You are here:   Features > How Jeremy Corbyn's Coup Hijacked Labour
 
Peter Mandelson has only made enough to spend £8 million on a Regent’s Park home. Blair has made tens of millions advising regimes as corrupt and repressive as the dictatorships of Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan. We have seen nothing like this since Lloyd George’s day, perhaps not since the Georgian oligarchy. It is not just Labour members who are disturbed by the spectacle of an ex-prime minister using his contacts to join the global superrich. But Labour members find it more shocking than most. They expect their politicians to retire to chairs in academia, or to posts at the United Nations or some other international organisation or charity. They will not allow another generation of centrist politicians to use the Labour party as a stepping-stone to careers helping the rich maximise their fortunes. To put it another way, Blair has discredited Blairism, and Corbyn’s rise is a reaction to his decline.

In that decline you find a paradox as grotesque as the Left’s support for reactionary movements. However critical you were of Blair’s wars in Sierra Leone, Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq, his defenders could plausibly claim that he was sending troops to fight against tyrannical and, in the former Yugoslavia and Iraq, genocidal regimes. By hiring himself out to Egypt, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan, Blair has destroyed his democratic “legacy” more thoroughly than his enemies ever could.

If you step back and look towards the horizon, a dismal prospect comes into view. One wing of the Labour Party left office and latched onto a malign force in the world: the resource-rich states with large sovereign wealth funds and a vanishingly small concern for human rights. After the Western financial crisis, they were the freest spenders on earth, and Blair, Mandelson and dozens of others sucked long and heartily at their teats. Meanwhile, a second wing of the Labour Party latched on to equally powerful and equally malign anti-Western movements which hate not just the worst of our society but its best: democracy, human rights and sexual equality.

While writing this piece I have been uncomfortable using phrases like “the Left” or the “far Left”, and tried to add a few caveats. There are multiple Lefts in Britain, not one or two. I know many honourable Labour MPs and count good people in far-left groups among my friends. But the fact remains that the dominant movements in Labour politics over the past two decades have been, at best, indifferent and, at worst, hostile to the struggles of oppressed peoples. Unless Labour changes very fast and very soon, it will cease to be a force for good in the world. I hope I am wrong but I can’t see that change happening in my lifetime.

View Full Article
 
Share/Save
 
 
 
 
fhugheveleigh
August 31st, 2015
10:08 AM
Agree with most of this article but by no means all of it as many of the readers' comments make pertinent observations which question some of the article's argument. Mr Cohen has his blind spots and one of them is the thrice mentioned UKIP. To write that they (UKIP) are 'little Englanders' who 'defend Putin' and, by implication, are 'brutish' is factually inaccurate, simplistic and plainly wrong. Bias and politically blinkered argument works both ways and Mr Cohen should step away from his Observer stronghold and allow himself time to re-think a few of his unaccountable-for prejudices.

Anonymous
August 29th, 2015
3:08 PM
The majority of people who are voting for Corbyn are not remotely interested in this historical pontification. They're interested in his low expenses, the fact that he's photographed getting the bus home, his commitment to a fairer society, the policies he is outlining. That's not to say that your points may not have validity (though your own bias is just as bad as the the one you are pointing the finger at). Ultimately, however, you, like many I see who are caught up in a middle class, London-centric bubble, are missing the whole point of Corbyn's popularity.

Paul Murdoch
August 29th, 2015
1:08 PM
I believe Nick Cohen's What's Left has just been re-released at what seems a more than opportune moment given the current convulsions within the Labour Party. It will serve as a timely reminder and warning of just what may go wrong should Corbynism defy all expectations and gain any long term traction. I am surprised therefore that the current tendency, from all sides, to settle on the "he's a nice guy, but..." assessment. Given the subject matter of the book, I'm surprised nobody is drawing parallels between Corbyn and the host of left wing 'intellectuals' of the 30s who could not bring themselves to condemn Stalinism and the Soviet Union. Those well-meaning egalitarian individuals who were so readily 'potemkined' through a sort of wilful blindness. Men and women who so craved a new fairer world order, who were so frustrated by the flaws of parliamentary democracy, who were so in thrall to radical intellectual fashion that they could tour the Soviet Union during some of the worst famines in human history and write home of full bellies and laughing proletarians. Those people like Corbyn and many of his supporters were doubtlessly 'nice' and doubtlessly operating with the best of intentions, but that's not enough in an adult human being. That sort of moral pretension is inexcusable in all but the adolescent. The preservation of one's ethical purity by selective redaction of any facts or events which might sully the 'brand', the logical twists undertaken to draw moral equivalences which condone barbarity are not the hallmarks of 'nice guys' acting in good faith. They are the actions of moral imbeciles. I still read articles which persist in painting the Cold War as a stand off between two irreconcilable ideologies as though we are meant to conclude we're disinterested observers looking upon the story of 'two houses alike in dignity'. We're not. At least not if we have read any serious history, if we possess any modicum of intellectual honesty, if we reject the meretricious appeals of radical chic (or whatever its contemporary might be called) and if we possess principles which can be brought to bear on a real and imperfect world rather than the idealised canvas which forms the ground of so many a sixth form psychodrama. The present day analogies are just too striking. Putin, Islamism... "What use is power without principle?" Answer: power; the ability to oppose injustice, to effect change, however messy and compromised the process; the agency to do more than strike poses, to be more than a posturing hypocrite. Yet the cocoon of perpetual ethical purity just seems too enveloping. Too many just won't break out. For every Sidney and Beatrice Webb, Shaw, Sartre, Wells, we have an Owen Jones, an Alistair Milne, a Monbiot, a Greewald, a Pilger or that ludicrous Penny woman. Just the other week in the Guardian, we had Oborne's whitewashing of Hizb it-Tahir which brought to mind (considerations of literary merit aside) HG Well's infamous conclusion "I have never mat a man so fair, candid and honest" following his grotesque interview with Stalin. Not that 'balance' wasn't restored. The Guardian followed up with a hatchet job of monumentally snide proportions on Majid Nawaaz based entirely on sly insinuation and anonymous quotations from-and the irony is just too sublime-a reporter whom it seems has fond memories of an uncle who turns out to have been one of Khomeni's butchers-in-chief...though one whose penchant for natty suits apparently mitigates his excesses since, I imagine, in Guardian circles a dash of hipsterism is always a progressive signifier. Now it would be a stretch to suggest the attack on Nawaaz or the regular defaming of Cohen have matched the calumnies launched against Koestler, Serge or Orwell for their crimes of clear sightedness and moral consistency but I do sincerely wish that the day will come when Cohen gets his 'told you so' moment a la Robert Conquest*. This day may be some time in arriving but when it does, I think the lesson that must prevail is that the battle is won but, if history is our guide, the useful idiots will soon regroup and a new fatuous campaign will soon be joined in the cause of ...insert example of identitarian lunacy... So, in answer to the earnest young man who demanded an explanation as to why I would sooner stick six inch nails in my ears than vote for Corbyn... 1) learn some history which predates the mid nineties 2) Corbyn, however personable, is a moral and intellectual cripple * I did try 'Conquestesque' but it looked silly

Pops
August 29th, 2015
6:08 AM
Another example of the ironies of our times. Who has the moral high ground anymore? Not the left, it seems.

Jimmy Sands
August 28th, 2015
9:08 PM
A powerful piece and hard to disagree with any of it save the lazy tone of despair. Anyone who shares this view but does not act on it needs to explain why they are ceding the field to Corbyn. Labour members who agree with this need to get stuck in. Non Labour members who feel this way need to join. It saddens me to see Nick talking about the party in the third person.

Christopher Burd
August 28th, 2015
4:08 PM
Corbyn: “The expansion of Nato into Poland and the Czech Republic has particularly increased tensions with Russia.” Assuming Corbyn said this prior to the Ukrainian crisis, this was just stating the obvious. Using it to point-and-sputter at Corbyn suggests a higher degree of cluelessness than we've come to expect from Nick Cohen.

Anonymous
August 28th, 2015
2:08 PM
"Corbyn is popular because..." That statement has yet to be proved. He appears to be popular with Labour Party members. There's no indication at this stage, however, that he is popular with normal people. Give him six months as Labour leader then come back and talk about his popularity.

michael buckler
August 28th, 2015
7:08 AM
Hi. Earlier this week on the radio 4, 'Today' program a barrister explained that the Labour Party (not the PLP) is a private organisation. The Parliamentary Labour Party is part of a constitutional body. It is open to the PLP to re-adopt the leadership election and restrict the election to MPs. Labour MPs presumably want to win, and want a Labour government at some point. Approx 9 million people voted Labour in the last two elections. Until a few weeks ago the private Labour party was couple of hundred thousand.There is one action that the current Labour front-bench can perform, which can restore some credibility, some self-esteem, and a competent leader. After all the Queen sends for someone who can command a parliamentary majority.

S Clarke
August 27th, 2015
8:08 PM
It is laughable to describe Corbyn's popularity as a coup, Labour are currently holding their most democratic leadership election to date. If members of the Labour party choose Corbyn, it will be neither illegal, nor a seizure of power. You may also want to rethink some of your points, this one in particular: "If you do not take on your opponents’ ideas today, your opponents will take you over tomorrow."

Anonymous
August 27th, 2015
10:08 AM
To summarize this article: Don't trust Corbyn because he thinks the US causes problems in the world and don't trust the Labour right as they are a bunch of opportunists.

Post your comment

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.