Morning Star.png

 

 

A Refreshing Appearance

 

 

Editorial, The Morning Star, London, 16 September 2015

 

How refreshing to hear a Labour Party leader say to the Trade Union
Congress: "I am, and always will be, an active trade unionist."

 

To hear from a Labour leader who prizes the "organic link" between the
labour movement and its party.

 

And who does not talk to the trade union movement as an external lobby to be
alternately appeased and rebuffed as political calculations dictate but as
one of us - "there are six million of us in this country," "we are the
largest voluntary organisation in Britain."

 

The monopoly media had begun the sneers and scaremongering even before
Jeremy Corbyn finished speaking, but his reference to his labour movement
background is not merely an interesting personal anecdote.

 

A grounding in grassroots representation of cleaners, caretakers and school
caterers "taught [him] a great deal about people."

 

So has 32 years representing the people of Islington North, being returned
with larger and larger majorities as the years pass by.

 

This is the point the pundits miss when they dismiss Corbyn - and, more
recently, shadow chancellor John McDonnell - as lacking experience, though
fresh-faced Blairites who've been in the Commons for five minutes rarely
face the same accusation when they trot out their tired old platitudes about
"tough choices" (attacks on the vulnerable), public-sector "reform"
(privatisation) or "modernisation" (copying the Conservative Party).

 

Of course Corbyn is not a typical leader of the opposition. The Labour Party
didn't vote for one.

 

Thatcherite economics have been discredited by the bankers' crash and
politicians increasingly sound as if they are on another planet from the
rest of us.

 

So decades of experience as an outstanding constituency MP - helping
ordinary people resolve the problems they face - are a far better
qualification for Corbyn and McDonnell to reconnect Labour to voters up and
down the country than any amount of yah-boo front-bench posturing.

 

It was this innate emotional link to most Britons that led Corbyn to offer
the TUC a more consistent, principled and popular policy list than his
predecessors felt able to - a wholehearted struggle against the Trade Union
Bill and for a Workers' Rights Bill, against the Welfare Bill and for
raising wages and controlling rents, against the whole shower of pampered
poverty-deniers whose wealth and privilege choke off the chance of a decent
life for the rest of us.

 

It was this link too that meant his first action on winning the Labour
leadership was not to hold a press conference, but to head straight to a
march offering our solidarity to refugees fleeing terror and civil war.

 

And to prioritise an event highlighting mental health issues over an
appearance on a BBC breakfast show, attracting the predictable opprobrium of
the press for not slavishly following their agenda.

 

Since Jeremy's election the Establishment has bent over backwards to portray
him as isolated and out of touch, but yesterday told a different story.

 

How many party leaders are mobbed by crowds of young fans as they arrive to
address a conference?

 

How many can get two standing ovations before they've even said a word?

 

As Jeremy pointed out, the number of votes cast for him were more than twice
the entire membership of the Conservative Party.

 

Thirty thousand people have joined Labour in the three days since he was
elected.

His leadership is already beginning to build the mass movement we need if we
are to overcome the mockery, distortions and lies and march to victory and a
better, fairer country.

 

 

From:
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-a146-A-refreshing-appearance#.VfkrmhGqq
kp

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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