not a member? click here to sign up

Tony The Tory

New Labour s Project is an empty and cynical enterprise, says EAMONN McCANN

Eamonn McCann, 03 Feb 1999

Politicians returning to Westminster have found the carpets in the corridors of power squelchy from fresh blood. The knives have been out and, although the bodies of the politically slain have been unquietly removed from the scene of their crimes, the air still throbs thickly with intrigue.

It s only 20 months since that glad confident morning when we awoke to New Labour s arc of triumph inscribed across the sky. The phenomenon was, at the time, the awe of all Europe. Readers will recall fierce disputation among Irish politicians and media pundits as to which party here had the most plausible claim on the franchise for Blairism in Ireland.

Now, perhaps, the jig s up, the bubble s burst, the end is nigh. Or at least nigher than anybody had imagined.

New Labour ministers chew the dust as tales of financial jiggery-pokery by fellows with spin-doctorates in deviousness are recounted in 72-point front-page print. Thrill-a-minute yarns about the sexual shenanigans of unlikely Lotharios are propped up against the cornflake packets of Middle England s Sunday morning. Scorned women with unfinished brilliant careers give New Labour love rats furious hell, and move on.

It begs the question: how does this differ from the drear, dead days of the ancien regime? John Major, thou shouldst be living at this hour, as indeed you may well be. How could we tell?

And what is, or was, Blairism, anyway? And whatever happened to the Stakeholder Society? And what s this Third Way which the man with the super-glued grin didn t demur to urge on Nelson Mandela as a prescription for the ills of South Africa, too?

Wading through the ocean of pol-corr. omniscience which followed the downfall of messers Mandelson, Robinson and Whelan and the subsequent tumult of ruckus and bile, we stumbled on only one solid, generally accepted fact: that at the heart of the matter lay an irresolvable contradiction between Blair on the one hand and Gordon Brown on the other.

But what is it that Britain s Premier and Chancellor of the Exchequer differ so deeply about? What are the political correlates of the vicious , poisonous , razor-edged , hate-fuelled and irreconcilable disagreement which has come close to derailing the New Labour Project?

What difference would it make to which areas of life if Brownite priorities replaced Blair s as the template for British government activity? What, in turn, would the implications be for those Irish politicians and commentators who have been so entranced by New Labour as to promote the Third Way as the ideological wonder-drug of the epoch?

In fact, there s no point in puzzlement. Not here. Since Tony Blair s accession to the British Labour leadership four and a half years ago, it has regularly been proclaimed in this modest space that the man is a question mark in search of a query, a lacuna in need of a context, an

empty vessel into which might be poured any ideological concoction whatever.

The reason the current New Labour factionalism is conducted in the personalised terms which we have seen and shuddered at, the reason it s characterised not by explanations of policy difference but by expressions of resentment and spite, is that The Project, as Blair preposterously puts it, isn t a political undertaking at all, but a means of securing advancement for one band rather than another of power-drunk vainglorious louts.

Robin Cook s feisty ex-wife Margaret put it right: They ve sold their souls for jelly rolls and sides of hairy bacon.

Those who d hoped that Blair and New Labour had found a way of resolving the problems of the free market without having to confront capitalism itself might now think again. They might start by thinking on the fact that we still live in a class-riven world and that the key question on which the unlocking of all others turn is, still, the one raised in the rhythms of Woody Guthrie: Which side are you on, man, which side are you on?

People who eschew to take sides in class conflict can sometimes find wide, deep support a mile wide, an inch deep.

To be all things to all people is to be for nothing very much.

New Labour? Two lies. Nothing but the same old Tory. n

Related Content

Latest Articles by Eamonn McCann

Seeing Sense In The War On Drugs

A small developing nation is the latest to point out the futility of trying to ban substances that are readily available to millions...


2013-03-11

Pride Is Great, But Where's The Anger?

Gay Pride is a celebration of sexual diversity – but it is important not to forget the need for a clenched fist


2012-08-27

True Bro-mance

She’s a busy actor with a Hollywood career of long-standing. So how did Bronagh Gallagher find the time to record a cracking new solo record?


2012-06-13

Murder In An Irish Town

In September 1988, John Gallagher drove to Lifford, collected a rifle from behind the wardrobe in his father’s bedroom and headed for Sligo, where he murdered his ex-girlfriend Anne Gillespie, and her mother Annie. When the case came to court John Gallagher pleaded – and was found – guilty but insane and he was remanded to the Central Mental Hospital in Dundrum. In July 2000, Gallagher successfully escaped from Dundrum and absconded to England, before returning to Northern Ireland, where he was able to live freely, because of the unique absence of an extradition treaty for people in his position. Earlier this month, in a bizarre twist, apparently in the hope of taking advantage of a bequest from his father, Gallagher turned up at the Central Mental Hospital and handed himself in. It’s open to him to apply to the Health Review Board for release on the grounds that he does not now suffer from a mental illness. The Minister for Justice, Alan Shatter, has already acknowledged the possibility that he might be released within a matter of weeks. But as far back as 1991, in a special investigation carried out for Hot Press, Eamonn McCann questioned the original verdict of the court – and whether Gallagher was ever ‘insane’ within the meaning intended by the act. In the light of the growing controversy about the case, we reprint here in full the extraordinary story as it was originally published in Hot Press.


2012-06-12

What's The Problem With Gay Marriage

Plus: the Champions League is decadent and depraved...


2012-03-28

Contact Us

Hot Press,
13 Trinity Street,
Dublin 2.
Rep. Of Ireland
Tel: +353 (1) 241 1500

Email:info@hotpress.ie

Click here for more contact information.

Click here to find out more about Hot Press

Hot Press always welcomes feed back so if you've got something to tell us click here.

Advertise With Us

For more detail on how to advertise with Hot Press click here or call us on +353 (1) 241 1540