Policy-based Groundhog Day
What’s that ‘internet law’ about the longer a comment thread goes on the more likely it is Hitler will get a mention? Can’t remember the name.
No matter. Here’s the new TCF law of liberal think-tanks and campaign organisations:
The more wishy-washy liberal think-tanks and their websites there are being funded by wishy-washy funders with more dosh than sense, the more likely it is there’ll be a policy competition deadline next week or some time quite soon.
Not a great law, I admit. Needs a bit of work.
But anyway, I love a good internet competition, me.
So, hot on the heels of submitting my policy ideas via some Fabian society shindig of some kind to a Labour party ‘policy forum’ I can’t remember the details of , and having it ignored, and then hot on the heels of my entering the Labour Party’s strangely similar manifesto policy competition thingy somewhere at Labour membersnet and being ignored, and then hot on the heels of entering a strangely similar policy competition at Compass and being ignored, and hot on the heels of entering my strangely similar manifesto idea to the new liberal blogsite LeftFootForward and having it soundly ignored, I think it’s time to enter Power 2010′s new competition for policy ideas and such like.
Power 2010 is funded by the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust, who had a competition for, erm, great ideas a year or two back.
I got ignored.
So I don’t think I’m being too overly cynical if I think I may just be ignored this time round too.
And I’m not, I think, being too cynical thinking that, even if I don’t get ignored, the idea won’t get anywhere with the powers-that-be that are supposed to be persuaded to change their ways by such competitions, because the idea seeks a change in their ways which would actually change power balances.
But, heh, as opportunity costs go, entering this next competition is pretty minimal, as it’s just a quick cut and paste across from the last one, and anyway I get to put it up here at TCF as well with some kind of justification other than that I want to give it another airing.
And in reality what I’m proposing is better taken through proper ‘mass engagement’ mechanisms I’ll be setting out this weekend.
But a bit of additional exposure won’t hurt, so here’s my competition entry aimed at a total reversal of fiancial flows of current state funding to political parties and thereby a massive boot up the jacksy to the parliamentary establishment.
1. What’s proposed
The whole financial flow of state funding for all political parties that have representatives in the House of Commons (as a proxy for overall current national legitimacy, and to exclude the BNP and other nasties) should be reversed, in order to promote local political activity and devolve power within parties to the ’grassroots’.
The total amount of state funding should be equivalent ONLY to the amount of funding provided indirectly to political parties in the forms of MP allowances, ministerial allowances etc. and, for example, funds spent by the BBC on allowing free party political broadcasts. There would therefore be no overall additional cost to the taxpayer. Indeed, a saving might be made.
The overall ‘pot’ of money should then be divided up at a local level e.g. CLP level/Tory association level on a pro-rata basis according to membership at the start of the financial year. It would be up to the parties themselves to debate and decide on what amount of this locally allocated resource should be allocated to national party levels.
If the Labour party want to involve trade unions in those discussions, that’s up to the Labour party etc. The important change would be that, as with the money – if formally lodged with local parties in the first instance – the power balance between centre and local is changed, in my view for the better.
All other types of donations would be permissable, but could only be made to local parties, and would not exceed a certain ratio of private donation to state funding (level to be agreed). Individual donors would only be able to donate to a limited number (let us say 3 for arguments sake) of local parties in this way, of which one would need to be the donor’s area of residence.
Unions would abide by the same rules, with each union branch counting as an individual donor. There would be an expectation that the ratios of state to donor funding permissable would fall over the first few years, as the money is replaced my membership fees in rejuvenated local parties (see below).
2. Rationale and consequences
The reversal of financial flows, as set out briefly would do two main things.
First, and important enough in the current context of poor public opinion of both MPs and national level political parties, it would make them much more accountable to the local parties that selected them to stand for office (whether parliamentary or intra-party) in the first place.
For example, the money that used to go straight to their MP expenses bank accounts to fund e.g. local offices, local staff as well as their day-to-day personal expenses will be lodged, alongside any other matching funds, with the local party. The MP will need to justify her/his claim to a section of the overall local party ‘pot’, perhaps by setting out a ‘business plan’ for an appropriate period and justifying costs.
In most cases, local parties are going to want an MP who does plenty of casework and local representation, as well as ‘performing’ for them in parliament as they want them to, and will provide a reasonable budget for this, including an OK place to live in London during the week and that kind of thing.
If the MP can justify 1st class travel on the train, for example, because it allows them to get more work done, then that’s fine. If not, that’s fine too. If the local party thinks it might be a better idea if the MP’s office and the local party office functions should be merged to rationalise stuff, then they’ll have the final say.
Equally, national level parties will have to seek money from local parties to carry out their functions. Thus, for example, if the national party wanted to spend money on TV adverts, they’d have to seek the money for it from local parties, probably via (revitalised) party conferences. Local parties might decide instead to approve alternative plans to set up Obama-style IT-based networks, and that would be up to them.
That’s all very well, and all done with the same money as was spent before, just with the decision-making power totally reversed by ‘statute’.
Cynical readers will already however have spotted that, while it’s all very well to devolve power to local parties, this is hardly the same as devolving to local people; local parties are, after all, weak structures, peopled if they are peopled at all by self-selecting, self-referential nobodies with few brain cells to rub together, will run the argument. This argument will come, not least, from party HQs themselves desperate to retain the status quo of the power and money structure, and who are distrustful of the capacity of the ‘foot soldier’ activists.
That, after all, is what is writ large in both main parties’ ’motivational’ literature, and in the many central government documents, influenced by the policy wonks at HQ or at Downing Street – the view that local parties are a thing of the past, that local politics can safely be done away with in favour of technocratic management of CLPs/Tory associations, where the only expectations are lip service to policy reviews and, more important, to campaigning with HQ-sanctioned leaflets, HQ-sanctioned IT set-ups which alienate people ‘on the doorstep’ because they’ve been created by people who’ve never been ‘on the doorstep and don’t realise asking questions of people while ticking off their answers on a pre-arranged coded list is not the same as talking to people like they are people.
The point is that, with a reversal of the financial flow, with what a local party gets dependent on their membership, local parties will suddenly become different beasts.
With money comes the capacity to ‘do stuff’, and combined with a new motivation within existing membership to draw in members, there would almost certainly be a rapid rise in membership, as people actually start to see a point – a decision making point – to being in their party of choice.
They suddenly get not just the opportunity to decide, as a member, on how the MP should use their money (or whether to give them any at all), but also to decide, for example, on whether the party, and by newly re-established link, the area as a whole, will be best served by the state funding going into a dozen leaflets, or into a playscheme the Council won’t pay for.
And suddenly, the way opens up for parties to become mass parties again. At local level, people will engage because engagement matters, and it won’t be long before there is a much smaller distinction between ‘the party’ and the people those parties have, rhetorically, at least, been set up to serve.
As set out above, as membership increases in this way, so will the opportunity to legislate on the permitted ratio of private donations to local funding, as the membership fee total will be counted into this whole. As membership grows therefore, so does democratic entitlement, whereby you don’t have to be called Ashcroft to have your say on what your party does with the cash.
In terms of the Labour party, the obvious additional opportunities will lie in the possibility of renewing the link with trade unions, via membership fees, and in some cases starting even to develop the local party organically as the ‘workers’ council’ in the way aspired to years ago but never really attained because of the very constraints on power, from above, that I have set out above.
Of course, I don’t see the ‘powers-that-be’ leaping up and down with joy at the thought of having their money removed and given to someone else to decide how they might spend it if they behave themselves, but I’d like to see a challenge laid down to them.
The challenge is best in question form, and reflects in part this useful critique of ‘freedom’ (and allied concepts) set out by Dave at Though Cowards Flinch.
It goes:
‘So what do you have against a proposal to actually do what, in paper after paper after speech after speech after speech you have said you want to do – to empower people?
‘What do you have against a proposal to hand over power in a way which does not cost more money, and which comes without any of the financial and legal hang-ups that come when you try to ‘empower communities’ through supposedly allowing them influence on local public policy and local public spending, but in tautologous reality only allows them to do this if they tick YOUR boxes about what communities are, how they should behave, and how they should spend the money (another post to follow from me on the discursive complexities of how ‘empowerment’ is ‘disempowering’)?
‘What do you have against a real ‘freedom’ – freedom to build parties anew, to build democracy? Are you scared of the power you’ll lose, or are you with us?’
Some interesting ideas. Can you link to your previous idea submitted to the Compass website (the full version rather than the Compass Application Form verson)? I can’t find it online – there is a link to a pdf which is broken. From memory I was critical of that, but I like this one better.
There are still some issues though – not least of which is the lack of attention given to personality factions within local parties and the effect they could have on this process. I can well imagine struggles over funding where MPs didn’t have the money they needed to run a constituency office, because some people in the local party didn’t like them and had organised to use the money in some other way instead.
I also disagree with your views on the Labour Party’s national IT set-up for canvassing. More than any previous system it’s been set up by people who’ve done plenty of canvassing and understand what’s needed. I find – and so do all my local party’s canvassers – that it’s possible to work the three questions into a conversation where you get a message across about a key policy, ask what’s concerning the voter and get voter id too. The way the questions are phrased allows the most accurate voter id we’ve ever had, and for better decisions in who to target and how.
There is a need for resources at a national level, for systems like our online canvassing database, but also because resources need to be redistributed between CLPs towards marginals. There’s no point in Tory CLPs with wealthy members having all the money while marginal working-class CLPs struggle. (I’m also worried about what happens with CLPs where their local union branches are dominated by other parties who refuse to give money to the Labour Party however union-friendly the local CLP & MP are – it seems unfair to exclude them from getting donations from national unions.)
But the general spirit of your idea is worth pursuing; just the details that need ironing out, I think.
Tim
Thanks for this. You, and I seem to remember Matthew Cain, are the only ones who’ve shown any interest in the kind of stuff proposed here, and I’m encouraged that you think it’s not completely barking, at least. (Mind you, it is very bad news for the min thesis of this post that it will be totally ignored).
I’ve have a look for the earlier version as I can’t now remember how they differed, and I didn’t bother to re-read what this said before I posted it, either.
That’s largely because what is here is being subsumed into what I think are more deliverable ideas linked to the unio national disaffiliation/local reaffiliation idea we’ve touched on previously, and which I’ll be working up more fully this weekend. So, yes, the current piece is very much first draft and there’s plenty to be ironed out, though in this ‘legislative’ form I think it’s not worth the trouble as it won’t happen; energies should be put into forcing through the Labour party by tapping into the unions’ (potential) financial control over Labour party. I don’t give a monkey’s what the Tories do.
On the matter of unions not being to LP and branches therefore being disadvantaged by il-luck, this is part of the same issue, and part of the benefit of what I propose is the drawing back in of non-affiliates on the basis of a fundamentally changed power structure in the party (i’m not underestinmating the scale of the challenge).
On the canvassing stuff, yes, I take your point fully and I do take my hat of the people who’ve done that re-engineering. I’ve not really thought through the extent to which that can be localised though, because i’m warming up also for some fairly controversial statementology, which I think you may disagree with a good deal at first reading, about the value (and opportunity cost) of the whole canvassing operation, in relation to the overall campaigning/politicking distinction that has hold in the current LP notwithstanding noticeable but still relatively marginal improvements around canvassing techniques-cum-policy messaging
hmmm, I’ll look forward to that but expect to disagree. To me, canvassing is the most effective tool we have available to win elections. It’s face-to-face, so we know our message is being listened to with no filters inbetween the source and its target; it’s interactive, so we have the chance to listen to concerns directly again without filters, and it’s high-quality – personalised, flexible and intensive. There are higher-engagement tools – for example working on campaigns with other folks, but they will inevitably reach fewer people. There’s no doubt that canvassing is a drain on human resources, but it’s worth it.