Golden opportunity for Labour | Michael Stephenson Value for money - for who? | Steve Cockburn Movement politics | Anthony Painter The egos have landed | Lance Price 'It's the buses' | Ed Thornton and Adam Harrison
Latest magazine

May 2010

July 2010



Columns
Paul's week in politics Paul's week in politics
Paul Richards
Red Wedge Red Wedge
Dividing the Lib-Con coalition
Kate comments Kate comments
Kate Green MP
Commons people Commons people
Jonathan Reynolds MP
Stateside story Stateside story
James Plunkett
The Politics of Poverty The Politics of Poverty
Steve Cockburn
From the grassroots From the grassroots
Louisa Thomson
Union matters Union matters
Hannah Blythyn
The economy The economy
Rachel Reeves MP
Young progressives Young progressives
David Chaplin & Jamie McMahon
Colombia Colombia
Maria Carolina Latorre
Scotland Scotland
Judith Fisher
Theo's Thursday Theo's Thursday
Theo Blackwell
Tory Tracker Tory Tracker
David Hencke
School governors' network School governors' network
News and views from the education frontline
Latest comments

I'm all in favour of this website being a pro-coalition mouthpiece,...
Dan McCurry (London)
29/07/2010 | 10:50

I think it is true that local issues are a way that ordinary...
Paula Sharratt (Nottingham)
29/07/2010 | 05:45

Cameron wants Turkey in to weaken the EU politically. Those...
G Simpson (Northumberland)
28/07/2010 | 17:13

Wonder if Rachel didn't mean David rather than Ed...?!

...
()
28/07/2010 | 14:37

Links

Articles

The primary issue

Primaries could be the most direct route to engaging tens of thousands of people with the Labour party

The Progress campaign for primaries is a timely one, and I am happy to support it. There has been a lively debate about how we could change and revitalise the Labour party - and whether primaries could be part of that - over the last few years. It is important that we now move to thinking about how change might happen in practice.

The idea that political parties are dead, dying or a fundamental block to a new politics is a lazy cliche. But we should be worried by its increasing popularity. So we will need to think about how to change the culture and organisation of political parties if they are to reverse democratic disengagement. There is good evidence, set out in the Fabian pamphlet 'Facing Out', that many Labour-supporting people share our values and are active outside party politics but do not find party membership an attractive model. If we are interested in bringing about social change, we have to look at how we can harness that energy. The interests of members and Labour-minded people outside the party are not zero-sum, if the question is about how we make change happen in our society. A more open party culture needs to give current members a stronger voice too.

I doubt that primaries are a 'magic bullet' - but they could well be the most direct route to engaging tens of thousands of people with the Labour party and to engage them in the causes we believe in too. There are lots of hopes - and some fears - about what primaries can achieve. Nobody can be certain of what the impact will be. There are different ways to hold a primary election. So I think this is the right moment to experiment and pilot so that we can have a more informed debate in the next few years.

It would make sense to use the opportunity of an unusual number of retirements to pilot and experiment with primaries in parliamentary candidate selections this year - and for the NEC to look for local parties interested in volunteering. Ideally, we should do this in a range of constituencies - safe seats, marginals and places the party is weak - and perhaps use slightly different approaches

There is an especially strong case for having the most open approach possible for the London Mayoral election in 2012 - and we should advocate and work out how to do that before this becomes a debate nearer the time about which system might favour particular individual candidates. Some form of 'primary' for the next Mayoral candidate seems to me a no-brainer given that this is a directly elected post with preferential voting where the Labour candidate must appeal for progressive support across party boundaries to win. The London Mayoral cycle should prove a really important opportunity to catalyse the 'movement politics' we are beginning to see with London Citizens, 38 Degrees and other groups, and to challenge ourselves to connect to that.

Sunder Katwala is general secretary of the Fabian Society. This is his personal view, rather than that of the Society as a whole

11 Aug 2009 15:23

 

Comments

Be the first to comment on this item.

Leave a comment

Name


City


e-mail address (optional)


e-mail address privacy

Comment

Progress takes no responsibility for the content of comments posted on this website which represent the views of their authors alone.