Comment: Neither Corbyn nor Blair, but global social democracy and Left internationalism

Alan Johnson argues the democratic Left should be for a radical re-balancing of power and resources.

This is the first in a series of articles on the future of the British Left. To read a different view, click here.  

What if they are both wrong? What if both the social neo-liberalism of Tony Blair and the ‘Stop the War’ anti-Westernism of Jeremy Corbyn are both inadequate responses to the exhaustion of social democracy in the West from the late 1970s, and the collapse of ‘actually existing socialism’ in the East a decade later? Such, at least, is the intuition of some of us who will launch a new journal of the democratic Left later this year.

Beyond Corbyn

A ‘Stop the War’-shaped foreign policy is at best a useless pose and at worst a sell-out of our natural allies – democrats, liberals, feminists, free trade unionists, two-staters. Yes, ‘don’t do stupid stuff’ is a good foreign policy maxim; yes, we should reject ill-conceived neoconservative interventionism of the Iraq kind.

But we remain internationalists and we do not walk by on the other side. Cheering on proxy Islamist forces as Corbyn and Livingstone do is a betrayal of our deepest values – democracy, liberty, anti-totalitarianism, gender, sexual and racial equality, national self-determination, internationalism and human flourishing.

Corbyn says the Islamist terror gang Hezbollah is ‘an organisation that is bringing about long term peace and social justice and political justice in the whole region.’ That is shameful of him. Actually, Hezbollah is currently propping up Assad and starving Syrians to death in the town of Madaya. The warmed-over Stalinism of the pro-Putin Seumas Milne, or Diane Abbott’s rose-tinted apologias for the mass-murdering Chairman Mao, are no better.

Instead, we need a democratic, anti-totalitarian and internationalist Left that fights with the democrats against the Islamists, not, like Ken Livingstone and Jeremy Corbyn, with the Islamists against the democrats. One that enables the human rights campaigners fighting for their lives against authoritarians, not, like Corbyn’s Stop the War, denying them a platform.

We Left-wingers need to accept there if a ‘responsibility to protect’ and we need to forge international alliances with governments and civil society actors so that we can make good on that commitment without ‘doing stupid stuff’.

We need a Left that will revere the French anti-Nazi and pro-European socialist Leon Blum, not the vicious antisemitic thugs of Hamas. We need a Left that reads Michael Walzer’s essay ‘What is Left Internationalism?’, not Socialist Worker and Mao’s Little Red Book.

Beyond Blair

But the Corbynistas get something right. And it’s something existential, for any democratic Left. Simply put, the results are now in: ‘social neo-liberal’ or ‘third way’ economic and social policies have failed to offer a genuinely progressive response to the ills of neo-liberal global capitalism.

Namely: deregulation, the unshackling of anti-social corporate power and spread of environmental degradation; financialisation, a new age of greed, the banking crisis and austerity; privatisation, the decay of the public realm, the collapse of social housing, the spread of social cruelty, the spectacular rise in inequality and the fraying of the commons; the assault on trade union and workplace rights; and the rise and rise of a crass bottom-lineism, a possessive individualism that is slowly coarsening the culture, creating a one-dimensional world in which our potential for rich individuality and co-operative sociality is strangled.

Faced with those ills, Corbyn’s supporters are crying out: ‘Let us be Social Democrats!’ But are the rest of us really listening? If the democratic Left is not for a radical re-balancing of power and resources – global social democracy – then it will die and it will deserve to die.

There is simply no meaning to a Left today that does not – as the inheritor of the promise of the enlightenment and the democratic revolutions, and as universalists standing for the ‘planetary humanism’ of Primo Levi and Paul Gilroy – believe in a radical economic policy that challenges the untrammelled and destructive power of global capitalism.

Global social democracy

An open online journal of ideas for people who want to explore a terrain beyond Blair and Corbyn will open its pages to serious thinking about two big ideas: Left internationalism and global social democracy.

We believe these two ideas should form the political horizon of a renewed social democracy in the 21st century. It’s a long term intellectual project, (the journal won’t be commenting on the latest sacking from the shadow cabinet).

Yes, these two big ideas are no more than signposts on the way toward a serious social democratic alternative to neo-liberalism and ‘Stop the War’-ism. Granted. And building an electoral coalition able to deliver them will be hugely difficult. Of course. But as I wrote in World Affairs last year:

“we democratic Leftists now know more than enough about the two roads travelled by the Left in recent decades – one marked ‘social neo-liberalism’ terminated in us being ‘intensely relaxed’ about people getting filthy rich, the loss of millions of working-class votes [and the victory of Jeremy Corbyn, we can now add]; and the other, marked ‘anti-imperialism’, ended in a reactionary cult proclaiming ‘We are all Hezbollah now!’.”

The road we have not taken is global social democracy: democratic, egalitarian, internationalist, and liberal. We should take that road, even if, like the poet, we cannot yet look down it far.

Alan Johnson is the editor of Fathom and works for the Britain Israel Communications and Research Centre (BICOM)

31 Responses to “Comment: Neither Corbyn nor Blair, but global social democracy and Left internationalism”

  1. Faerieson

    God help us all! So we have to cater for people who ‘think’ like you do, do we? Abandon any pretensions of progress then. That is unless you think that these respective parties offered the best alternatives in 97, 01, 05, 10 and 15.

    Why would we bother at all?

  2. David Coats

    I think you have confused your Alan Johnsons. The author of this article is not Rt Hon Alan Johnson MP.

    BTW in the 1980s and early 90s I spent far too many hours preventing the lunacies of London Labour Briefing – of which Jeremy Corbyn was a prominent member. I think you will find that the Labour tradition is too complex to be reduced to “Blairites” and “Corbynistas” – there are lots of other currents of opinion out there, which is the point this article is making. I, for one, have never been a “Blairite”, but I have always been on the centre-right of the party, I am no supporter of Jeremy Corbyn, desperately want to see a reforming Labour government and plan to stay exactly where I am.

  3. Mike Stallard

    It is all very well having great ideals.
    But how are you going to pay for them when there is the huge welfare bill, the NHS, the education system and all the other things that the left likes to gift to their vulnerable people?
    And remember we spend £84,000,000,000 on servicing the debt

  4. Jonathan

    “…deregulation, the unshackling of anti-social corporate power and spread
    of environmental degradation; financialisation, a new age of greed, the
    banking crisis and austerity; privatisation, the decay of the public
    realm”

    Nothing wrong with deregulation, where regulation is stifling growth. “Anti-social corporate power” — free markets help to ensure that companies cannot act in an antisocial way. “Privatisation” – nothing wrong with that, where private enterprise delivers more efficiently. “Austerity” – where deficits are excessive, they need to be cut.

    Labour is stuck with Corbyn until they are annihilated in 2020. His replacement may be no better. That’s the way it is.

  5. ElstonGunnn

    Maybe you can explain what it means to be on “the centre right of party” David. What policies, for example, do you favour that Corbyn, and others on the left of the party, do not?

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