Today, it is arguable that
the UK
political scene has never been more uninspiring. This despite the fact that the
nation is facing some of the greatest strategic challenges in its history,
almost all of which are global in their scope. These include the challenge of
stewarding an economy that is both flourishing and sustainable without running
up colossal debt, seeking territorial security in a world of unregulated
nuclear development and volatile terrorism, and the urgent need for continual
global resolve over food, water and environmental security for all. The
question that sits over all this is - with the economic eclipsing of Europe by
new markets, what global role does Britain now have? What role should we look
to have? Westminster
barely scratches the surface of such issues, and without being dogmatically
alarmist, we really do have our head in the political sand right now. Party
politics appears as sterile as ever, voter engagement largely cynical.
So why plunge in now?
Surely this is the time to walk away and get on living a full, joyful,
Christ-centred life outside of the murky machinations of politics? While a
greatly attractive prospect in many ways, I have found myself unable to walk
away. It is a call on my life I can’t lay down. And I feel that now is the time
to get involved. I have had many helpful years of political formation and
reflection, and do not regret waiting until now. But I would regret waiting any
longer. So in I have plunged.
But why the Labour party?
In purely ideological terms, I have made convincing cases to myself for joining
any one of the three main parties. I believe in the socialist ethic of caring
for the less-well-off, marginalised and vulnerable within society; I believe in
the liberal view of civic society and democratic governance; I believe in the
one-nation conservative social vision of a politics that embraces
cultural-moral concerns as well as material matters. Yet, as has already been
noted, these visions seem at best confused and diluted within their respective
contemporary parties, so I have had to take some other questions into account:
o What values are at the core of each party?
o Which parties reflect the interest of all and not
just a select group?
o Which parties have the political courage to take on
the strategic Goliaths of our age?
o Which parties move beyond materialism to consider
the fullness of ‘the good life’?
There was not a uniform
answer to these questions. But after great reflection, I have decided that the
Labour Party is the party closest to my political home, despite falling short
on some of the above points. I have many views that will not be shared with the
majority of other Labour members (such as on EU membership, schooling and gay
marriage) which may prove challenging, although this would equally be the case
(perhaps on different issues) within the other parties. But faced with the
alternatives of frustration in a minority party or the tirelessness of starting
a new movement, I am happy to have made this choice.
So, I’ve joined the party,
what next? There are two very clear next steps for me – to agitate the Labour
policy agenda to deal with these huge national challenges and to campaign for a
Labour majority in the 2015 general election, to deliver a government that will
truly govern as a ‘one-nation’ party. After that, who knows…