Osborne described the move
as “the biggest transfer of power to our
local government in living memory".
So it is, for those whose memory extends no further back than 1990, when
the Thatcher government, as part of its poll tax legislation, nationalised
business rates, before which they had been set locally for centuries. For Thatcher, this counter-revolution against
democracy was entirely justified, to prevent representatives elected locally
raising the money locally to do locally what they’d been elected to do. To say that hard-Left Labour councils weren’t
as democratic as they claimed to be was a fair point, but one that could easily
have been corrected by moving to proportional representation. Now that would have been a radical change. One that would have permanently denied the
Tories a majority at Westminster
level too.
Not that the Tories have
ever been that keen on local democracy, given that collective decision-making is prima facie socialist. But just fine if it
involves awarding public sector contracts to national or global business chains
with no long-term commitment to the area.
When council services do fail, the answer should be to let elections
sort things out, as we do when promises made nationally are broken. Not for the Tories, who’d rather undermine,
then seize and privatise. Very localist
that. With that kind of encouragement, don’t
be at all surprised if the calibre of local councillors isn’t what it was.
There’s a theme developing. Labour offered ‘regionalism’ that was nothing
of the sort. The Tories offered
‘localism’ that was nothing of the sort.
And now we have ‘devolution’.
Which is…? Well, usually
understood as involving directly elected national or regional assemblies, able
to take over whole swaths of Whitehall
power, leaving most of Osborne’s Cabinet colleagues redundant. Not the creation of a condition of national
amnesia in which the return of recently stolen powers, with strings attached,
can be hailed as ground-breaking generosity.
That’s quite some conjuring trick and the sad fact is that so many
supposedly intelligent and well-read folk will fall for it. The proof of that is that they continue to
vote for the London
parties that all offer only marginally different versions of the same sleight
of hand.
The law of the political
jungle being to define or be defined, it’s only natural that the London regime should wish
to colonise the language of its enemies.
Words like ‘regionalism’ and ‘localism’ can be chewed up and spat out,
but only if we deferentially accept the regime’s right to define them for us.
When John Prescott made a
mess of regionalism, there were those urging us to find new conceptual ground,
untainted by failure. ‘Provincialism’,
perhaps, or maybe ‘areaism’. It’s an
easy thing to do and the wrong thing.
Those who retreat in the face of adversity show only their unfitness for
public office. Those who see only a
debate about the internal administrative nomenclature of England don’t see that the Europe
of regions is about bigger issues in an unstable world. (‘Provincialism’ doesn’t work in that
context, where provinces are the county-sized units into which Belgian, Italian
and Spanish regions are sub-divided.) Those
who think that a little local set-back in the North East referendum of 2004
marks the end of the road don’t see the historical timescale over which
devolutionary issues unfold, and have always unfolded. Generations come and go but the battle over
power’s location continues.
So when Osborne attempts to
present his nannying of local democracy as a ‘devolution revolution’ we don’t
just have the right to say ‘hands off a word that means much more than you can
imagine’. We have the duty to do so too. The current issue of Plaid Cymru’s magazine, The Welsh Nation, describes Welsh
political life today as ‘post-nationalist’.
Did we miss something? Enough of
this nonsense! Let’s not vote for
parties who don’t know what they stand for and therefore can’t be trusted to
stick to it. Let’s leave the conjuring
tricks to the Blairites and supplant a dishonest past that’s over-run its
allotted hour.
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