I received a leaflet
today promoting the candidacy of Kier Starmer to be Labour’s next Leader. It’s
a good quality piece of campaign literature (although I wasn’t persuaded and will be
voting for Rebecca Long-Bailey, who was nominated by our local Labour Party).
However, I was
slightly unnerved by the fact that the leaflet opens out into a large portrait
of the candidate, bearing the slogan “Integrity, Authority, Unity”.
As someone who
found in Jeremy Corbyn, the first Labour Leader I had supported (as a leadership candidate) since the
decision on who our Leader should be was taken away from the Parliamentary
Labour Party I was always conscious that the criticism that some “Corbynistas”
were tending towards a personality cult was not without its force.
I don’t think
Jeremy Corbyn ever authorised anything quite as gruesome as this poster
however. This is real personality cult stuff, using half of the two sides of A3
available on the leaflet for what looks like a cross between a window poster
and the sort of thing that might appear on the bedroom wall of a particularly
disturbed teenager.
What struck me
most of all though was the slogan; “Integrity, Authority, Unity”. Like all the
best slogans it is a three
word slogan. It’s not quite “Liberte,
Egalite, Fraternite” or “Land,
Peace and Bread” but it beats the famous Blairite failure at a three word
slogan “Education, Education, Education”.
But what is the
slogan trying to say about the candidate, in an election against two other
candidates?
He is the
candidate with integrity? The integrity he showed when he joined
the mass resignation from the Shadow Cabinet in 2016
(before being invited
back as Shadow Brexit Secretary)? Are we meant to conclude that he has more
integrity than the other candidates? On what basis?
He is the
candidate with authority? Please. This is a blatant appeal to the unconscious
bias which sees in a white man in a suit the characteristics it expects to see
in an “electable” leader. Should we
conclude that Mr (“Sir”) Starmer has more authority than his female opponents?
If he has, why has he?
He is the
candidate to bring unity? The sort of unity he encouraged by nominating
Owen Smith for the leadership in 2016? That was the unity of majority of the
Parliamentary Labour Party against the majority of the Party membership.
Let’s be clear.
What I am criticising here is a leaflet, not a candidate. The bookie’s
favourite to be our next Leader may win the election, and if he does, I
will campaign for him to be our Prime Minister (just as I campaigned for
successive Labour Leaders whom I had not supported in their election within the
Party).
Ultimately, the
identity of the Leader of the Labour Party is less important than the active
willingness of the Party membership to assert our democratic right to control
the direction of our Party.
However a
Leader who genuinely wanted unity with the membership, who wanted authority
founded upon democratic engagement with that membership and who sought
integrity in that relationship of mutual respect would be more likely to assist
us, as Party members, in building the Party our people need.
That’s why I
will vote for Rebecca
Long-Bailey.
1 comment:
The font is interesting too Jon. It looks as though the words are on a different plane to the image, "A long time ago in a galaxy far far away..." that sort of thing.
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