annual incomes for 16 million households by £1,040 in April. And, of course, the Chancellor rounded off all that (and much more) by going back on the Tory manifesto promise to keep UK aid spending at 0.7% of gross national income.”

    “Rishinomics“ is what I’ve called it for fun, of course. It’s neoliberalism really. And this is how it always works. It isn’t simply that capitalists hate the poor (though they often do). Capitalists need the poor. So they create poverty. An executive in a finance company housed in the World Financial Centre in New York, Craig Dinsell, explained some of it to me over lunch in the Metropolitan Museum restaurant in 2012. Low-paid workers can’t expect to be paid good wages, or even half-decent wages. That would cause inflation. Actually, low pay is good for them because it gives them an incentive to better themselves and get themselves out of poverty. It gives them ambition. Without that, they would just stay in their menial jobs for life. That’s “human nature” apparently (I’d been waiting for that). This little narrative, of course, ignores the fact that poverty more often destroys ambition and hope, it grinds people down. The truth is that low pay remains part of the system because it is essential to the pursuit of profit, although Craig didn’t quite put it like that—he was ruminating on “human nature”. So this, as far as I could tell, was the best of all possible worlds—There Is No Alternative. Tina lives.[1]

   I knew Craig Dinsell in the late 1960s, when he was 20. We attended an evangelical Baptist church in North London, where he played the role of gadfly to the church establishment and sang Bob Dylan songs. Now, as I said, he moves in high circles and is himself part of a rather bigger establishment (“We were invited to a dinner for Tony Blair”, he told me. “He seemed a nice guy”). Craig is a nice liberal. He reads the New York Times and advised me not to watch Fox News. I’m sure he voted for Biden.

    And in that there is a warning. We justifiably feel relief at Biden’s victory. But while Reagan was the first who decisively took the neoliberal path, it was so decisive that none of his successors or their followers ever abandoned it. Including Biden. As Brando Marcetic notes in “Yesterday’s Man: the case against Joe Biden”:

“While Clinton’s neoliberal politics alienated many voters, Biden was one of the earliest adopters of neoliberalism, successfully pushing the [Democratic] party to become more like him.”

If Marcetic is right (and I confess I have only read the introduction to the book so far, but it sounds likely to me) then while the tone, the style, and most of the politics of Biden may be very different from the horrors of the last 4 years, we should beware of wanting to “get back to normal”. For “normal” still includes neoliberalism. And Joe needs to be watched. And pushed.

    As for Rishi, don’t ask.


[1] Tina was the name given by cabinet minister Norman St John Stevas to Margret Thatcher because of her frequent use of the phrase “There is no alternative” to justify her neoliberal policies. In the end he had to go.

No reset for “freedom of information”

Not that I want to be repetitive, but …

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/nov/24/orwellian-government-unit-obstructs-freedom-of-information-says-report

Perhaps I should simply say “Watch this space.”

No reset for the Home Office

When I worked at the international telephone exchange in London (I’m obviously talking about when there were such things, so in the early 1980s) we had to sign the Official Secrets Act. We signed it when we joined and we signed it when we left. When I left, Mr Ignacek, a divisional supervisor, told me: “You have to sign the Act again.”

    “What for?” I asked.

     “So you don’t blab!” he said.

      “Blab?” I said. “What about?!” (We were only a telephone exchange. I wasn’t John Le Carré.)

      “Anything,” Iggy said. “You can’t even tell them the colour of the paint on the bloody walls!”

    All that was ridiculous and funny. The story (below) of how the Official Secrets Act is being used today to cover up cruelty and ill-treatment of asylum seekers is not funny at all. It’s shameful. And yes, Priti Patel is overseeing it, no doubt with her trademark enthusiasm for bullying way out in front. But, as I said before (see previous two blogs), abuse of asylum seekers goes back through the decades and was perpetrated by governments of all shades. Why did Labour Home Secretary David Blunkett introduce the policy of separating the children of refused asylum seekers from their parents and putting them in care in order to force their terrified parents to take the family back to their dangerous home country? The Head of Asylum Policy at the Home Office in 2006, Rod McLean, told me it was because he wanted to prove to the tabloid press that he was not a “soft touch” when it came to asylum. When I told MacLean that the Refugee Council had said this policy was “not the mark of a civilised society”, he sighed, shrugged his shoulders and said: “Well, they would say that, wouldn’t they?”

    And so it goes on. In our name. We have to do something about it. Get involved in one of the support groups mentioned in the article, send emails to MPs and ministers, raise the issue in your union branch, invent ways of protesting that are safe during the pandemic. We shouldn’t leave people to the non-existent mercy of our politicians and their civil servants.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/nov/23/home-office-accused-of-cover-up-at-camp-for-asylum-seekers

Reset? As I said, “business as usual”

Remember the Tories were going to end the hostile environment? Remember how sorry they were about it? Remember how “grateful” they were to the Windrush generation? Remember they were going to “reset” policymaking after the departure of Cummings and Cain? And remember (see previous blog) how I said they wouldn’t?

    Well, they haven’t. Ken Morgan’s story won’t be the last to demonstrate “business as usual” at the Home Office. And don’t imagine that it makes much difference who is Home Secretary or which government is in power. Ken Morgan’s story began in 1994 under John Major’s Tory government; we’ve had 3 Labour governments, a Tory/LibDem coalition and 3 Tory governments since then. Under all those governments, and with their connivance, the Home Office maintained its racist hostility to migrants and asylum seekers. Tory Home Secretary Michael Howard agreed with his fellow Tory Ann Widdicombe that the UK was a “soft touch” for asylum seekers and said that “only a tiny proportion of them are genuine refugees”. Labour Home Secretary David Blunkett later said they were “swamping our schools”.

    If by some miracle Priti Patel was ousted from her post as Home Secretary, it wouldn’t make much difference to any of this. After the Windrush scandal broke, Tory Home Secretary Savid Javid told us that the “hostile” environment had been changed to the “compliant” environment. That’s different, isn’t it? Yes. It suggests thumbscrews.

Windrush victim refused British citizenship despite wrongful passport confiscation
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2020/nov/22/windrush-victim-refused-british-citizenship-despite-wrongful-passport-confiscation?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

Re-what?

After the departure of Cummings and Cain, the new buzzword is “reset”. Johnson will be able to reset Downing Street, reset his politics, reset his relationship with his MPs, reset his government and reset policymaking. 


Reset.


A clutter of Tory MPs have said it, former cabinet ministers have said it, and anonymous current ones. Journalists are making sure they use it. Andrew Marr will say it. Sajid Javid was said to be favourite for reset minister.


Prediction: it won’t happen (OK, it’s a hostage to fortune, and my impersonations of the prophet Isaiah have never been that good, but still). Johnson won’t stop trying to fix the judges, he will still appoint the nastiest ones to do jobs like the Spycops inquiry (the judge doing that one told counsel for one of the victims that he couldn’t ask the witness any more questions, and if he tried, “I will silence you”). Priti Patel won’t stop vilifying solicitors for doing their jobs defending their clients, and her Home Office will, as in the story below, defy court orders with impunity. The Home Office has always provided a home for lawless thugs, but I think this is the first time I’ve seen them defy a court order with such arrogance, afterwards saying “It’s business as usual”. And the Orwellian language has reached a new height: their housing subcontractor Mears sent one asylum seeker an eviction notice which read: “You need to leave this property by 11 November 2020. We understand it is a key step in your asylum journey.”


Reset? No, it’s “business as usual”.


I think I’ll stay off the news for the rest of today! And it’s raining.


Home Office accused of breaching court order over asylum seeker evictions
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/nov/06/home-office-high-court-asylum-seeker-evictions-coronavirus?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other