THE LAST DITCH

When introduced at West London parties as "to the right of Genghis Khan", I smilingly reply that he was well to the left of me on economics but far to the right of me on social issues. At the same parties, I have become accustomed to being called a "Nazi" or a "fascist" by people whose ambitions for the power of the state and its influence on our lives place them far closer to the true definition of those terms.

When the present hoo-ha about Brexit has passed into history, I am beginning to hope that it will have taught us, finally, that "Left" and "Right" are meaningless labels that inhibit intelligent debate. 

It is currently the most prominent issue that divides us – not vertically between Left and Right – but diagonally. Some Brexiteers want out of the EU so that they can avoid the restrictions on "state aid" that prevent the nationalisation of key businesses. Some Brexiteers want out of the EU to strip away an unnecessary layer of government and hope that, once free of its Napoleonic influence, they can strip away several more. All that unites them (and this is why sneers about the lack of a Brexit plan ring true) is that they want out of the EU. Their only "plan" is that the future direction of Britain's laws should be set in Britain. They have hopes but no certainties as to what that direction should be.

As our current political parties are ranged along a Left/Right axis they are therefore useless as a means of resolving this great national argument. Like Fulham FC's current porous defence, they contain a selection of talented individuals – some of them very highly-paid and/or well-regarded – but deployed in entirely the wrong shape (and some might play far better for another team). The current gilets jaunes protestors in France are also arranged along a diagonal divide. Their political demands are many, varied and mutually inconsistent – if measured by traditional Left/Right means. They seem united only in despising the hauteur of the current European Narcissism Champion, Emmanuel Macron (and what sane person could disagree with them on that?)

Throughout the West, we need new parties arranged along a different axis; one that more accurately reflects the genuine differences of opinion in our society. As a classical liberal, I would love that axis to run between a laissez-faire Liberal Party and an Interventionist Party. Almost every political argument I ever encounter could be summarised as "more state / less state"– whether it's about "public health", Brexit or the most serious real problem in Britain today – the affordability of  housing. Others might draw the dividing line somewhere else. 

Given the tribalism of British politics, it's hard to imagine how new parties might arise but things certainly can't continue the way they are right now. Tell me, gentles all, how do you think our politics will develop?

5 responses to “A diagonal division”

  1. MarkC Avatar
    MarkC

    I’ve mulled this over for a while because things are rarely as simple as “socialism is left-wing, authoritarians / Hitlers / BNP / damned Tories are right-wing”. Manifestly it’s not true; Communism is just a branch of Socialism, and Socialism is a mainstay of Fascism, given Fascism’s belief in control of resources (including people) for the benefit of the State. That Hitler (for instance) wasn’t a Communist but a National Socialist is quite irrelevant for the purpose of classifying Fascists. But how, then, can Hitler be “right-wing” if Socialists are “left-wing”?
    It must be very useful for the left wing to have placed Hitler and his like on the “right-wing”, and for the BBC and media to pander to it by classifying – say – Tommy Robinson, EDL or the BNP as right-wing when in fact, their policy pledges read as unreformed National Socialist. The term “left-wing” seems to be seen as all warm and fuzzy and caring while “right-wing” is damning. It doesn’t enter people’s heads to wonder why warm and fuzzy and caring comes from the same system which murdered hundreds of millions in the 20th century alone.
    Looking forward, it’s an uncomfortable thought but I wonder if our politics will continue its regression into a future where there is no guidance of broad principle behind party ambition, but merely the need to compete with the Opposition on how much to give away to / promise to various victim groups in order to snare votes – driven by political greed, Twittermobs and the media planting clickbait articles.
    I don’t want to be pessimistic, but sometimes it’s difficult!

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  2. Tom Avatar

    That risk exists. No doubt. But there are encouraging straws in the wind. Any trick that works too long engenders arrogance in the trickster. The English have little patience with arrogance and will always look to lay it low. We don’t mind elites, provided that the elitists don’t think themselves entitled. And by God the current lot do! I hope to live to see them get their come-uppance.

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  3. David Avatar
    David

    I hope / expect that we are about to see a major party realignment on in / out lines, followed by a general election won conclusively by out.
    Very possibly wishful thanking, but, as losing 68kg in a year demonstrates, lots of things are possible.

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  4. Tom Avatar

    I’ve lost 50 kg in a year, but it’s going to take a year and a half to lose 68 kg! Frankly that’s a hell of a lot easier than forming the new parties you mention. So I’m afraid I do think that’s wishful thinking. 😦

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  5. rapscallion Avatar
    rapscallion

    You are right to suggest that it’s not a Left/Right issue, and in fact I don’t even think more state/less state issue either. It is perhaps more of a Nationalist/Traditionalist/Culturalist versus Globalism split. This has manifested itself as a result of twenty years of Globalism. Many jobs in the West have been outsourced to the 2nd and 3rd world, and within the EU, an awful lot has moved from West to East. What you are left with, are people who have lost their jobs and have to get much lower paid jobs that require them to travel. Those that kept their jobs are in the same boat, and the remainder have no chance because all the immigrants (legal and illegal) are taking the really low paid jobs – that is for the one’s that actually work. Therefore, a large proportion of your population (and it almost always the indigenous white population) are either on the breadline or just under it, and they are struggling as their wages have effectively stagnated for the last 20 years or shrunk. They are traduced when they complain about the large number of immigrants and smeared racist or xenophobe, and then have to cough up taxes to pay for the privilege. Meanwhile their towns and cities are becoming unrecognisable by being ghettoised.
    In 2016 they revolted, hence Brexit and Trump. They did the same in Italy (March 2018). Right across Europe peoples have had enough. Poland, Hungary, Slovakia and Slovenia won’t accept any migrants as per EU orders. Sweden still doesn’t have a government. The AfD are doing better in Germany and now we have the Gilet Jaunes in France. The political tectonic plates are on the move, where they will settle God only knows.
    Very well done on losing 50Kg

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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