Labour MPs - From Lion Tamers to Women & Men in Suits
From London Socialist Historians Group Newsletter #59 (Autumn 2016).
After the EU Referendum, many Labour MPs who did not support Jeremy Corbyn for Labour leader last summer decided, unsurprisingly, that they still didn’t back him. They wanted to replace him but succeeded only in underlining his position as leader in the election which ended on 24 September in Liverpool. Corbyn won the first Labour leader election in September 2015 by more than a country mile because his opponents were politically dull.
Andy Burnham has done great work around Hillsborough but he is hardly a man to set the world on fire. Yvette Cooper can be a very effective performer in the Commons, but again is hardly an orator. The best that can be said for Liz Kendall is that she made the case for a New Labour politics 20 years on. But as her small share of the vote underlined, the world has moved on, New Labour is not ‘new’ anymore.
Owen Smith was not an improvement.
It would indeed be good if the next Labour leader, whenever that becomes an eventuality, were not a man in a suit but a woman. Margaret Beckett was leader briefly after the death of John Smith but that aside Labour has not had a female leader. That does not reflect modern society.
However, the Labour leadership is not just about gender but also politics.
The problem the Parliamentary Party has, and it is a big one, is that most of its MPs no longer represent the backgrounds of working men and women — working class voters — it hopes to get the votes of.
The process was underway some time before Blair appeared but New Labour made a fetish of promoting the suited representative with no great aspirations to change a world they had usually done quite well in already.
Yet Labour MPs were far from always like this.
John S Clarke (1885-1959) was Labour MP for Glasgow Maryhill from 1929 until 1931. He learned how to be a lion tamer in circuses in his teenage years and continued to do this throughout his life. He became a sailor and in that capacity ran guns to the 1905 Russian Revolution.
He opposed World War One, writing anti-war poems, but rather than apply to become a conscientious objector he successfully went on the run from the authorities. After the War he was a non-voting delegate at the Second Congress of the Comintern in 1920. While in Russia he famously cured Lenin’s dog of an illness.
In the early 1920s Clarke became a member of the Independent Labour Party though he left when the ILP disaffiliated from Labour in 1932. After his period as a Labour MP, Clarke, the lion tamer and poet, pursued an interest in Renaissance Art sitting on a range of public bodies that protected it in Scotland.
It seems quite unlikely that a man with such a varied background would make it through a Labour Party candidate selection process today, let alone be elected as a Labour MP.
As the manufactured furore, prior to his re-election, around Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership by MPs whose extra-Parliamentary CV is in most cases remarkably thin, underlines the Labour Party and the labour movement is much the poorer for not having people like John S Clarke in its ranks.
Keith Flett
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