THE GLOBE AND MAIL - Canada's National Newspaper

How to spot a new-centre socialist
Monday, October 26, 1998

By Peter Cook
Brussels


Brussels -- Europe has travelled many roads since Karl Marx warned of
"the bourgeois who is a bourgeois for the benefit of the working class."
But wolves in sheep's clothing are still with us. And, for good or ill,
some may be found in the preponderance of "new-centre" socialist
leaders, flanked by Green, Communist, even Conservative allies, who now
rule the continent.

 When Tony Blair of Britain's New Labour defeated a 17-year-old Tory
Government in 1996, he did it with the support of Tory tabloid
newspapers and the reassurance that he would not change the basic tenets
of Thatcherism or its holy grail of low taxes. Massively supported,
hugely popular, he then went further than any Thatcherite had dared,
creating an independent Bank of England. And he stuck resolutely to the
rest of his "new" manifesto, repeating as recently as at last month's
party conference in Blackpool that New Labour policies were based on
prudent economics, free-market solutions and low marginal rates of
taxation.

Mr. Blair has stated that socialists lost the battle of ideas in the
Reagan-Thatcherite 1980s. But now, through a concern for social justice,
he claims they are winning the battle of values.

Mr. Blair's victory of the left was followed a few months later by the
surprising triumph of Lionel Jospin's Socialist Party, and their
Communist and Green allies, in France.

How would their ideas and values be influenced by Blairite pragmatism?
In terms of rhetoric, not much. Mr. Jospin plowed ahead with his
ideological commitment to job creation via a state-imposed shorter work
week and tried to pursue a softer line on monetary and fiscal policy.
Pointedly, he made no claim to be a "new, centre" socialist. Still, he
has brought change. He has gone further than his right-wing predecessors
in privatizing state companies and reorganizing a mostly publicly owned
defence sector. He also has eschewed what is normal in French politics
by visiting the United States and praising it.

To Mr. Blair and Mr. Jospin have now been added Gerhard Schroeder in
Germany and the ex-Communist Massimo D'Alema in Italy.

Mr. D'Alema arrives in power by appointment, having previously been the
power behind Romano Prodi's Olive Tree coalition. The surprise, if any,
is that he has made his formerly communist Democratic Party of the Left
respectable enough to go into coalition with Christian Democrats. But of
course, in Italy, land of permanent coalitions, that is not so
remarkable. Nor, for all his intellectual lineage, is Mr. D'Alema likely
to be radical. His task is to show that a bourgeois can be a bourgeois
for the benefit of the working class and he has enough technocrats in
his cabinet to ensure that pragmatism prevails and he stays respectable.

Mr. Schroeder's ascent is more interesting. First, he arrives in power
after an election. Second, he won that election by pretending to be of
the neue mitte  (the new centre) while saying and doing nothing
particularly new or centrist. Since the election, Mr. Schroeder has been
so much the captive of his finance chief Oskar Lafontaine that he lost
his only visibly "new-centre" recruit, computer millionaire Jost
Stollmann, as economics minister. Mr. Stollmann rightly decided that the
new Social Democrats looked, in the persona of Mr. Lafontaine, just the
same as the old.

In some respects, the Schroeder-Lafontaine government, allied with the
Greens, is new and different. For example, they have been praised by
both the right-wing Financial Times of London and left-wing Le Monde of
Paris; in one case, for the moderation of their proposal to cut taxes,
in the other, for their awareness of the consumer interest as opposed to
the business interest.

Where will such virtues lead? Possibly to a different set of policies in
Europe. And if that turns out to be true, then the unchanging Mr.
Schroeder and the backward-looking Mr. Lafontaine could presage more of
a revolution than the trendy, new socialism of Mr. Blair.

The course that Europe is now on has been dictated by the Maastricht
Treaty and the arrival of the euro. It prescribes tight fiscal targets,
a monetary policy modelled on the Bundesbank and, after the euro comes,
a Growth and Stability Pact, which allows no relaxation of deficits
except in extraordinary circumstances. These rules were put there at the
insistence of the Bundesbank and former German finance minister Theo
Waigel, over the objections of the French, who wanted more flexibility.

Mr. Waigel, however, has given way to Mr. Lafontaine who is, he says, an
admirer of U.S. monetary policy under Alan Greenspan. As he sees it, Mr.
Greenspan's success has been to maintain consistently low interest rates
and achieve low unemployment. The other side of the Greenspan reputation
-- that of being a hard-nosed central banker who has not hesitated to
raise rates to pre-empt inflation and so has great credibility in
financial markets -- he ignores.

The combination, then, of a lax Mr. Lafontaine and a French Government
that is already calling for lower interest rates to combat global
recession represents an attitudinal change that could be decisive.
Socialism's gift to the bourgeois and working class may, as a result, be
a fiscal and monetary policy that is looser than at any time in the past
25 years (a period during which power in Bonn and Frankfurt has been
held by anti-inflation hawks). What is a new-centre socialist who is not
Blairite? One who is likely to take many more risks with inflation and
recession.

Peter Cook can be reached by E-mail at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
� THE GLOBE AND MAIL - 1998

--
Gregory Schwartz
Department of Political Science
York University
4700 Keele St.
Toronto, Ontario
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Canada

tel:  (416) 736-5265
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