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How Movements Succeed and Fail: Andy Beckett 

Bristol Ideas
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In the great revolutionary year of 1968, Tony Benn - MP for Bristol - was a respectable Labour minister in his forties, and he was restless. While new social movements were shaking up Britain and much of the world, Westminster politics seemed stuck. It was time, he decided, for a different approach. Over the next half century, the radicalised Benn helped forge a new Left in Britain. He was joined by four other politicians, who would become comrades, collaborators and rivals: Ken Livingstone, John McDonnell, Diane Abbott and Jeremy Corbyn.
For Andy Beckett, the story of these admired and loathed political explorers - both their sudden breakthroughs and long stretches in the wilderness - is the untold story of British politics in modern times. His new book 'The Searchers' shows their project to create a radically more equal, liberal and democratic Britain has been much more influential than electoral history might suggest and can be seen from the shape of city life - especially in Livingstone’s London - to the causes of our culture wars.
For their many detractors, this influence was and remains dangerous: a form of extremism that must be stamped out. But as these five searchers believed, in politics there is no total victory - nor total defeat. In this interview with Bristol Ideas’ director Andrew Kelly, Beckett discusses Tony Benn and Bristol, the rise of the Left, the impact it had in the elections of 2017 and 2019, antisemitism and the Left, and some of the ideas that worked and some that - so far - have failed.
Andy Beckett is a Guardian columnist. He has also written for the Economist, The New York Times magazine, the London Review of Books and the Independent on Sunday. His previous books are Promised You A Miracle: Why 1980-82 Made Modern Britain, When the Lights Went Out: Britain in the Seventies and Pinochet in Piccadilly.

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7 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 3   
@tobaidi
@tobaidi 3 месяца назад
One of the best conversations I've watched! Thank you for sharing this. Just incredible analysis by Andy!
@andyeasy3320
@andyeasy3320 3 месяца назад
For any kids watching I should point out that Roy Jenkins who championed 'social change' eg divorce and homosexuality laws during the 1960s, was not 'of the left' at all. Jenkins was quite the toff who liked his high living and was as far right as one could get in the Labour Party and remain in it. And yes Tony Benn did 'ask awkward questions about power'; one of those questions was about the prospect of joining the Common Market, in the 1960's and the referendum, promised by Wilson in the 1970's. It was 'the left' who asked questions about loss of sovereignty, enforced disconnection from the Commonwealth countries and democratic accountability of the distant Eurocrats and 'radical champion' Roy Jenkins, and Big Business Conservatives, who were waving the EEC flag. Andy also has a bit nerve stating that Corbyn avoided BBC's Today because he felt it was 'not sympathetic'. Andy is right in this assertion and yet he isn't able to remove the beam from hs own eye. Some of the 'brutal press treatment' Corbyn got from the press came from his own newspaper, The Guardian; the hit pieces on him were glaring. The last thing I would have thought about Corbyn was that he was an anti-semite. Also this conversation contains much yak from Andy and Andrew about this thing called 'the left' but I don't think the words 'democratic socialism' were mentioned once aside from a quote from Oscar Wilde. I must conclude that being left no longer means being wed to anything of the post-war consensus eg full employment, tax and spend, nationalisation or democratic socialism but instead means the cultish adherance to gender identity politics or climate alarmism. I do concur with other points Andy made about 'the left' and its perpetually clenched fist and the belief that anyone who isn't on 'the left' must, of course be right-wing. In my experience - I'm shocked to find that I'm older than Andy - that most people who are 'small c conservative' also like a little bit of 'small s socialism'. As it is, I wish Corbyn had won his General Election, it might have been a disaster, or it might not. I can't say I thought much of his shadow cabinet except for John McDonnell. A victory would have at least saved us the spectacle of the shambolic rule of the Conservative party. I now look forward to how 'the left' still remaining in the Labour Party goes about its business with a Labour government barely discernable from the Conservatives. I have just learned that Sir Keir has welcomed Natalie Elphick into the Labour Party. Let us take a moment and think about that. I look forward to reading Andy's book.
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