Five years ago today, the Labour Party manifesto for the 2017 General Election was officially launched at Bradford University 🌹
Some had been so excited by it, they wanted people to have it early … but this 🧵 is the story of what happened next …
When he came off stage, Jeremy signed a copy and gave it to me:
“Andrew, a brilliant and superb piece of work to transform lives. Love to you … in deep appreciation, Jeremy”
The manifesto was fully costed, in ‘Funding Britain’s Future’, published the same day
It was the first time a party had done this – credit John McDonnell's innovation and Rory's perspiration and dedication
As John said "The only numbers in Tory manifesto are the page numbers"
The @NME ran a piece entitled “11 massive and brilliant things in the Labour manifesto”
It enthused: "The poor won’t be screwed by the rich, younger generations won’t find housing and education so unattainable. To put it bluntly, it sounds great."
“This is a 21st century leftism, rolling back some Thatcherite policy while acting on modern problems like the ‘gig’ economy”
“As well as a revival of tax-and-spend politics, the other big hallmark of the Corbyn manifesto is universalism.” ✊
In their book on the 2017 election, Kavanagh & Cowley write:
“the manifesto was also extremely popular among party supporters and campaigners; candidates and local organisers talked of how the policies had energised party workers and had given them something to offer voters”
Between its official launch and polling day, the manifesto was downloaded from the Labour Party website an astonishing six million times – and thousands of copies were sold from the Labour website raising vital election funds
“The star of the show was the manifesto… there is another way, it doesn’t have to be this way, there is an alternative. Austerity doesn’t work.
“Politically, what has happened is that politics has moved: the centre ground has moved”
When running for the Labour leadership in 2020 Keir Starmer, told party members,
“We should treat the 2017 manifesto as our foundational document, the radicalism and the hope that that inspired across the country was real. So we have to hang on to that as we go forward.”
No manifesto should be preserved in aspic. Times and priorities change. But the case for redistributive taxation, investment & public ownership is timeless
Kavanagh & Cowley say “Few general election manifestos are remembered. Even fewer make much difference” This one did
🧵ends
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I’ve just seen these posts from Tom. And so I just want to go through his thread, for the record
When I phoned Jeremy (who had the manifesto the same day as Tom) I asked him whether he'd he sent it on to anyone? When I phoned Tom I asked him the same …🧵
This is true (I'd forgotten at that stage about Welsh & Scottish Labour) but as I said above, I asked both Jeremy & Tom if they'd shared it, who might have had access to their email, and if they’d printed it, left it anywhere, etc
This seems a blatant lie. Or more generously, perhaps Tom has forgotten that we went through the versions on the night of the leak and I agreed with him that it wasn’t the same version I had sent him.
After that shocking Lib Dem attack ad from Labour in #LocalElections2022 it appears there's an even worse one attacking the Greens, which was apparently doing the rounds in the West Midlands:
This is going to take a 🧵to unpick ...
Firstly we see the familiar attack from the Lib Dem one - that the Greens are soft on crime and on drugs.
It implies Labour doesn't want to reduce the prison population (the highest in Europe) or make any liberalisation of the UK's ineffective drugs laws - which is dumb.
Secondly, in attacking the Greens, it attacks two which are Labour policies as well 🤦
It is Labour policy to abolish right to buy. @WelshLabour has abolished right to buy.
Raising corporation tax to 24%. In 2019 Labour pledged to raise to 26%. Last year Sunak raised it to 25%
On this day 45 years ago, the Labour Cabinet of Jim Callaghan accepted an IMF loan, paving the way for Thatcherism
Denis Healey, speaking at Cabinet on 02/12/76, advocated a path based on cuts, privatisation and rising unemployment, “Anything less will not restore confidence”🧵
Michael Foot, with foresight of the situation he'd face as Leader, argued it might be better for the Govt to fall than to accept the IMF terms:
“We want to sustain the Government; or if forced into opposition, sustain ourselves in unity rather than be split into snarling groups”
Tony Benn pushed the Alternative Economic Strategy at Cabinet, and argued:
“This plan is based on two things: on Treasury forecasts that have been systematically wrong and on a monetarist theory that we don’t, for one moment, accept ourselves … there is a parallel with 1931”
On Tory Govt
“We’re calling them honourable; these people aren't honourable. They’re not honourable at all. They are completely self-interested. And dodgy, I think, is the mildest term that I could have used” labourlist.org/2021/11/zarah-…
This is 🤯 re: Batley & Spen by-election:
"I reached out to the party, saying, ‘hey, if there’s anything that I can do with young members, or the Muslim community, please let me know because I’m really keen to help out’, given what was happening... That offer wasn’t taken up."
As a young Muslim woman, she says she's been treated differently:
"Sultana points out that her maiden speech referring to “40 years of Thatcherism” caused uproar, yet nobody blinked an eye when Lisa Nandy talked about “40 years of economic decline”"