I am not
entirely clear on the definition of a pandemic – but once an infectious agent
has led to advice
to call off all Labour Party meetings you know things have got serious. As the
Chair of a Constituency Labour Party (CLP) who will now be deprived - even if
only temporarily – of the sheer unalloyed joy of chairing meetings, this has
obviously got me thinking.
The first thing
I think is that the robust advice issued by the General Secretary of the Labour
Party stands in stark contrast to the failure of Her Majesty’s Opposition
seriously to hold to account our Government over their inadequate response to
the current public health crisis (to be clear, asking
Johnson to explain more clearly why he wants to let old people die too soon
does not amount to holding him to account).
If we think
that the best way to protect the health and safety of Labour Party members (and to make a positive contribution to the health of the wider community) is to stop our members
from gathering together (even in relatively small numbers) then why hold back
from attacking the Government for their failure to act to stop mass gatherings,
or to close schools (particularly given the compelling
evidence that this would be effective)?
The second
thing I think is that, if there are other Party members who feel, as I do, that
Labour should be more vigorous in its opposition to the Government over its
lackadaisical attitude to thousands of untimely deaths, the decision to suspend
all Party meetings prevents us from finding a democratic way to give voice to
that opinion within the Party’s structures. In decades of activity in our
movement I have never been reassured by any
circumstances which limit the ability of the rank and file to criticise and
hold to account the leadership and the paid officials – and I am reassured
least of all in current circumstances.
This leads me
to the third thing I think, which is that the definition of a “General Meeting”
in Chapter
Seven of the Labour Party Rule Book does not in fact specify that a meeting
must take place in a single geographical location. It is (at least) arguable
that the Rules permit us to arrange meetings over the internet (using the
technologies that are now available to enable this). The General Secretary’s
advice that we stop meeting, and stop campaigning, is plainly (given its
context) advice that we should stop meeting in
person and stop campaigning on the
doorstep and in the streets.
No one thinks
we should stop campaigning online (although there would always be much to be
said for greater restraint on Facebook and Twitter) as you cannot catch COVID
19 online. Nor is there any reason why Labour Party members should cease
communicating electronically – from which it follows that, if we can organise
electronic meetings in a way that guarantees the democratic rights of Party
members (since nothing in the Labour Party Rule Book precludes electronic meetings)
we can, in fact, meet (online).
We can then
express (if we wish) the opinion that our Party, in Parliament, should be
holding Johnson’s Government to account more effectively and – where we hold any
power in devolved administrations or local government should be promoting more
effective preventative measures than those being advocated by our Government of
the privileged by the privileged for the privileged.
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