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In other words, Miliband tried to construct a winning coalition as a child tries to build a house out of Lego. He would take bricks from his toy box — the Scots here, the intelligentsia, the Northern working class and selected ethnic minorities there — and place them on top of each other until his 35 per cent strategy was complete. So confident was he that, even on election night, when his house was crashing around him, he still thought he could win.

One Labour adviser, who was far too intelligent for Ed Miliband to talk to, said the party forgot that modern left-wing politics isn’t like building with Lego but playing with magnets. The groups you try to pull together into your coalition are just as likely to repel as attract each other.

This is why the calls for Labour to return to Blairism are not quite as convincing as they sound. The old saying “you can win from the centre-Left but not from the Left” remains as true as ever, of course. Equally obviously, it would help Labour if it had leaders who talked to the voters as if they came from the same human species — or if that is too much to ask, from close relatives among the higher primates. But if Labour in England move to the centre, the SNP will use its “Blairism” against it in Scotland. If it tries to reclaim some of the hundreds of thousands of supporters it lost to UKIP, it will alienate supporters in the ethnic minorities. If it carries on pandering to conservative religious minorities by segregating women at Labour hustings, it will carry on losing the support of those, including liberal Muslims, who find its endorsement of reactionary prejudices intolerable. If it concentrates on England, as it must when it has just one seat in Scotland, it will further help the SNP.

A way out will be found only if Labour and the wider Left stop being so dishonest, and I include myself in that criticism. After the election, I looked back on what I had written about Labour with embarrassment. I produced a couple of disobliging pieces about Miliband. But I did not campaign against him. I did not scream at the parliamentary Labour party that he would let the Tories in, and millions would suffer as a result. Nor did many others in the left-wing press. People who knew better stayed silent in part because we did not want to be accused of treacherously aiding and abetting the Conservative cause, and in part because we believed the opinion polls, and thought that somehow or other Labour could cobble together a government. Living in London aided self-deception. Immigration and the extortionate cost of housing is pushing its population leftwards, as is London’s arrogance. The capital is strong and self-confident; it makes the mistake of thinking that everywhere else thinks as London thinks.

If the left-wing press was not pulling the Labour party back towards sanity, then nor were Labour politicians. They stayed loyal too and kept themselves wrapped in a warm cocoon. It ought to shame them that in the years before an appalling defeat not one senior figure tried to overthrow Miliband. Not one even developed an alternative political programme Labour could adopt after defeat. The trade unions were as bad. They have often been a stabilising force in Labour history, but are now so mad that Len McCluskey, the general secretary of Unite, backed Lutfur Rahman, the former mayor of Tower Hamlets, who was not only an opponent of the Labour party but a demagogue whose electoral frauds provoked the courts into removing him from office.

As they face the consequences of defeat, men and women who have spent years avoiding self-criticism will need to understand where they went so badly wrong. They will need to make their choices clear to an electorate which barely heeds them. And they will need to get on with it. Because unless the Left snaps out of its trance, the Conservatives will be in power for another decade.

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Jim McNeill
June 19th, 2015
7:06 PM
"The SNP swept Scotland by appealing to Scottish patriotism. Labour was a quisling party of foreigner-loving traitors, it said; “red Tories” who would sell out Scots to their English enemies." No they didn't say that at all Nick. They said that Labour sold out the working class, in England as well as Scotland. I do wish you would stop throwing these tiresome "Blood and Soil" jibes at the SNP, you're only parading your ignorance.

Anonymous
June 2nd, 2015
5:06 PM
I think the London bubble played a big part in Labour's downfall. The problem is London problems are not UK problems. A classic example of this is "the housing crisis" which left wing parts of the media love reporting on. The problem is in large parts of the UK house prices have if anything been rather flat. Russian billionaires aren't looking to pick up nice houses in Swindon or Humberside. Families living in such areas are often trapped by the low value of their homes and the inability to move to nicer areas. Indeed the house crisis is in large part a combination of left leaning young Londoners unable to live in the gentrified bits of central London and cuts to housing benefits (which again probably doesn't effect many families trapped in cheaper neighbourhoods). Indeed I suspect to many people living in average market towns listening to Londoners and people in trendy cities like Cambridge and Brighton complaining about house prices was probably reason enough to vote Tory. I love London and enjoyed my time there but sometimes When you live outside London it can feel a bit like a party you haven't been invited to. Add in a bit of resentment about a international set buying into areas you cannot afford and poor people getting housing benefits to live in areas you cannot live in and you quickly see why people opted for populists nationalist parties (e.g. SNP and UKIP). Trying to out nationalist the nationalist would backfire and would be counterproductive. But having a message that reaches out to people in parts of the UK that are not London and gives them hope would probably achieve a lot to undo the damage done by Miliband.

John Knowles
June 2nd, 2015
4:06 PM
Nick Cohen and the right wing gang do not understand why the SNP won in Scotland and the Tories got not a sniff there . They do not understand why UKIP have become the unlikely voice of working people . If you just spout right wing mantras and are out of touch with the public you will always lose .Unless you sort out your local activist Mafias who keep shutting out and driving away new members . If you do not tell your regional organisers to enforce party rules to protect talented members from being bullied out of the party then Labour will always lose .The party needs to get its head from up its own back side . And I love the Labour Party but only as it is meant to be.

kitefighter
June 2nd, 2015
10:06 AM
Nick Cohen writes passionately when throwing bricks at the left. That's the easy part. But what exactly would he have done differently that would meant a different outcome at the election? Where is his program?

Anonymous
June 1st, 2015
11:06 PM
It's actually much simpler than that. Labour, for years, have been too self congratulatory, too arrogant, and too patronising. Ordinary people have been telling Labour for years, who refused to listen and mocked their pleas as "uneducated" and "racist". Labour engineered a multi-cultural society without any mandate to do so. We were fed up of the political correctness that gagged its citizens, the writing was on the wall. None of us want the NHS to fall, and support many equalilty and fairness in society, but the arrogance of "what was right for the country" instead of listening to the rumblings was too much to bear. The Labour party got what it deserved.

Michael Walker
June 1st, 2015
9:06 PM
Another London centric, media centric analysis that manages to sneak in a pro-Israeli comment at the end...there is a serious need for some proper self reflection in the wider socialist movement but this surely isn't it... Let start with the words on the back of our membership card - the Labour Party is a democratic socialist party - what does this mean for all of Britain today and how do we put into effect what we claim to be? I'm sick of media types telling us what is wrong with the Labour party without ever having canvassed a doorstep in their lives or having the first idea why the Labour Party arose and what we are meant to represent. The last Labour Government didn't "preside" over the worst financial crisis in living memory - Gordon Brown was pre-eminent in saving the world's economies from a 1920's style crisis. Don't take my word for it - read Martin Wolf's book - and he is (or rather was), a head banging monetarist.. Ed fought an honourable campaign and we were slaughtered because a) the Labour Party doesn't stand for anything in the eyes of most of the electorate at the moment...b) our own timidity in arguing our case about the economy c) the right wing media conspiracy that has destroyed every Labour Leader apart from Wilson and Blair. The former was a consummate politician; the latter was just fortunate to be around at the end of 17 years of Tory rule. John Smith would never have fawned on Murdoch like Blair... It's been a struggle for 120 years and it probably will be for another 120 years but all true socialists don't turn on their own Leaders at the time of defeat...we unite!

Julian Bray
June 1st, 2015
5:06 PM
Be very afraid Peterborough Tory MP Stewart Jackson has retweeted this piece : I said earlier that Cameron was an inadequate prime minister unfit to meet the challenges of our time. Nowhere in my view is his mediocrity more evident than in his willingness to risk the union by setting up an arms race between Scottish and English nationalism. But why should he care? In the short term, which is the only term that matters to him, who can deny that his tactics worked, and that Labour could not cope with them?" Stewart Jackson MP retweeted 3d NickCohen4's avatar Nick Cohen @NickCohen4 "Left wing journalists weren't hard enough on Miliband" Me in @StandpointMag on our role in The Labour catastrophe standpointmag.co.uk/node/6075/full

Anonymous
May 31st, 2015
6:05 PM
I wonder if Nick Cohen understands why the Tories won. This piece reads like the analysis of a failed military campaign with the British electorate and their political views seen as an enemy which must be defeated. I don't believe that the English left PRETENDS that if cannot abide its country. They do truly despise us. The Left's reaction of contempt for the voters who put in a Tory majority makes this attitude plainly visible. The hard truth is that some of us would prefer this country to be run by the Tories than to have to endure rule by an occupying army of left-wingers who, Trojan Horse style, pretend to be the party of the people but actually want to re-shape us into kind of people they think we should be.

JPL
May 31st, 2015
8:05 AM
I'm sorry - you are wrong about Scotland. The SNP have become the only vocal proponents of left-wing policies. This was not rabid nationalism but plain old socialism. Like others, I only gave up on Labour when it chased power and dropped principles. Developing a Scottish Labour Party affiliated to the English Labour party is the only way back to a red map of Scotland. Any more blue tinge to Labour manifesto consigns Labour to continued Scottish oblivion.

Gareth
May 29th, 2015
8:05 PM
"Immigration and the extortionate cost of housing is pushing its population leftwards..." Do Lefties like the idea of having more people than beds to sleep in? Do they revel in the fact that houses built for Victorian railway porters are now unaffordable? No wonder every sane voter is giving up on them.

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