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When
You’re Smiling…
It
is likely that a lot of people would be noticeably happier if Gordon
Brown would stop smiling. Those startling, carefully orchestrated
facial arrangements – inflicted on soldiers in Afghanistan looking
after the oil supply lines, on Olympic athletes calculating how much
their status as gold medalists will be worth when they get back home,
on bewildered parents taking their offspring for a quite sea-front
stroll in Southwold – are not a pretty sight and convince nobody
that the Prime Minister is relaxed and happy with his ability to
grapple British capitalism out of its present crisis. Less disturbing
would be the funereal countenance recently so characteristic of him.

To
take the question further – what is there for Gordon brown to smile about?
Among the “experts” who expect to be trusted
to
correctly prescribe remedies for the ills of capitalism, there is
general agreement that the situation can only get worse and that we
are about to be overwhelmed by a slump. A couple of months ago no
less a person than the governor of the Bank of England warned us that
“The nice years of the 60s are over” – an assessment which
would have impressed only those whose memories of those years – the
boom and slump economy, the Cuba missile crisis, the war in Vietnam –
are anything but “nice”. More recently Alistair Darling, Brown’s
choice to succeed him as Chancellor of the Exchequer rocked the
governmental boat when he declared, in an interview with the Guardian,
that “The economic times we are facing
are
arguably the worst they’ve been in 60 years and I think it’s
going to be more profound and long-lasting than people thought” and
later, bemoaning Labour’s fall out of electoral favour “People
are pissed off with us”.
Resilient
Chancellors
of the Exchequer are not supposed to be so frank about what goes on
in the economy, so that Darling’s comments were open to being
dismissed as a “gaffe” – which was in fact an admission that
his comments were nearer the truth than Brown’s persistent
assertion that the government has so effectively strengthened the
British economy that it will weather the storm – unless the voters
are so ungrateful that they put in a Tory government to undo all his
good work. His government, Brown said, is ”resilient” in the way
it is dealing with the present problems (expect to hear more of
“resilient” – it has all the hallmarks of a word essential to
any Labour Party weasel with ambitions to slither up the greasy
pole).
The
best that Labour MPs can offer in this appalling situation is to
grumble that it is all Brown’s fault; get rid of him, by whatever
means, and things will get better. The most recent of these was,
notably, the discarded, embittered ex-Home Secretary Charles Clarke.
The intellectual contortions required in this come easily to the
practised amnesiacs on the Labour benches but we should remember that
it is not very long ago that these same representatives of the people
were clamourous in their praise of Brown as the greatest Chancellor
of the Exchequer in history. This was the leader whose superhuman
powers had constructed an economy virtually free of unemployment,
with an uninflatable price structure and interest rates so low that
thousands were tempted to leap into the void of unaffordable
mortgages. Now that those happy delusions have been blown away by
cruel reality Labour is turning to the equally bankrupt notion that
their party’s salvation lies in ridding itself of Brown.
Adjustments like that are effective conditioning to the dishonesty
inherent in trying to run British capitalism. The problem is that no
leader can be any more successful, can cook the books, deny reality
and deceive the voting people, any more effectively.
Miliband
This
will not prevent them persisting in their endless search for the
unobtainable. And while they do this, each one will harbour,
somewhere in their feverish
self-assessment, the ambition that they
are the ideal leader the party has been waiting for – the one with
the insight and the power to succeed where historically everyone
else has failed. For their own peace of mind, it must be hoped that
these delusions will not endure beyond one or two sleepless nights.
David Miliband, possibly enjoying in his abrupt promotion to the
heady, if cynically seamy, job of Foreign Secretary, recently let it
be known that he is ready to accept the crown. In an article in the Guardian
he began in the pose as a fearless
confronter of
reality – although perhaps unsettling more stubbornly myopic Labour
supporters– with the admission that “The odds are against us, no
question” but then mollified those he had disturbed with a generous
measure of re-assuring platitudes: “Every member of the Labour
party carries with them the simple guiding mission on the membership
card: to put power, wealth and opportunity in the hands of the many,
and not the few” and later he expanded on this platitude with some
more “…the challenge to society – to build a genuine sense of
belonging and responsibility on the back of greater protection from
outside risks and greater control of local issues”. Perhaps, in
spite of this, Miliband will succeed to the leadership. But it will
not take long for the surge of capitalist society to expose him as
just another discredited politician.
This
doleful procession of ecstatic expectations followed by rumbling
doubts then exposure and rejection, seems to feed on a
self-perpetuating energy originating in an apparently limitless
capacity for working-class self-deception. There have been many
victims of this, of eminent leaders fallen into the dustbin of
history. Gordon Brown looks like being only the latest in this dismal
line. How long can he keep smiling?
IVAN
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