Doing an interview on Irish radio last week, discussing how it feels to be a "foreigner" in Britain post Brexit (not very good), I got a job offer live on air. I was tempted, but declined.
The article below will be published on the Huff Post in the next few days. This will be my last blog post for at least 3 weeks. I'm off to retrace my childhood holidays, touring the west coast of Ireland with my family in a campervan. No screens allowed....except for absolute emergencies.
Having opted out of social media because of death
threats, I’ve encountered the dark misogyny that seeks to silence opinionated
women. So I despaired when I saw this very real malaise being hijacked by
prominent Labour MPs, including Heidi Alexander and Angela Eagle, to score points
against a man they want to oust. Women in politics face many threats, Jeremy
Corbyn isn’t one of them.
Anger expressed as abuse is unacceptable and it’s scandalous
that women in public office are subjected to significantly more than their male
counterparts (though Blairite Ian Austin’s recent bullying of Corbyn during
PMQs was disgraceful). Regarding Labour’s leadership election, all the evidence
suggests that members, and the public, are angry at proponents of New Labour -
irrespective of gender.
Ordinary people are under constant siege. Relentlessly
having to mobilise and ward off threats to our libraries, leisure centres,
schools and hospitals. Bit by bit the heart of our communities are being ripped
asunder by ruthless, ill-conceived Tory cuts. In this, the country’s hour of
greatest need, Labour’s NEC has banned constituency meetings. The wrath unleashed
by Labour plc, who fiddle
while Rome burns, should come as no surprise.
Austerity has hit women twice as hard as men. Women in
work are reliant on food banks and skip meals to feed their children. 85% of
all the cuts have been at women’s expense and recent research shows violence
against women has increased with austerity cuts to domestic violence services.
Is it any wonder the public is angry with Alexander, Eagle, and their
New Labour colleagues who back austerity and failed to vote against Tory
welfare cuts? It was Tony Blair’s de-regulation of financial
services that precipitated the recession, which left the richest,
64%
richer and the poorest 56% poorer. Decades of market-based capitalism has left
the UK one of the most unequal
countries in the OECD. When David Blunkett announced in 1997
that “re-distribution of wealth is no longer an objective of the (New) labour
party”, he wasn’t kidding.
Far from getting the £350m a week extra promised for
the NHS, within days of Brexit, plans to accelerate the closure of my local
A&E were approved. As the party that
founded the NHS, Labour should be providing strong opposition to Tory cuts.
That wasn’t the case under Heidi Alexander’s stewardship. Her failure to
support Caroline Lucas’ NHS Reinstatement Bill (reversing privatisation) felt
like a betrayal to those of us on the front line (mostly women) in a battle for
which the stakes couldn’t be higher.
Angela Eagle angered her CLP, who backed Jeremy
Corbyn, when she defied them and stood against him. It’s ironic that she called
upon Corbyn to resign because he couldn’t command the support of his PLP, yet her
own CLP passed a vote of no confidence in her last week.
Anarchy is what happens when those with power abuse the democratic process, not least by stifling and criminalising legitimate dissent.
The £25 membership fee is entirely in keeping with the
New Labour exclusive brand, wherein the right to vote was extended only to those
who could afford to buy it. Owen Smith, whose proclaimed anti-austerity
credentials are risible, didn’t object to the fiscally prohibitive membership
fee, despite it discriminating against those most impacted by austerity. Unfortunately
for Smith, the public are more discerning than in the Blair era and, having
been spun to within an inch of our lives, post Brexit we’re reading the small
print.
We can deduce, for example, that Smith is the
candidate supported by the right wing Labour group progress who the GMB
union accused of instructing Labour’s front bench to support Tory cuts in
2012. Large sums of money have been donated to Progress by corporations such as Pfizer, for whom Smith worked as a
lobbyist. Pfizer was recently accused of
breaching UK law by increasing the cost of an epilepsy drug by as much as 2,600
percent. As a result, the NHS bill for the drug
rose from around £2 annually to more than 40 million in 2014.
In 2006, Smith extolled
the virtues of PFI (which is bankrupting the NHS), private sector “choice” in
the NHS and academies. He also seemed nonchalant about Iraq.
If New Labour MPs are concerned about the misogyny
endured by ordinary women on a daily basis they should denounce austerity,
which the New Statesman described as
“an
economic and cultural assault on women”. They should also countenance the
wisdom of Einstein who understood that “Problems cannot be
solved with the same mindset that created them”.
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