Merlin Weekly Macro: Old challenges for any new government
The Jupiter Merlin team discuss how Starmer’s Labour might govern the UK differently, and ask whether they would have any more success at ‘getting things done’?
20% behind in the polls. Leaking votes to Reform UK, now holding a steady 12% share, more than double where they were a year ago. The PM rules out an election specifically on May 2nd, the same day as the local elections. Talk in the press of Penny Mordaunt as a leadership stalking horse. They might be able to close some of the gap over what time remains but surely any change of Tory leader now, what would be the sixth since 2010 and the fourth in this Parliament alone, really would be the last panicked gulp of a drowning party as its head ducks beneath the waves for the last time. Seeking divine intervention, Sunak hopes his policy and economic stars will align and 2024 is going to be his and the Tories’ Year.
Starmer’s Prospective ‘Politburo’
There are currently 22 Ministers who have cabinet rank, plus the Prime Minister himself; up to six more are in attendance. You see them in the No.10 Cabinet Meeting Room all squashed cheek-by-jowl around a Georgian dining table designed for half that number. As a formal forum, it is absurdly large for effective decision making. By way of comparison, in 1936 Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin had a 10-man cabinet responsible for the government of a third of the globe, rather than more than double the number of people today around that same table minding the business of a small island. In 1997, Tony Blair understood the problem but went too far in the opposite direction: his “sofa government” was too informal and relaxed, allowing the undue influence of unelected, appointed advisers to hold sway over policy. David Cameron’s informal style was also prevalent but with fewer advisers in evidence. As for Boris and the expletive-ridden WhatsApp wrecking ball that was Dominic Cummings, however well intended the sentiment to break the system to “get things done”, the less said about the means the better.
Politics and good government: as fish is to chips, or oil is to water?
There have been many excellent insights into the inner workings of British politics and its characters over the years. It is true that most political autobiographies are never read and are left to gather dust as forgotten, vain and self-serving or self-exculpating literature of dubious merit. But some become compelling best sellers: Alan Clark’s notorious Diaries; Margaret Thatcher, The Downing Street Years; Rory Stewart’s Life on the Edge, to name but three.
The latter and most recent reveals a good man, with lots of non-political real-life experience (he was previously a district governor in Iraq and founded a successful aid charity in Afghanistan) wanting to give something back to society and to make a difference. Evident is the extent to which he was largely out of his depth in the cut and thrust and devilry of Westminster politics; quite how he imagined he would be a successful Prime Minister is a mystery. But four elements of his autobiography are revealing, pertinent and enduring: his observations on the intransigence and bunker-mindedness of the civil service which views ministers as serially inconvenient impositions but occasionally useful idiots; the never-ending merry-go-round of ridiculously short-term ministerial appointments; the frequency with which new ministerial appointees have zero experience of their new areas of responsibility and are actively steered away from areas they really do know about; the almost infallible inability to make reliable financial forecasts of departmental expenditure and deliver projects on time and on budget. Stewart illuminates everything about why the public sector is the dysfunctional mess we know it to be.
The five-year electoral cycle seriously impedes proper pan-economic strategic fiscal planning. Government is all too often reduced to short-term tactics for political gain, or outright firefighting to contain departmental or bigger crises (today we have the unfortunate coincidence of both: the political expediency of electoral bribes masquerading as tax cuts ahead of the election, necessitating future crudely applied spending constraints to pay for them while public services are demonstrably failing).
New government, old challenges
Starmer’s early, pre-manifesto thoughts revolve around five policy pillars: securing the highest sustained growth in the G7; creating a clean energy “super-power”; improving the NHS; better policing and justice; reducing inequality and promoting education, the central plank of which is the imposition of VAT and business rates on private schools. Note that there is zero mention of or priority for defence.
It is among these broad aspirations that the quality of detailed planning, decision-making and execution really counts. This is what goes to the nub of the IFG reforms and Starmer’s Gang of Four and how it delegates responsibility down through the spending departments.
Round or square pegs for circular holes?
But whatever the structure, success hinges on two supreme factors: first, having the right, sufficiently qualified and experienced people to cook up the policy in the first place (the wider electorate and respectively the good people of Holborn & St Pancras, Leeds West, Ashton-under-Lyne and Wolverhampton Southeast will decide whether Starmer, Reeves, Rayner and McFadden are any better than today’s incumbent equivalents); second, getting the civil service and the unions to cooperate: without that, however good the plans, they will sink without trace.
The importance of the Official Opposition
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