Published: September 17th 2010 - at 4:36 pm

The Economist contradicts itself in endorsing David Miliband


by Sunder Katwala    

No modernising voice has yet proposed that newspaper leader writers and editorial boards should have their own section in Labour’s electoral college.

But that idea may now be tempting some in the David Miliband camp – which can now add the support of The Economist to that of the Mirror, Observer, Times and Independent, with the Guardian sitting it out following some unhappy recent endorsement experiences, leaving the New Statesman flying an Ed Miliband banner in an attempt to prevent a media consensus landslide.

However, regular Economist readers may find the Economist’s broad-brush conclusion unconvincing.

The Economist’s editorial worries about being left out of the Labour coalition if MiliD is not chosen:

A lurch to the left would leave centrist swing-voters, including this newspaper, with nowhere to go other than the Con-Lib coalition. Britain needs a credible opposition — and David Miliband is the most plausible person to deliver it.

However, the point that charges about a “lurch left” lack any credible evidence has been made most effectively during this campaign in The Economist, by the Bagehot columnist who has noted that Red Angela Merkel and Red Nicolas Sarkozy have gone rather further in their critique of capitalism than what Bagehot called the the ‘model Christian Democrat’, Ed Miliband:

I have not seen anything him say anything that a continental Christian Democrat could not say to fire up his own conservative base on a wet Wednesday in Hamburg or Lyon.

Might that “lurch” from New Labour to the continental centre-right have something to recommend it? Perhaps not. Merkelism is probably also a little statist for much of The Economist’s Anglo-American audiences.

Next Left favours a slightly deeper shade of pale pink than the Bagehot column, as we do indeed favour modest, gradualist, strategic and electorally viable lurches towards social democracy. In that spirit, we have been pleased to report that David Miliband has a very similar policy platform to Ed Miliband, though there are some important, if nuanced, policy and political differences between them.

On specifics, MiliD has a stronger progressive pitch in advocating a mansion tax, which MiliE has not; both are for examining the question of unearned rewards at the top, though without saying what they will do about it; neither supports Ed Balls’ policy of bringing the 50p rate in at £100,000.

A difference about whether the 50p rate at £150k should be for this Parliament or permanent is easily exaggerated.

The slogan “keep the current tax rate” has never before brought excited citizens to the barricades.

But perhaps the Economist is slightly agitated at “Red Dave” Cameron and “Red George” Osborne’s failure to give any make any serious move, so far, to reverse it.


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About the author
Sunder Katwala is a regular contributor to Liberal Conspiracy. He is the director of British Future, a think-tank addressing identity and integration, migration and opportunity. He was formerly secretary-general of the Fabian Society.
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Story Filed Under: Blog ,Labour party ,Media ,Westminster


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Reader comments


1. Sunder Katwala

They are, of course, perfectly within their rights to endorse David Miliband if they consider him the best candidate, and editorial leader writers are allowed to disagree with their own columnists, even in papers/magazines where everyone writes anonymously.

Sunder can you explain what is so progressive about suddenly imposing a tax of many thousands of pounds based upon whether one’s house is above or below an arbitrary figure, irrespective of income?

The corporate elite just want to make sure they are backing two horses in the race. If they have a New Labour stooge as leader of one of the main parties, they need not worry who gets into power because they won’t do anything that upsets our corporate masters.

The elites want to make sure they have gamed the system. It’s a lot cheaper to give a few quid to David now than have to spend a fortune at a general election.

Let’s be honest, the Observer endorsement is really the Guardian endorsement too. If they backed Ed Mili and he lost, it would be excruciatingly embarrassing after their Lib Dem endorsement at the election…

5. Sunder Katwala

(4) – as somebody who used to write Observer leaders, the decision-making process on the two papers is entirely separate.

The G not making an endorsement protects them from backing a candidate who does not win, whichever one does.

I think that some people suspect not that the lurch to the left that Ed Miliband could represent comes not so much from what he is advocating now (insofar as we have detail on that – his statements on the deficit are far more porous than those of his brother, but also more so than those of Balls) but rather what he may be pressed to adopt as policy later, in view of his backers, and their likely demands. This is, for instance, what Hopi Sen implied in his ‘case against’ series. He’s committed to those union marches against cuts now, and later perhaps also to other things the unions expect.

While not being an Andy Burnham supporter, I think his promotion of a land value tax should be more widely debated.

Though I doubt we’ll get it from Edward Miliband, a lurch to the left is precisely what Labour needs. We need to turn the clock back to before Blairism in many ways.

Merkelism is probably also a little statist for much of The Economist’s Anglo-American audiences.

I imagine that Labour will, during ther next election, be appealing to British voters, rather than German ones. “A lurch to the left” means lurching away from the British centre-ground, not the German centre ground.

To take a quote from another article by Bagehot:

Britain still feels like an outlier, at least by the standards of western Europe

http://www.economist.com/blogs/bagehot/2010/07/new_bagehot


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