Chuka
Umunna, Labour’s shadow Business Secretary, is being touted as among those who
may succeed Miliband as Leader if Labour lose the election. It could therefore
be revealing to look at what empty promises he is making in his bid for
re-election in Streatham in London.
One ‘Re-elect
Chuka Umunna’ leaflet states (the obvious): ‘Too many people don’t earn enough
money.’ So what is he going to do about it? Make employers pay higher wages all
round? He’s not that much of a
demagogue, if only because no-one would believe a Labour government could
deliver it. Instead, what he promises is:
‘Labour
believes that helping people get higher paying work is the right thing to do …
Labour will support areas of the economy like low-carbon and creative
industries which can support new high paying jobs … Labour believes that the
least everyone deserves is a wage they can live off, and a Labour government
will help more people get higher paying jobs.’
This is
carefully crafted to suggest one thing while meaning another (note the
repetition of the term ‘higher paying’). The suggestion is that a Labour
government will help workers earn more money. However, this won’t be for the
job they are now doing. It would only be for workers who moved to work in some
other sector of the economy said to be able to ‘support high paying jobs.’ Two
sectors in particular are mentioned – low-carbon and ‘creative’. Umunna doesn’t spell out how or why these
industries would be able to offer higher-paid jobs than other industries nor
how a Labour government would ‘support’ them, though probably there’s a Labour
Party policy paper somewhere, full of provisos and let-out clauses, explaining
this.
‘Creative’
is generally used to refer to specialised legal and commercial services that
are sold to overseas clients (and which are not really ‘creative’ at all since
they don’t actually create any new wealth, just make a profit from capturing a
share of wealth already created in some other part of the world). As to
‘low-carbon industries’, it is hard to see how they could be made profitable
without government help, whether tax breaks or direct subsidies, i. e, by being
subsidised from the profits of other sectors of the economy.
Wanting to
earn more money is a perfectly legitimate
aspiration for workers under capitalism, but they would be better
advised to pursue this through their own trade union action than relying on the
promises of ambitious politicians.
The Charlatan |
Elsewhere,
Umunna makes a really wild promise:
‘I want a
Labour government so we can fix the root causes of the problems people come to
me at my surgeries for help with. I believe we can tackle the massive problems
that exist with the cost of housing and childcare, with out transport system,
and with low pay and insecure work.’
Fix the
root causes? Really? Since these ‘massive problems’ have a single root cause in
capitalism, with its minority ownership and production for profit, a Labour
government is going to do nothing of the sort.
They would just tinker around without being able to tackle them. If
re-elected he and the other MPs will find people continuing to come to their
surgeries for help with the same problems as before since their root cause –
capitalism – will not have been fixed. To really solve them capitalism will
have to be ended but Umunna accepts capitalism and is on record as standing
only for a ‘better capitalism’
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