Blue Labour

Blue Labour
FounderMaurice Glasman
FoundedApril 2009 (2009-04)
Ideology
Political positionSyncretic
PartyLabour Party
Colours  Blue
Website
bluelabour.org

Blue Labour is a British campaign group and political faction that seeks to promote blue-collar and culturally conservative values within the British Labour Party — particularly on immigration, crime, and community spirit — while remaining committed to labour rights and left-wing economic policies.[1][2][3][4] It seeks to represent a traditional working-class approach to Labour politics. Launched in 2009 as a counter to New Labour,[5] the Blue Labour movement first rose to prominence after Labour's defeat in the 2010 general election,[6] in which for the first time the party received fewer working-class votes than it did middle-class votes.[7] The movement has influenced a handful of Labour MPs and frontbenchers; founder Maurice Glasman served as a close ally to Ed Miliband during his early years as Leader of the Opposition, before himself becoming a life peer in the House of Lords.[8] The movement has also seen a resurgence of interest[9] after the loss of red wall seats in the 2019 general election.

Blue Labour argues that the party lost touch with its base by embracing anti-patriotism in the face of Brexit[10] and by undermining solidarity in local communities through bureaucratic collectivism, social agendas, and neoliberal economics. It argues that whilst postwar Old Labour had become too uncritical of state power, New Labour far worsened this with an uncritical view of global markets as well. The group further advocates a switch to local and democratic community management and provision of services, rather than relying on a top-down welfare state which it sees as excessively bureaucratic.[4][11][12] Economically it is described as a "movement keen on guild socialism and continental corporatism".[13]

The Blue Labour position has been articulated in books such as Tangled Up in Blue (2011) of Rowenna Davis, Blue Labour: Forging a New Politics (2015) of Ian Geary and Adrian Pabst and Blue Labour: The Politics of the Common Good (2022) of Glasman himself. Additional elucidations on Blue Labour's ideas can be found in The Purple Book (2011) of Robert Philpot and Despised: Why the Modern Left Loathes the Working Class (2020) of Paul Embery. A number of commentators, including Adrian Pabst himself, have argued that, as leader of the Labour Party, Keir Starmer has adopted significant elements of Blue Labour's analysis and policies.[14]

  1. ^ Goodhart, David (20 March 2011). "Labour can have its own coalition too". The Independent.
  2. ^ Pickard, Jim; Payne, Sebastian (29 April 2021). "Labour's lost heartlands: Can it win them back?". Financial Times. Cruddas was a key figure in the "Blue Labour" movement which [...] urged the party's leadership to listen more closely to blue-collar concerns about immigration, crime and the EU.
  3. ^ Oleary, Duncan (21 May 2015). "Something new and something blue: the key to Labour's future?". New Statesman.
  4. ^ a b Grady, Helen (21 March 2011). "Blue Labour: Party's radical answer to the Big Society?". BBC News.
  5. ^ Moss, Stephen (19 July 2011). "Lord Glasman: 'I'm a radical traditionalist'". The Guardian.
  6. ^ Wintour, Patrick (21 April 2011). "Miliband Speech To Engage With Blue Labour Ideals". The Guardian.
  7. ^ Kellner, Peter (16 May 2011). Labour is not just the party of the working class (Report). YouGov.
  8. ^ Wintour, Patrick (4 January 2012). "Ed Miliband's leadership attacked by Lord Glasman". The Guardian.
  9. ^ Cite error: The named reference inews-20191216 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  10. ^ Freedman, Theo (30 July 2021). "The Labour left can no longer afford to ignore Blue Labour". LabourList.
  11. ^ Barrett, Matthew (20 May 2011). "Ten Things You Need to Know About Blue Labour". LeftWatch.
  12. ^ Score, Steve (30 March 2011). "Review: Blue Labour". The Socialist.
  13. ^ Bagehot (19 May 2011). "A nation of shoppers". The Economist.
  14. ^ Goodhart, David (22 November 2022). "Has Keir Starmer found the sweet spot in British politics?". The Spectator. Retrieved 5 September 2023.

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