Talk:Labour Party (UK)/Archive 4

Latest comment: 14 years ago by Snowded in topic Proposal
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Blair's role in the Iraq War

The Chilcot inquiry[1] is uncovering all kinds of damning evidence about how Blair witheld information on the illegality of the Iraq war from the Cabinet, and even suggestions of 'bullying' of the country's foremost legal officers. Any suggestions about how, and whether, this should be covered in the Labour Party (UK) article? Riversider (talk) 13:48, 30 November 2009 (UTC)

It be better in the Tony Blair article, surely. You don't have massive information about every single Labour leader and Prime Minister in this article. --Welshsocialist (talk) 16:42, 5 December 2009 (UTC)

London Assembly in the Infobox

I'm struggling to see the justification for including the number of seats held in the London Assembly in the infobox graphic for each party, when a) it's not a UK-wide institution, and b) if we were including sub-UK institutions then the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly would have a stronger case for being there than the London Assembly, both being far more powerful bodies. Sofia9 (talk) 05:52, 4 December 2009 (UTC)

I would argue that either all of the regional assemblies, including Northern Ireland, be included or none of them should be. Furious Andrew

Secret Ballot

Should we have an article on Labour Party (UK) secret ballot, 2010 or something similar (see here). 03md 14:46, 6 January 2010 (UTC)

It really depends how notable you feel this letter is. Minor MPs are writing letters all the time, and this is an encyclopedia, not a newspaper. If Hoon were to succeed in his machinations, and it were to actually lead to a secret ballot that led to the replacement of Brown, or of more open faction fighting in the Labour Party, it might be a little more notable. It's certainly nowhere near as notable as the Zinoviev letter was, as that media forgery had an extremely high impact on the election, just 4 days later Riversider (talk) 16:16, 6 January 2010 (UTC)

Not really worth it. The whole thing came to nothing, and was over in a day. --Welshsocialist (talk) 01:41, 7 January 2010 (UTC)


Latest shifts in power within Labour, Social Democracy Vs Neo Liberalism

Seamus Milne of the Guardian, a paper with a long historical connection with the Labour Party, has contributed an interesting analysis of the shifting balance of power within Labour between the 'Social Democratic' and 'Neo-Liberal' ideological currents following the 'failed' Hoon coup attempt: Brown coup Blairites in Charge


Here's some of what he has to say:

Brown and his closest allies have been brought to heel, Blairite and Treasury orthodoxy has been re-established, and the government's recent crab-like shift towards a more recognisably social democratic stance has come to a ­juddering halt. That was encapsulated at Monday's meeting of Labour MPs when Lord Mandelson, whose powers now extend well beyond those of a mere deputy premier, smilingly accepted Brown's pledge that he was merely "one of a team" who would not now be interfering in other people's jobs – such as running the party's election campaign....

...by exploiting the coup attempt to demand a change of direction, and making the prime minister's closest ally, Ed Balls, their fall guy, the cabinet's anti-Brown majority has unmistakably called time on the Keynesian-inspired and progressive tax measures that have won public support but caused such alarm in the City, Treasury and media...

....Both Brown and Balls were of course architects of New Labour and its fatal embrace of neoliberal economics, privatisation and "light-touch" regulation in the 1990s....

...in the wake of last week's internal coup, Labour has ditched the chance to go into the ­election as the anti-cuts party, is fighting on Tory territory, and appears ­determined to run a Dutch auction with the other main parties on who can slash the deficit fastest. It's the ghost of Labour governments past.

Now they're back in charge of the government, the Blairites are setting out their stall to take control of the party after its expected defeat.

In summary, Milne's analysis of the recent coup attempt is that it resulted in a defeat for any return to Social Democracy, and a victory for the Neo-Liberals, who intend to hold sway, both before and after the election.

Milne's analysis in this authoritative published source matches almost exactly what I've been arguing here for the last months. Everyone can see it, apart from the Labour Party members themselves. Riversider (talk) 16:50, 14 January 2010 (UTC)

There have always been debates within the labour party about what it is, and what is meant by democratic socialism. One important thing to note in the above quote is that the reference is to neo-Liberal ECONOMICS, and that is its normal context which is a bit different from democratic socialism. My own views are similar to yours, but I am not sure what you are trying to achieve here. There is not debate about the existence of citations that reference a neo-liberal economic policy; You seemed happy with the suggested compromise above? Would you confirm? --Snowded TALK 17:47, 14 January 2010 (UTC)
I think this goes beyond debates about what constitutes 'democratic socialism'. The Mandelsons of this world spend too much time on billionaire's yachts to care very much what their pro-corporate ideology gets called, as long as it holds sway. I've already said that I think what you call a 'compromise' could well be a way forward, and I'm happy to give it a chance. Obviously it's not only down to me, there are other editors here who may also have an opinion. Riversider (talk) 17:59, 14 January 2010 (UTC)
Thanks - any other comments guys?--Snowded TALK 18:06, 14 January 2010 (UTC)

I just want a consensus here. Almost weekly I've come on here I've seen something disappeare in the idealogy info box, be it Democratic Socialism, Neo-Liberalism or everything inbetween. Of course most of the time, I think, it is done by people who have not read the discussions about such issues that has been had numberous times. Maybe once it is sorted, we can add something in the info box directing people to the discussion page on the idealogy issue?

I do think that New "Labours" alleged neo-liberalism does need to be referenced somewhere, as it is a criticism put forward of New "Labour" from many Labour Party members aswell as those outside the party, and there are policies, at Westminister, that can also back up the alligation of neo-liberalism (aswell as policies that enforce the idea that the party is democratic socialist, and social democratic). I think the issue is more the importance it is given, and the validility of the sources used to back up the claim of neo-liberalism.--Welshsocialist (talk) 22:22, 14 January 2010 (UTC)

Quick add on to my above. Maybe it would also be an idea to point out that neo-liberalism in Labour is an English thing. The Welsh party has "clear red water" and, to my understanding, so does the Scottish party.--Welshsocialist (talk) 22:25, 14 January 2010 (UTC)

So are you happy with the compromise? Ideology is democratic socialist then we have a new title Ideological Currents to which add Third Way and Neo-Liberal economics. --Snowded TALK 00:57, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
I'd disagree with this false dichotomy between a neo-liberal ideology and neo-liberal economic policies. The economic policies do not happen by themselves or by accident, but naturally emerge from thinking based on neo-liberal concepts: i.e. a neo-liberal ideology, it would be equally impossible for a party with a neo-liberal or neo-conservative ideology to implement socialist economic policies. Making this artificial dichotomy between ideology and policies, between how the party leadership thinks and what the party leadership does, is a bit like saying "I'm really a christian, but I regularly attend a black mass and sacrifice goats to Lucifer".
I don't think there can now be any doubt about the number or validity of sources that attach the label 'neo-liberal' to Labour's ideology and policies. An attempt to discredit these sources was made, but soon abandoned as it quickly became apparent how empty the objections to the sources that have been provided below actually are. For every source that has been listed below, there are hundreds more, this cannot be said for sources showing leading labour figures, or authoritative political commentators explaining how their policies are democratic socialist. These are much harder to find...Riversider (talk) 09:37, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
Umm, well neoliberal is a pejorative label for economical liberalism if we look at lede of that article, and Keynesian approaches are evident in current policy so its not as black and white an issue as your goat sacrifice suggestion would imply. It is also defined as an economic theory. I'm happy to simply pipelink Neoliberal in the Ideological currents section however. Other cited material can then be added there as appropriate. --Snowded TALK 09:52, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
If you read the Tim Worstall quote from the Adam Smith Institute listed below, you will see that in some mouths the word 'neo-liberalism' is not perjorative at all, he is full of praise for the achievements of Labour's neo-liberals and is wishing all power to their ideological elbows. Riversider (talk) 09:59, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
To satanists goat sacrifice is not a pejorative act. I think you need to pay attention to WP:SOAP, you appear to be on a crusade here. It is all very well to report a cited opinion about the Labour Party but you are clearly arguing for a position that you support passionately. that can be a problem--Snowded TALK 10:09, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
Political paties do inspire passionate opinions, even Labour. I've tried to avoid the mistake of people who use WP as a soapbox by constantly referring to a wide variety of authoritative published sources, which some in this debate doggedly refuse to do in return. I was challenged to produce "Sources from people who support the Labour Party, accepting that the Labour Party was neoliberal and arguing that it was a good thing" and "Sources from right-wing academics arguing that the Labour Party is neoliberal". Below I have listed quotes from the New Labour Reader and from the Adam Smith Institute (along with several others) doing both these things. The fundamental foundation of every WP article must be the published sources, and must reflect the balance of published sources, whatever the opinions of the editors.
The Adam Smith Institute is a highly respected think tank, the right wing equivalent of Demos. They use the term 'neo-liberalism' quite comfortably and see it as a positive force. The charge was that the term was only used by the left, and was entirely perjorative. This is not the case, the term is widely used by academics, has a clearly defined meaning, and is only perjorative to people that disagree with it, or to people who wish to pretend they are one thing while doing another.
What has made me passionate is the idea that some editors can delete the word 'neoliberal' so blithely, in the face of such a huge weight of published material, based entirely on their own opinion, if anything, that is WP:SOAP . Riversider (talk) 10:24, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
With any political party there will be multiple sources to support both good and bad perspectives on that party. I really don't think you paid attention to the comments Sam made here. I'll also be interested to see if you tackle the Neoliberal article which does not correspond to your views. --Snowded TALK 10:33, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
As I say I've found authoritative sources that criticise Labour's neo-liberalism, and authoritative sources that praise Labour's neo-liberalism, authoritative sources that criticise or praise Labour for being socialist are however much thinner on the ground (and nobody on that side of this debate has yet come up with any). I think I have addressed Sam's comments directly and in plenty of detail, and backed these points up with published sources, perhaps you would explain which of his comments are not addressed in one way or another in my later responses, so that I can address those too. Riversider (talk) 10:45, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
Your "authoritative sources" is becoming something of a mantra you know and its blinding you to the fact that no one is questioning the fact that they exist. There is a criticism of the labour party that it adopted thatcherite policies and its also praised for that from right wing think tanks. Those actually represent two aspects of a POV criticism they don't balance each other as you imply. Neoliberalism is, in the context of the labour party a pejorative term but its also a very ambiguous one. In some versions it means pure Laissez-faire capitalism, in others a move to privatization etc. Many of the authors you cite use it in different ways. The point which Sam made is that to use it without explanation and context is wrong. So two points really (i) left wing criticism & right wing praise are the same thing and therefore a POV (ii) the term needs explanation and context. Then we can add the third, namely that you do appear to be on a campaign here with some COI issues. I cam to this one late, but my overall impression (that you can take or leave) is that you have not sought to engage with other editors, you have just asserted your opinion. --Snowded TALK 11:10, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
The existence of these sources has only just begun to become acknowledged after attempts to debunk them failed. Because Labour is a political party, and the party in power in the UK at present, virtually every article written about them will come from one POV or another. In this debate the goalposts keep shifting, first I am asked for articles written from the right wing POV praising neo-liberalism (as it was alleged the right did not use this term), then I am told that these articles are POV. The fact that I have come up with such published sources when challenged to by other editors is clear evidence that I have indeed 'engaged' with them. The problem has been that when I have issued similar challenges to come up with published material that disproves the case I have been making, these have not been 'engaged' with.
The key problem for editors here is this: When dealing with a political party, because of the multiplicity of POVs it is not correct or possible to attempt to come up with one single 'objective' description of the party. It is only possible for us to represent the various points of view expressed in the published material. I believe that your suggested 'compromise' (as well as the current version) achieves this. Your compromise was a genuine attempt to deal properly with the issue, and as such I welcome it.
I have made reflecting the published material a mantra, as this is the foundation on which WP is based. All published material on any topic is imperfect in one sense or another, but it is the only firm foundation we have, my method has been to find multiple sources from diverse sources and POVs that balance each others imperfections and thus create an irrefutable case. If the whole of WP was built with similar rigor, we would have something amazing.
(BTW There is no contradiction whatsoever between laissez faire capitalism and privatisation, they are entirely congruent with each other, so I don't understand the point you were making there).Riversider (talk) 11:36, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
The point was not a contradiction but that they are not congruent. laissez faire would involve privatization, but it does not follow that a partial approach to privatization means laissez faire. My point is that neoliberal is too capable of misinterpretation to stand unqualified. --Snowded TALK 11:55, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
Well we will have to disagree on a lot of that, but as you say we have compromise. I just have to find a way to implement it without wreaking the template--Snowded TALK 11:38, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
Good luck with that Snowded. If I have been engaged in a 'campaign', it has been a campaign for the continued inclusion of one single word in the infobox. Your compromise proposal, with it's list of ideological currents, and the idea of more text in the article itself around the question of the neoliberalism in Labour's policies goes well beyond this, and will hopefully represent a considerable improvement in the article. Riversider (talk) 12:25, 15 January 2010 (UTC)


I am not happy with the term "self-defined" as a heading. How about changing it to "consitutional" or "Clause 4" something along those lines. As it is in the Labour Party's consitution that it is Democratic socialist? As it stands, with the current wording. It still could cause problems, I feel. --Welshsocialist (talk) 16:11, 15 January 2010 (UTC)

Plus, the leadership of the party tend to use "third way", "social democratic" or "progressive" and don't call themselves, usually, "democratic socialist". It is more accurate to say it is the consitutional position of the party, rather then self-defined, which implies, to my mind, something else.--Welshsocialist (talk) 16:16, 15 January 2010 (UTC)

The term Snowded used was "self-identified", not "self-defined". I can't see how it can be contraversial. An ideology lives in people's heads and hearts, and not in a piece of paper, so 'Constitutional' doesn't make sense, it's a bureaucratic way of looking at things. Alternatives might be 'self-styled' or 'professed'. Riversider (talk) 16:31, 15 January 2010 (UTC)
On reflection, 'constitutional' is not that bad, and certainly not worth fighting over, I think most people should be able to live with it, even if it's not ideal. Riversider (talk) 16:36, 15 January 2010 (UTC)

Supporting material

Here's a list of published sources asserting that Labour is Neo-Liberal.
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.


They come from such a broad range of authors and academics, many leading figures in their respective fields.

It is impossible for Wikipedia NOT to use the term 'Neo-Liberalism' in relation to Labour's ideology given the sheer weight of these published sources - the question should actually be "can we any longer justify calling Labour socialist or social democratic?":

"New Labour and the commonsense of neoliberalism: trade unionism, collective bargaining and workers' rights" Paul Smith (2009) Industrial Relations Journal volume 40 issue 4 pp337 - 355

Paul Smith was formerly Senior Lecturer at the School of Economic and Management Studies, Keele University. Here's the abstract:

"The assumptions and values of neoliberalism came to dominate the Conservative governments, 1979–97, inspiring a range of policies that included industrial relations and employment law. Inasmuch as New Labour has adopted many of these policies then it can be presumed to have accepted their neoliberal underpinnings. Moreover, New Labour's policies owe much to neoliberalism. Wedderburn's exposition of the relationship between the writings of Hayek and the policy of Conservative governments, 1979–88, is utilised and extended to display the continuity and distinctiveness of New Labour's policy on industrial relations and employment law in relation to its Conservative predecessors. New Labour's neoliberal assumptions and values are evaluated. The conclusion argues for a fundamental rebuttal of New Labour's values as an integral component of a campaign to re-establish trade union rights and liberties, and effective employment protection."

Other possible citations from quite a broad range of academic journals and books, most of which are of reasonable authority and reliability(found by following the references cited in the above article) might include: Crouch, C. (2007), 'From Labour Legislation and Public Policy towards a Flexible Labour Market: The Ambiguous Privatization of a Policy Area', Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, 23/24, 233–250.

Davies, P. and M. Freedland (2007), Towards a Flexible Labour Market: Labour Legislation and Regulation since the 1990s (Oxford, Oxford University Press).

Denham, A. and M. Garnett (2001), 'From "Guru" to "Godfather": Keith Joseph, "New" Labour and the British Conservative Tradition', Political Quarterly, 72, 1, 97−106. Links

Edmonds, J. (2006), 'Positioning Labour Closer to Employers: The Importance of the Labour Party's Business 1997 Manifesto', Historical Studies in Industrial Relations, 22, 85–107

Gamble, A. (2006), 'Two Faces of Neo-liberalism', in R. Robinson (ed.), The Neo-liberal Revolution: Forging the Market State (Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan)

Shaw, E. (2007), Losing Labour's Soul: New Labour and the Blair Government 1997–2007 (London, Routledge).

Smith, P. and G. Morton (2006), 'Nine Years of New Labour: Neoliberalism and Workers' Rights', British Journal of Industrial Relations, 44, 3, 401–420.

Wilkinson, F. (2007), 'Neo-liberalism and New Labour Policy: Economic Performance, Historical Comparisons and Future Prospects', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 31, 6, 817–843.

Clift, Ben and Tomlinson, Jim (2007) Complexity constraint and New Labour's putative neo-liberalism: a reply to Colin Hay. British Journal of Political Science, Vol.37 (No.2). pp. 378-381.

'Britain's Neo-Liberal State': http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/email/britain-s-neo-liberal-state

New Labour’s leaders, as Simon Jenkins has documented in Thatcher and Sons, continued the core twin principles of Thatcher’s regime: the intensification of centralised executive authority and the cultivation of an elite order at ease with a politics focused on winners, wealth and corporate logic - a neo-liberal regime.

Daniels G; McIlroy J (eds) (2009) Trade Unions in a Neoliberal World; British Trade Unions under New Labour. Routledge, UK

New Statesman (Martin Jacques): The Hunger for Renewal http://www.newstatesman.com/uk-politics/2009/04/labour-party-neoliberalism

"The Labour Party that capitulated so completely to neoliberalism is exhausted."

Fullbrook: Economics and Neo-Liberalism http://www.paecon.net/Fullbrook/EconomicsandNeoliberalism.pdf

"Neoliberalism is the ideology of our time. And of New Labour and Tony Blair."

David Hill, who argues that 'Third Way' is a gloss which is intended to disguise Labour's Neo-Liberalism: http://www.ieps.org.uk/PDFs/newlaboursneoliberal.pdf

However, in its other major policies, too, neo-liberal policies of marketisation, privatisation, hierarchicalisation of social and welfare benefits and increasing levels of economic and racialised social class differentiation are evident, suppressing, distorting and dominating the social democratic elements of its policy. Such neo-liberal policies include: • privatisation (such as of Air Traffic Control); • PFI (Private Finance Initiative) which gives eventual private ownership of health, education and other public and publicly funded services to private capital (discussed by Richard Hatcher at this Conference and in Hatcher 2001); steadfast opposition to overwhelming public demand for the re-nationalisation of the Railways and track in the UK; • fiscal/taxation and low minimum wage/ high `fat cat' salary policy; • attempts to reduce compliance with the workers' rights in the European Social Chapter; • overall government policies resulting in increasing racialised social class inequalities in income and living conditions (see Hill, 1999b; Hill and Cole, 2001; Hill, Sanders and Hankin, 2001; Rahman et al,2001). However, while recognising that disarticulations do occur, the conclusion from the evidence of this paper is that New Labour education policy is congruent with, and an important constituent part of, the overall neo-liberal ideological thrust of state policy under New Labour.

Daily Telegraph writer: http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/davidlindsey/100012972/the-postal-workers-are-fighting-for-britain/

"Well, with the connivance of New Labour and the Cameroons in general, and of Peter Mandelson in particular, the essentially or entirely foreign forces of global capitalism and the EU are marching in with a view to destroying the Royal Mail. .... Meanwhile, the “free” marketeers seriously propose privatising something that has never been in the private sector, having been in what would now be called public ownership ever since it was created by Charles II in 1660, and representing the most significant direct link between the monarchy and every household, business, organisation and institution in the land. Nothing could better indicate how utterly unconservative the “free” market ideology really is. Neoliberal economics, a total disregard for our heritage and institutions, and European federalism: all of a piece, of course.

The Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/sep/23/new-labour-gordon-brown-election

3m votes melted away at the 2001 election, when Blair began his crusade to privatise public services. The largest group were working-class voters losing out to the corporate-tailored, cheap-labour policies that became New Labour's hallmark. Of course Brown shares responsibility for all that as co-architect of a now discredited neoliberal project – and New Labour's failure to deliver for many of its supporters is the crucial missing element in the minister's account of the party's unpopularity. But it's also what Blairites disastrously want to return to. The Times: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article6857714.ece Mr Brown would probably derive most enjoyment from the fury a Blair presidency would induce in the Conservative leadership. Ironically, the only politicians more horrified at the prospect are old-style European socialists, who dread a “neo-liberal” axis, of the newly reappointed President of the European Commission, José Manuel Barroso, and Mr Blair.

The Socialist: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/articles/8169

The merger of government departments, with the all powerful Lord Mandelson now being responsible for universities and business, highlights New Labour's intention to intensify the marketisation process in universities.

Kamran Mofid: http://www.selvesandothers.org/article16487.html

Where I differ with Peter Mandelson is that trade and financial globalisation also has a very dark side which he seems to ignore by not highlighting them in his piece. The ’one size fits all” Anglo-Saxon economic strategy — obsessed with economic reform, an ever-expanding free-market liberalism, structural adjustment policies, privatisation, and deregulation — has been a global tragedy. It would be an affront to our humanity and decency to ignore this. It would be great if Peter Mandelsom can, in the interest of the common good, bring himself to admit that, market fundamentalism has failed, as it has broken all the fabric of our society and communities everywhere in the world

Tom Macfarlane: http://tommacfarlane.co.uk/neoliberalism_and_governments_management_of_its_discontents.html New Statesman: http://www.newstatesman.com/uk-politics/2009/08/luton-town-labour-local-home

“[The speech] disguised New Labour's absolute commitment to neoliberal capitalism. Brown, Blair and Mandelson were all about promoting neoliberalism, dissolving the state, unpicking the postwar settlement and letting the market rule.

the Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/sep/29/labour-conference-gordon-brown-speech

We gloried in a neoliberal economic policy when it gave us the boom," says one Brown aide. "We celebrated the freedom of people in the City to make grotesque sums of money when we believed it would pay for what we wanted to do.

or this from October's edition of Labour periodical the New Statesman: http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2009/10/council-housing-social-glynn

neoliberal housing policy has been extremely socially divisive, driving a wedge between homeowners and social tenants. Sarah Glynn's timely book, Where the Other Half Lives, focuses on the impact of these policies on lower income housing, and explores the crucial question of what happened to those who were left behind by long-term inflationary rises in property prices. As the valorisation of owner-occupation as the normal tenure for all became a point of cross-party consensus, council housing was relegated to the status of a "residual" tenure, a sponge which was there to soak up the poorest and most socially disadvantaged members of society. Under Thatcher and Blair, council housing lost the utopian impetus which it had under Attlee and Bevan, when it was seen as a public service available to citizens of all classes, and not simply as emergency housing for the dispossessed. In 2009 - after twelve years of Labour rule - the boundary of the council estate is the frontier of the deepest social division in Britian, a dividing line which separates the property-owning majority from a lumpen underclass afflicted by drug addiction, crime and unemployment.

Here's a very academic article by some of the country's leading geographers which while it is pretty opaque in it's style, still unequivocally places labour ideology in the class of 'neoliberalism: http://www.brynmawr.edu/Acads/GSSW/schram/antipode.pdf in it May, from the University of London, Cloke from the University of Bristol and Johnsen from the University of York say:

in this article we continue the task of fleshing out understandings of the neoliberalisation of Western welfare state regimes with an examination of changes to British welfare policy since the election of the New Labour government in May 1997. Put simply, we suggest that there has been a significant change in the nature and form of welfare policies and practices in Britain since the election of New Labour. Such a change sits within the broad chronology proposed by Peck and Tickell 2002), but suggests the need to complement broad brush analyses of the changing face of neoliberalism with a closer reading of the different ways in which the neoliberal state has sought to intervene in the social field within a period of roll-out neoliberalism.

Gerry Hassan, who is "a writer, commentator and policy analyst and author and editor of over a dozen books on Scottish and UK politics, the latest of which is ‘The Modern SNP: From Protest to Power' published by Edinburgh University Press", someone who is described in the Scottish Herald as "Scotland's main public intellectual" here writing for 'Open Democracy':

For the last thirty years our political classes and received wisdom in business and media through Thatcherism and then Blairism/Brownism has told us that a new age is upon us. This required us to accept ‘change' as a new mantra and the fact that ‘the status quo wasn't an option'. Their idea of change turned out to be a very narrow and doctrinaire one, of letting markets be freer, keeping business regulation and taxes to a minimum, and emphasising that people had to look after themselves more and more....The sacred cows which brought us to economic near-meltdown are still revered. The economic neo-liberalism which informed so much of the recent past is still the only philosophy around, and unrepentantly extending its grip over social and cultural life. None of the main UK parties are prepared to make the link between the economic and political crisis, and see them as part of the same crisis

http://www.opendemocracy.net/blog/ourkingdom/gerry-hassan/2009/10/11/why-it-is-a-real-time-for-change here's an Irish point of view: http://bjsw.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/38/2/270 Paul Michael Garrett is the author of Remaking Social Work with Children and Families (2003) and Social Work and Irish People in Britain (2004). He works at the National University of Ireland in Galway. He says in this article "How to be Modern: New Labour’s Neoliberal Modernity and the Change for Children programme" published in the British Journal of Social Work:

In England the New Labour administration is seeking to embed a ‘transformational reform agenda’ within children’s service. Social workers, among others appear, however, to be wary of the agenda which is now rhetorically rooted in the Every Child Matters: Change for Children programme (CfC). The main social work practice elements of this programme are associated with the introduction of a Children’s Index, a multidisciplinary Common Assessment Framework and the role of Lead Professional. In terms of the promotion of this programme, the government has maintained that the focal aim is to create a ‘modern’ children’s workforce. However, the entire ‘transformational agenda’ can be interpreted as reflecting New Labour’s neoliberal modernity

http://www.francisboutle.co.uk/pages.php?cID=6&pID=36 according to this review recently published in the Western Mail of 'Clear Red Water: Welsh Devolution and Socialist Politics' by Nick Davies & Darren Williams

Davies and Williams argue that Welsh Labour is facing a choice - it can either revert to being little more than a branch office of New Labour in London, supporting neo-liberal economic policies, or it can further its drive to forge a more radical path. But to do that, it needs to work with allies on the political left.

Riversider (talk) 10:26, 11 January 2010 (UTC)

Rebuttal

What we are looking for here is to find a source or sources, which is reliable, verifiable and so on, which objectively makes a case that the Labour Party as a whole is accurately described as "neoliberal". One of the fundamental problems is that the term "neoliberal" is used to describe something so vague and nebulous that it is very difficult to be precise about what is and is not included. An observer must also distinguish between issues on which there was a genuine choice of policy, and issues on which the realities of the world deny a choice to any Government no matter what it would prefer to do given a free hand.

A second fundamental problem is (as I point out above) the frequent use of 'neoliberal' as a pejorative: typically by those on the far left who wish to pin an undesired label on those of the more moderate left, as part of an agenda to detach supporters from any more moderate group so that they will in future adhere to a more extreme politics. See Questionable sources. It is no place to say whether this is a legitimate argument, but it is not appropriate to use such sources to substantiate applying this label as a neutral description - especially in an infobox where there is no room for context to be applied.

We can dismiss Paul Smith almost immediately: the end of the abstract shows that he is writing from a position not primarily of analysis but of starting a campaign, a position which removes him from a truly objective analysis. The list of references from his article are worthless in this debate: you have not read them and you tell us nothing.

We then come to Gerry Hassan and Anthony Barnett's article for OpenDemocracy, which is fairly characterised as a polemic with academic citations. Both the authors are a well known critics of the Labour Party. A single quote from Martin Jacques, a former editor of the Communist Party of Great Britain's Marxism Today is hardly a firm source to rely on. Edward Fullbrook is explicitly trying to lay out a strategy to change the Labour Party; his website makes it clear he specifically disagrees with neoclassical economics. Sam Blacketer (talk) 13:05, 11 January 2010 (UTC)

(not completed)

Comment on Rebuttal

Interesting that you dismiss Paul Smith on the grounds that he argues for "a campaign to re-establish trade union rights and liberties, and effective employment protection". Are people who believe in Trade Union rights now universally classed as non-authoritative in their analysis of the Labour Party?

You rule out Hassan because he is "a critic of the Labour Party" - so presumably only people who agree entirely with whatever the Labour Party is currently saying are qualified to comment on Labour's ideology?

You rule out Jaques because he wrote for 'Marxism Today', (a periodical that in the 1980s could in fact claim to be one of the originators of the theoretical framework that underpinned the New Labour 'project'.) Jacques was co-founder of the think tank 'Demos', which is highly influential in New Labour policies, making him a strongly authoritative source.

You rule out Fulbrook because he disagrees with neo-classical economics. Since neo-classical economics got us into the credit crunch, perhaps he has a point. Who else are you going to rule out on spurious grounds?

Riversider (talk) 13:43, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
This is very annoying. I wrote a response an hour ago and it was submitted and accepted but ::has now disappeared in the software. Your comments on Paul Smith and Edward Fullbrook bring me to question whether you are really debating how to improve the article about the Labour Party, or engaging in a wider political debate. I suspect that many of those who are arguing for the inclusion of 'neoliberal' as an ideology of the Labour Party are not primarily motivated by the fact that they think it an accurate and informative description (although they do), but by a wish to see such a damaging label firmly affixed for reasons of their own politics.
The reason for holding critics of the Labour Party as poor sources (which is a position thoroughly grounded in Wikipedia policy: see above) is that it is a one-sided debate. You can produce lots of sources of people to the left of the Labour Party arguing that it is neoliberal and that this is a bad thing. If 'neoliberalism' was an accurate and neutral description of the Labour Party, then you would be able to produce in addition:
  • Sources from people who support the Labour Party, accepting that the Labour Party was neoliberal and arguing that it was a good thing.
  • Sources from right-wing academics arguing that the Labour Party is neoliberal.
I see none of these in evidence. What we have here is a highly partial presentation and that will not do for an infobox where one cannot explain the context. Sam Blacketer (talk) 15:27, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
The problem here is that Labour is a political party. By definition it will have a layer of activists who agree with it entirely. Anyone else who disagrees in whole or part with it's programme becomes classed as a 'critic', and therefore under your definition becomes an unsafe source. Of course the activists themselves are also highly partial, and just as 'unsafe' as sources. You suggest that my comments on Fulbrook disqualify me from being able to edit - You wish to rule him out because he disagrees with neo-classical economics. Agreement with the tenets of neo-classical economics is one of the defining characteristics of neo-liberalism, so you seem to be arguing that only neo-liberals can comment on Labour's ideology!
In the list of references are included commentators from the New Statesman (a totally pro-labour publication), the Guardian (which has been very influential in Labour's history), the Times and the Telegraph (representing the right wing POV you assert is absent from the list). The weight of published sources relating to Labour is overwhelmingly that it is neo-liberal rather than democratic socialist (if we exclude publications issued by the Labour Party itself, and even here, the word 'socialism' is one that is hidden in the attic like a mad aunt and only wheeled out on very rare occasions.)
The only fair way to represent the various schools of understanding of Labour's ideology, is to represent them all - excluding 'neo-liberalism' because Labour activists do not like it, despite the weight of published sources would go against all the guidelines of Wikipedia. Riversider (talk) 15:56, 11 January 2010 (UTC)
You asked from a quote from a Labour supporter, who argues that Labour neo liberalism is a 'good thing' I would wish to refer you to Freeden's article 'The ideology of New Labour' in 'The New Labour Reader' (2003) edited by Chadwick and Heffernan (if this is not an authoritative source for this topic, I despair of EVER finding one).

In this he argues that New Labour borrows from a variety of ideological traditions, but is closest to, and borrows most significantly from Liberalism. He concludes

"The ideological map of New Labour now looks something like this. It is located between the three great Western ideological traditions - liberalism, conservatism and socialism - though it is not equidistant from them all. Liberalism has always concentrated on the pursuit of liberty, the development of individuality, on human rationality, on open ended progress, on limiting state power, but also on some notion of the common good. From that ideology, Labour has extracted ideas concerning private choice, the enhancement of human capacities, the furtherance of legitimate individual interests, a respect for individual rights and a concern with human well-being pursued in part by a welfare state but in the main through the exercise of personal responsibility underpinned by what Blair identifies as "talent and ambition... aspiration and achievement".

QED.Riversider (talk) 18:22, 11 January 2010 (UTC)

And here's another view from the right, Tim Worstall, blogging on the Adam Smith Institute website and calling for neo-liberalism to carry on strong: [1]

- We're told that the disastrous collapse of all we hold most dear over the past couple of years has put the final nail in the coffin of neo-liberalism. You know, this free markets, light regulation, lots of trade and economic liberty that we here at the ASI uphold. We've even been told that the experiment, started when Maggie Thatcher came to power, has failed, that having been tried it has been found wanting, and now it's time for the clever people to tell us all what to do. - - Hmm. - - Oxford Economics says that gross domestic product per person has fallen to £22,700 on average in 2009, down from £23,000 in 2005 after adjusting for inflation – a fall of 1.3%. In Labour's first two terms GDP per head grew 12.6% and 8.3% respectively. - - Sorry, what's that? The worst economic crisis since whenever has simply shaved off the last few years of economic expansion? We're all living in the gross and absolute poverty that we were immiserated by those four short years ago? - - So, err, what was GDP per capita in 1979 then? From here, it was £11,500 and in 2005 it was £19,842*. So that's a 73% rise in general living standards (no, GDP isn't perfect for this but it will do) over the time period of our experiment in neo-liberalism.

-

-


While this is a blog, it is hosted by the Adam Smith Institute, a highly authoritative organisation on matters related to neo-liberalism. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Riversider2008 (talkcontribs) 14:43, 12 January 2010 (UTC)

This is a pretty clearly worded abstract: Wilkinson F. Neo-Liberalism and New Labour Policy: Economic Performance, Historical Comparisons and Future Prospects, Cambridge Journal of Economics (2007): [2]

The paper analyses 19760/70s inflation, the replacement of Keynesian with neo-liberal economic policy, and the post-1979 decline in inflation. It is shown that the fall in inflation is explained by trends in import prices rather than by switches in economic policy. However, New Labour's conversion to neo-liberalism means that no alternative to it is on political offer, despite returns to pre-Keynesian policy-making, the success of which will depend on price policies based on an understanding of the institutional roots of inflation.

Will you now argue that the Cambridge Journal of Economics is not an authoritative source? Riversider (talk) 15:04, 12 January 2010 (UTC)

Social Democracy and Sparrowhawks references

Sparrowhawk has added no less than 4 references to the main article which he believes back up the assertion that Labour is a social democratic party. In fact at least two of these sources argue the precise opposite - that Labour is not social democratic enough. One by David Coates (who as far as I know is no relation to Ken Coates) is a review of three sources and concludes:

What drives Labour Party politics, and gives it its inner logic, is the dynamic between these internal struggles and a set of powerful external constraints. The Labour Party has always been internally divided between positions now characterized as ‘old’ and ‘new’. It has ‘always been a broad coalition of two main groupings, two projects, two political universes: a coalition of social reformists keen to subordinate the power of private capital to progressive social ends, and bourgeois radicals keen to modernize the local manufacturing base’ (Coates, 1996, 68); and it has always united those conflicting groups around a common faith in the capacity of the parliamentary state to be used for either set of purposes. But in power the Party’s leaders have regularly experienced the limited capacity of the parliamentary state to effect progressive social change. In particular, they have regularly found that ‘no matter how many cocktail offensives’ they launched, they could never ‘pull UK private capital round just by the force of arguments alone’ (Coates, 1996, 70). Instead, in office they have regularly faced both material and ideological forms of resistance to any radicalism in their programme, resistance to which they have regularly succumbed, not least because their politics have always lacked any mechanism for building a strong counter-hegemonic culture from which effectively to resist and overcome conservative forces

Another by David Bailey argues that social democrats have abandoned their faith in social democracy, and asks 'why not' reject neo-liberalism and return to social democratic values:

whilst ‘traditional’ social democracy may have experienced certain economic, political and ideological obstacles in recent decades, the decision by social democratic practitioners to abandon their faith in these obstacles only confirms a lack of continued commitment to ‘traditional’ social democracy. This decision cannot in itself be explained in terms of the factors that prompted it to be made. Put differently, in order for ‘traditional’ social democratic actors to decide that the most appropriate response to these contextual changes was to revise ‘traditional’ social democratic principles, there must have been at some point in this process an abandonment of the view that ‘traditional’ social democracy itself was able to provide a suitable response. Put differently still, why not adopt a ‘traditional’ social democratic strategy of macroeconomic demand management as a means to adapt to the internationalization of the political economy? Why not propose ‘traditional’ social democratic policies as a means of building working class identity? Why not seek to reverse the ascendance of neoliberalism with a re-emboldened statement of the necessity of ‘traditional’ social democracy?

Meanwhile, perhaps most tellingly of all Roger Liddle's piece argues that, just as social democracy no longer means greater public ownership, it should also no longer mean greater public expenditure. (Liddle was a key architect of New Labour, and this looks very much like an ideological cover for policies of huge cuts in public expenditure, a key objective of the neo-liberal agenda).

because nationalisation was the right thing in the 1940s, many members of the Labour Party came to equate their socialism with the extension of public ownership. This belief had disastrous consequences for the Party’s unity and electability in the decades that followed. Similarly, we must not two generations later make the same mistake over public expenditure.

and

we need to think of ways we can advance a modern equality agenda without spending public money at all.


The references Sparrowhawk has provided us however do give further strength to Snowded's suggested compromise proposal, for a list of 'ideological currents' within labour which includes labels like 'third way' 'social democratic' and 'neo-liberal' Riversider (talk) 13:58, 15 January 2010 (UTC)

That seems like a logical thing to do. We've done something similar with the Democratic Party page, albeit less formal.--Sparrowhawk64 (talk) 14:33, 15 January 2010 (UTC)

Nu-Labour?

I have been trying, without success, to determine the etymology of the perjorative "Nu-Labour" or "NuLabour." Obviously it refers to New Labour. But why "Nu?" 79.74.254.179 (talk) 14:25, 18 January 2010 (UTC)

Conspiracy theorists will tell you that 'nu' is the 13th letter of the Greek alphabet, and that 13 is a highly significant number to hidden groups like the illuminati. I think the real reason is more likely to be that writing 'Nu' instead of 'New' is a way of implying something artifial, ersatz, catchphrasey. Trouble is, I can't find any authoritative sources for either of these explanations, so neither meet Wikipedia requirements. Riversider (talk) 09:16, 25 January 2010 (UTC)

Evolved from prominent blogs such as Guido Fawkes - shorthand/play on words for 'Zanu-Labour', referring to the policies, tactics and results of the Labour party, in particular relating to civil liberties. 217.158.248.66 (talk) 16:11, 2 March 2010 (UTC)

Labour MP on Neoliberalism

Here's what Colin Burgon (a Labour MP) says about Neo-liberalism in Labour:

Labour's coalition of voters has been eroded by neoliberal policies that have seen a race to the bottom with flexible labour markets and a failure to give proper protection for agency workers, by the promotion of personal debt to mitigate against the transfer of wealth from labour to capital, by the extension of the market into wider spheres of society and, of course, by the foreign policy misadventure in Iraq.

I'm now waiting for someone to tell me Labour MPs are not 'authoritative sources' on the ideology of the Labour Party. Perhaps they will listen to Tribune, a longstanding publication of a particular wing of the Labour Party which says

Effective leadership challenges have to be ideologically driven. The feeble attempts against Brown come from technocratic politicians who have no ideology, apart from the desire to continue with the embrace of neo-liberal capitalism.

Riversider (talk) 14:36, 18 January 2010 (UTC)

I thought this discussion was over? --Welshsocialist (talk) 16:22, 26 January 2010 (UTC)

I wish it was! if you check the article history you'll see IPs are still trying to delete the 'neoliberal' tag, without checking the talk page - I suppose though that you're right to suggest that adding even more evidence to the talk page isn't going to make much difference to this behaviour. BTW, on the subject of the Welsh Labour Party being a bastion of working class social democracy, did you attend this £1000 a plate fundraiser for the WLP?Riversider (talk) 16:51, 26 January 2010 (UTC)

A fundraise by a private indivisual is neither here nor there. The party needs money to fight elections. It don't have the millionaire backers of the Tories, and if it was one set up by the actual Welsh Labour Party, the tickets would have been much cheaper. And back to the matter at hand, if the IPers are reverting without looking at the talk page, then it don't make sense posting here. Maybe a bit in the info box telling them that it is sorted and to read the talk page for more info would be better? --Welshsocialist (talk) 16:28, 27 January 2010 (UTC)

Yes, I believe you WS that those attending this £1000 a head fundraiser are not millionaires, but single parents and low paid workers from the Cardiff council estates. Seriously though, I'm hoping that we've gathered together enough evidence to stop anyone who actually reads talk pages from rving this edit, and there's little else we can do to stop those that never bother to check the talk page or consider the evidence. Incidentally, I've uncovered a few positive uses of the term 'neo-liberalism' now, including a particularly strong one explaining how Fairtrade uses neo-liberal capitalist market mechanisms to help the third world poor, and this has led to the introductory paragraph of neoliberalism being rewritten to remove the false assertion that the term is only used by left-wing critics of neoliberalism. Riversider (talk) 15:47, 2 February 2010 (UTC)

SNP win in Scottish election and Blair's resignation - slightly misleading??

Under the heading "In government (1997-present)" are the sentences "Significantly, the party lost power in Scotland to a minority Scottish National Party government in 2007. Shortly after this, Tony Blair resigned as Prime Minister and was replaced by his Chancellor, Gordon Brown."

This could easily be misinterpreted as suggesting that Blair resigned because of the SNP's win, which I don't believe was the case - should this be rephrased to avoid confusion? 129.67.63.75 (talk) 22:59, 11 February 2010 (UTC)

A fair point - he had previously announced in September 2006 that he would quit within a year. I'll attempt to reword. Cheers Fishiehelper2 (talk) 10:35, 12 February 2010 (UTC)

Time for Protection?

I've noticed an increase in POV edits by IPs that ignore the cited articles and the discussions here on the talk page. I suspect as the General Election draws nearer, the volume of such unhelpful edits will increase. Is it time for the page to be given some kind of protection, at least until the election is over? Riversider (talk) 10:41, 22 February 2010 (UTC)

I think that it will have to eventually happen sooner or later, with all the main parties pages. Some people seem to mistakingly believe that vandalising wikipedia pages will somehow affect the outcome of an election, or at least like to take some misguided anger out on Wikipedia pages. --Welshsocialist (talk) 18:15, 23 February 2010 (UTC)

Socialism and Centrist

Never thought I would post this, but can you really say that Labour is purely socialist? I would argue that democratic socialism and socialism are different things with different approaches, and if socialism is to be an "idealogical current" then, prehaps it should be changed to democratic socialism (which is already mentioned in anycase). Also should centrist be in the idealogy box, when it is a position and is already covered in that, and by the idealogical term "third way". --Welshsocialist (talk) 18:18, 23 February 2010 (UTC)

"Centre-left", as the article currently stands, is a joke. It is a self-described socialist party. The Lib/Dems are Centre-Left. For God's sake there are open Trotskyites that are not only members but part of the leadership. Troskyites, for the uninitiated, means communists. 72.209.63.226 (talk) 17:06, 16 March 2010 (UTC)
I don't think you can call Labour trotskite, or communist and you would struggle to find any reiable evidence to back that up.--Welshsocialist (talk) 16:56, 24 March 2010 (UTC)
The fact that trotskyists exist within the party doesn't mean that the party itself (as an organisation) doesn't take a centre-left stance on policy issues, etc. If anything labour are more centrist than centre-left, not more left than centre-left... rogue_lettuce (talk) 17:21, 30 March 2010 (UTC)

Social Liberalism

A number of reliable sources associate Social Liberalism with the Labour Party, for example Remaking the Labour Party: From Gaitskell to Blair (T Jones, 1996), The three educational ideologies of the British Labour Party, 1997-2001 (L Paterson - Oxford Review of Education, 2003) and Can fair be efficient? New Labour, Social Liberalism and British economic policy (S Buckler, DP Dolowitz - New Political Economy, 2004). Is this a minority view, or does it have wider currency? AJRG (talk) 18:59, 30 March 2010 (UTC)

Would you provide some quotations from those references so that a judgement can be made? Social Liberalism is normally aligned with the social democrats. --Snowded TALK 07:14, 31 March 2010 (UTC)
  1. Remaking the Labour Party: From Gaitskell to Blair (T Jones, 1996) (pp117-8)
    For the democratic state which Kinnock favoured was one that involved, as he told the 1985 Party Conference, "...the collective contribution of the community for the purpose of individual liberty throughout the community". This was a significant emphasis because, in spite of his repudiation of social democracy and its revisionist precursors, those interrelated ideas - positive freedom and an enabling state - which could themselves both be traced back to the social liberalism of both T .H. Green and the Edwardian New Liberals, formed the intellectual basis of the movement away from traditional socialist positions that Kinnock was to complete after 1987.
  2. The three educational ideologies of the British Labour Party, 1997-2001 (L Paterson - Oxford Review of Education, 2003) (abstract)
    There are three strands of Labour practice in education: a renovated version of social liberalism, a form of weak developmentalism, and a type of new social democracy that is in the mainstream of European thinking on the left.
  3. Can fair be efficient? New Labour, Social Liberalism and British economic policy (S Buckler, DP Dolowitz - New Political Economy, 2004)
    The title makes the connection. AJRG (talk) 09:55, 31 March 2010 (UTC)

I think these sources sound reiable, academic and reasonable enoguh. If sources are enough to get neo-liberalism included hich is far more questionable to be included. Labour has brought forward a lot of social liberal policies (although that could be more due to the party being social democtatic/democratic socialist than socially liberal)--Welshsocialist (talk) 14:28, 31 March 2010 (UTC)

There was a wide body of material for neo-liberalism and its a specific economic policy. Here the first quote says that some of the ideas that Kinnock favored can be traced back to social Liberalism. That is not enough to say that the Labout Party has a social liberal ideology, many people have been quoting as influencing individual labour politicians. Ideas can be traced back to marxism, but the party does not have a maxist ideology. The second quote relates to education policy and is again weak, it qualifies the phrase with "renovated" and sees it as only one strand. The third is the weakest, a title could just as well be describing a contrast between the two. This is original research I'm afraid, inputing an ideology from indirect sources. --Snowded TALK 18:14, 31 March 2010 (UTC)
The claim that Labour has a social liberal ideology is made explicitly in New Labour's Ideology: A Reply to Michael Freeden by Buckler and Dolowitz (see below). Perhaps you've forgotten the Militant Tendency? If Labour didn't have a Marxist ideology it could describe itself in its constitution as social democratic instead of democratic socialist. Since the Infobox already contains an entry for ideological currents, it seems strange to complain that social liberalism is only one strand. In a broad church, such as the Labour Party, of course it is. AJRG (talk) 14:45, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Theorizing the third way: New Labour and social justice (S Buckler, DP Dolowitz - Journal of Political Ideologies, Volume 5, Issue 3 October 2000 , pages 301 - 320 )
A reading of John Rawls's liberal theory of justice is used as a means of characterizing New Labour's general ideological approach; the implications are then traced through to the policy level and a correspondence between Rawlsian liberalism and New Labour's agenda is established. On this basis, it is argued that New Labour has adopted a 'social liberal' position, emphasizing procedural fairness over distributive patterns, which can be viewed as a departure both from traditional 'social democracy' and from the 'neo-liberalism' of the recent right.
New Labour and Public Opinion: The Third Way as Centrism (P Norris, New Labour: Progressive Future, 2001)
Understood as an ideological project the intellectual origins of the so-called third way are open to different interpretations: as the adoption of 'soft' Thatcherism; as a return to the early roots of social liberalism; or as a genuinely new reworking of social democratic values
The Party of European Socialists (PES) and European Employment Policies: From "Eurokeynesianism" to "Third Way policies"? (A Aust - workshop “Third Ways in Europe” European Consortium for Political Research - Joint Sessions, Grenoble, 6-11 April 2001)
The Schröder-Blair paper reduces the "two-pillar strategy" of the Larsson report to a one-pillar strategy consisting of investments in human capital, increased competition and structural adaptation. This represents a strategic variant which I have called "adaptation". It is essentially some kind of social liberalism. AJRG (talk) 20:03, 31 March 2010 (UTC)
Well the first of those is a little better (the reference to Rawls) the others are very poor. One references "roots" which again requires some form of OR to draw the conclusion. The second references a paper by two EUropean politicians in a European context so is not relevant. Its no good just to do a google search and find examples of terms being used in the same context you know. So at the moment we have one journal reference that argues that New Labour has adopted a social liberal position; not enough to say that the Labour Party has a social liberal ideology. --Snowded TALK 20:09, 31 March 2010 (UTC)
There isn't any doubt that the Labour Party has early roots in social liberalism. That is, after all, its history - not least in Wales. AJRG (talk) 14:45, 3 April 2010 (UTC)

We need to make clear that social liberalism is not the most prominent ideology of the party, or even one of the most prominent. However, reputable sources do agree that it is one component among many, and I think it deserves to be included in the infobox.UBER (talk) 20:12, 31 March 2010 (UTC)

Well so far I can only see one citation which even gets close to supporting that position. We were far more vigorous in respect of neo-liberalism --Snowded TALK 20:14, 31 March 2010 (UTC)
I see several that make that point. The quotation from the Norris book makes the point almost painfully explicit.UBER (talk) 20:17, 31 March 2010 (UTC)
Well you really need to go through them rather than just assert a position (see my comment above). The Norris quote has material that should be included in the body of the article related to third way but it does not make the point explicit, it says that the Third Way MAY ("open to different..." be a return to the ROOTS of social liberalism. --Snowded TALK 09:14, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
A third way in social security reform or fractured social citizenship? (R Lister - Risk and citizenship: key issues in welfare, 2001)
Blair's emphasis on responsibilities reflects an ideological eclecticism which draws on a number of influences, including popular communitarianism, Christian Socialism and social liberalism (Deacon 1997; Beer 1998; Freeden 1999).
New Labour (S Driver, L Martell - 2006, p 12, ISBN 0-7456-3330-7)
Blair and Brown believed - and this is what really united them - that Labour could reform its politics and its policies without compromising its fundamental principles. The party could draw on its stock of political traditions - ethical socialism, Christian socialism, social liberalism, revisionist social democracy - and values - equality, social justice - and rework them to suit the contemporary world. AJRG (talk) 20:48, 31 March 2010 (UTC)
So we add in Christian socialism and revisionist social democracy as well do we? This really makes the point, the fact that various people are influenced by things does not make it an ideology within the party. The quotes here all seem examples of googlesearchitus, rather than scholarly consideration--Snowded TALK 09:06, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
The ideology of the Labour Party has swung back and forth throughout its history. The social liberalism of Beveridge was the ideology enacted by Nye Bevan as the Welfare State and the social liberalism of Keynes has been the ideology of Gordon Brown's response to the recent credit crisis. AJRG (talk) 16:59, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Social democracy, British-style (R Ladrech - Contemporary Politics, Volume 8, Issue 2 January 2002, pages 145 - 150)
... the transformation of Labour into New Labour went beyond social democracy, as understood by Pierson and many others, and instead has arrived at the doorstep of social liberalism. The analyses of Panitch and Leys, and Heath, Jowell and Curtice would seem to suggest that there might be something in this characterization. AJRG (talk) 09:25, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
See point about googlesearchitis, have you read any of these books you are referencing? --Snowded TALK 09:31, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Any material lacking a reliable source may be removed, but whether and how quickly this should happen depends on the material and the overall state of the article. Editors might object if you remove material without giving them time to provide references. It has always been good practice to make reasonable efforts to find sources oneself that support such material, and cite them. AJRG (talk) 09:50, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
At the risk of being accused of 'googlesearchitis' I carried out a google battle between "New Labour" "Neo-Liberalism" and "New Labour" "Social Liberalism". As you can see, neo-liberalism was used on at least one scale of magnitude more than 'social liberalism' as a term to describe New Labour: Google BattleI know this is not definitive for WP purposes, but I find it useful as a means of measuring the relative use of terminology in general discussion. Riversider (talk) 09:57, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
No accusation from me! I think the statement above shows the usefulness and the limits of a google search --Snowded TALK 10:03, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

(ec)I note that you (AJRG) have not answered my question as to whether you have read this material or not. You can show that many ideologies have given rise to the current Labour Party. Those include Marxism, Christian Socialism, Chartism and many others. If you check the discussion on neo-liberalism the citations clearly established that neo-liberalism had been adopted as an economic policy by the labour party, hence its inclusion. It was also very clear that the editor citing the material had read it. This is not the case above, you are establishing intellectual origins and traces, but not adoption. That is the trouble with just searching on key words, you find associations in odd excerpts. --Snowded TALK 10:02, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

Have you read any of it? AJRG (talk) 11:40, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
"Democratic Socialism" beats "Social Liberalism" too, but by nowhere near as much as Neo-Liberalism Google Battle 2Riversider (talk) 10:25, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Political ideology today (Ian Adams - 2001 - Political Science ISBN 0719060206 p105)
The most enduring has been the "Third Way", signifying a middle path between Thatcherism and old Labour. This is still rather vague, but a distinctive outlook can be discerned. In a fact it is less a way between Thatcherism and old Labour so much as a synthesis of elements of Thatcherism with elements of social liberalism, especially in the modern form of communitarianism. AJRG (talk) 11:40, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
I note that there's a long history of disagreement between AJRG and Snowded. I'm going to assume that both editors are here because of a mutual desire to improve the article and that they will behave accordingly. Riversider (talk) 12:55, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
I have a fairly long history on this article, including coming up with the compromise that has sustained itself re neo-liberalism. AJRG has been playing the hound over a range of articles if you check back. He's good on google searches, weak on OR (which is where he originally got upset on an issue on NLP related pages). --Snowded TALK 16:08, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
I am (as you can see from the material I'm collecting). AJRG (talk) 13:07, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

Why Gordon Brown will lose Glasgow East (James MacMillan, Personal View, The Telegraph, 08 Jul 2008)

Brown would like his working-class Scottish base to imagine that he is ill at ease with New Labour's social liberalism.

Ethical socialism (Jon Cruddas and Jonathan Rutherford Soundings issue 44, Spring 2010. p18)

Only by developing our traditions of socialism and social liberalism, in conversation with newer traditions, particularly green politics and a politics that recognises cultural difference, will we be able to build a new hegemonic politics. AJRG (talk) 13:07, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Interesting that you should cite an article by Cruddas and Rutherford. Here's one I came across recently Cruddas and Rutherford on why now is the time for a new socialism

"The recession has dealt a serious blow to the neoliberal orthodoxy. It was the sale of council housing that helped to secure its popular support. In the name of a property owning democracy, the modest economic interests of individuals were aligned with the profit-seeking of financialised capitalism. It was a new kind of popular compact between the market and the individual. A similar compact between the business elite and shareholder value created a tiny super rich elite - and became the unquestioned business model of the era. Its values of self-reliance and entrepreneurialism legitimised market- based welfare and pension reform, the drive to a flexible labour market and the transfer of risk from the state and business to the individual. New Labour entered government in 1997 having accommodated itself to the neo-liberal orthodoxy and with plans to deepen and extend its compact."

"The political fault lines of a new era are starting to take shape. They divide those who believe that privileging the market and individual self-interest is the best way to govern society and those who believe that democracy and society must come before markets. These fault lines cut across party lines and divide them from within: Thatcherite politics versus compassionate Conservatives; market Liberal Democrats versus social Liberal Democrats; neo-liberal New Labour versus social democratic Labour. The pro-market factions of all three main parties have lost credibility and there is now a crisis of political representation."

Seems to me based on this, that Cruddas and Rutherford see the key division in the Labour Party as one between 'neo-liberal' and 'social democratic', which is well reflected in the way that the infobox stands now (though the additional material on Labour neoliberalism has not yet been included in the body of the article). Riversider (talk) 13:24, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

Keir Hardie Memorial Lecture (Jon Cruddas, September 2009)

We celebrate Hardie as the founder of the Labour Party. Yet he also operated within and between variants of liberalism itself- between its radical, individualistic strands and a more collective, social liberalism. Precisely the emerging debate in the Labour Party today.
...
Hobhouse's social liberalism finds modern day counterparts in the ethical socialism of Paul Ricouer and Charles Taylor. AJRG (talk) 14:35, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
AJRG, seems to me from the article's you've cited (and the ones I've produced) that Cruddas is not saying that Labour's ideology is 'social liberalism', but instead he is saying that it should be social liberalism. He is pointing out that the current ideology of Labour is neo-liberal, and is pointing to the credit crunch, to Keir Hardie and to Ricouer and Taylor as reasons for Labour to adopt social liberalism instead. The infobox is there to show what Labour officially claims it's ideology to be (democratic socialism), and how others maybe more accurately describe their ideology (neo-liberalism), but not to describe what labour's ideology should be in the eyes of people who wish to change it back to a social democratic party, like Cruddas. That said, 'social liberalism' could be seen as being used by Cruddas as a synonym for 'social democracy', which is in the infobox. (In the Telegraph article you cite, the term 'social liberalism' is used as a synonym for 'neo-liberalism', adding to the confusion...) Riversider (talk) 15:27, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
I don't subscribe to your "synonym" argument - social democracy, social liberalism and neo-liberalism are different things. Driver and Martell list social liberalism as one of the four political traditions of the labour party. Cruddas and Rutherford call for the development of the traditions of socialism and social liberalism. Not something new, but a re-emphasis of two of the historical traditions. Wasn't it social liberalism that created the NHS and the Welfare State? AJRG (talk) 15:52, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Cruddas and Rutherford DO call for the re-emphasis of labour's social democratic traditions, which implies that they believe that these have been de-emphasised in favour of neo-liberalism. If they are not synonyms, then could you explain what the key ideological differences are between 'social democracy' and 'social liberalism'? Riversider (talk) 16:08, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Very briefly: social democracy is a form of socialism that rejects Marxism; social liberalism is the belief that liberalism should include social justice; and neo-liberalism is a reaction against social liberalism. In practice, social democracy and social liberalism may approach a similar position from different starting points. AJRG (talk) 16:50, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
So far the only evidence for social liberalism is that is part of the context which gave rise to the Third Way or otherwise features in the history of thought. There is nothing so far which establishes it as an ideology. If we took the evidence as it stands then we would end up listing more or less all middle to left political movements of the last 100 years. --Snowded TALK 16:14, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
You might, but some political movements have been more influential than others. Social liberalism is part of the history of the Labour Party, one of its political traditions, and the basis of the Welfare State. AJRG (talk) 16:59, 3 April 2010 (UTC)

Lies, spin and deceit (John Lloyd, Prospect Magazine, 21st October 2006, Issue 127)

Wilson’s reputation for slipperiness arose, in part, from his need to keep together a party that contained powerful currents from Marxism to social liberalism, and depended on support from unions that were increasingly left-led.
...
Blair’s excision, in 1995, of the party’s clause IV (on common ownership) and its replacement with a clause that endorsed the market (unique among left-of-centre parties) marked a move from social democracy towards social liberalism. AJRG (talk) 21:51, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

Third way, phase two (Tony Blair, Prospect Magazine, 20th March 2001, Issue 61)

I want to lay to rest some of the myths around the third way. It is not a third way between conservative and social democratic philosophy. It is social democracy renewed. It is firmly anchored in the tradition of progressive politics and the values which have motivated the democratic left for more than a century. It is a third way for Britain because it represents a third phase of post-war history-following the settlements of 1945 and 1979. It is a third way for the left too. In the last century, the tradition of social liberalism emphasised individual freedom in a market economy. Social democracy used the power of government to advance social justice. The third way works to combine their commitments in a relevant way for the 21st century. AJRG (talk) 07:39, 2 April 2010 (UTC)

New Labour's Ideology: A Reply to Michael Freeden (Steve Buckler and David P. Dolowitz, The Political Quarterly, January 2000, Volume 71, Issue 1, pp102-109)

We shall look first at New Labour's most general statements of principle and seek to show that they reflect a social liberal theoretical position. We shall then draw out some implications of this position for a general, principled, agenda, arguing that New Labour's agenda is consistent with these implications. This argument will be further supported by reference to some of the more particular policy initiatives taken by the New Labour government to date. AJRG (talk) 08:13, 2 April 2010 (UTC)

The Roots of New Labour: Liberalism rediscovered (Samuel H. Beer, The Economist, Feb 7th 1998)

Tony Blair's New Labour offers the nation a choice. His social liberalism, exemplified in British history and honoured in the classics of political thought, distinguishes his views sharply enough from other brands of liberalism to sustain a lively and significant democratic dialogue. His emphasis upon the responsibilities entailed by the opportunities to be opened up by New Labour promises to give a defining purpose to the remodelled welfare state. AJRG (talk) 10:15, 3 April 2010 (UTC)

History of the Labour Party - The Harold Wilson era (Labour Party website)

Labour was returned to office on a platform of modernisation and reform. The party's manifesto, The New Britain, focused on the need for economic and social transformation. In many ways, this is what Wilson's administration achieved. The period was one of openness and social liberalism, with the legalisation of many taboo practices such as divorce, homosexuality and abortion, and the ending of capital punishment. AJRG (talk) 10:35, 3 April 2010 (UTC)

Proposal

Primarily, neoliberalism is a term that should be reserved for right-wing liberal and conservative parties in Latin America, so it's very difficult to justify its inclusion for the Labour Party in Britain. Social liberalism, on the other hand, is very similar to the official social democratic ideology of the party, and in this case it's easier to justify its inclusion. However, I would actually support removing both of these terms if they are going to give us so much heartache. Just leave it at Third Way and social democracy.UBER (talk) 16:15, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

I have a lot of sympathy with that view. However if you check back on the talk page you will see a long discussion on neo-liberalism and a compromise agreement being made. --Snowded TALK 16:17, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Consensus changes in Wikipedia...and often too. I categorically oppose the inclusion of the term "neoliberalism" for the Labour Party. It seems to me such a breathlessly stupid term to apply for this party that I can't imagine how it even got in there in the first place. The best approach seems to be to get rid of all references to liberal ideology, of whatever variation.UBER (talk) 16:20, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Agree, it can and often should, just pointing you to the prior discussion which we should take account of. My personal preference would be to get rid of Third Way as well as that is less of an ideology more of a PR stunt. However it is referenced, and so is neo-liberalism --Snowded TALK 16:22, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
Well so is social liberalism, but we can't seem to agree on that either. I'd be fine removing all three, including Third Way.UBER (talk) 16:23, 1 April 2010 (UTC)
We have to reflect the balance of published sources UBER. The term Neoliberalism has spread from Latin America, and is now widely used as a description of Labour's ideology by academics and political commentators in the UK, and even by some Labour MPs as the references above show. 'Social Liberalism' is a bit of a red herring, it turns up in far fewer published sources as a term, and not as a term to describe the current ideology of the party (though some argue for it's adoption as AJRG's references show). Neoliberalism meets the requirements of WP:V, Social liberalism is far more dubious. The existing compromise is uncomfortable for all concerned, anyone arguing that Labour's current ideology is 'socialist' or 'democratic socialist' would be greeted with derision in most politically aware circles, especially now that Darling has boasted that his cuts in the public sector will be deeper and tougher than Thatchers... Riversider (talk) 16:24, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

I disagree sontrong that anyone stating the fact that Labour is a democratic socialist party would be met with "derision" in most politically aware circles. Maybe only in far left circles, but that is another arguement. I am all for getting rid of Neo-liberalism (as it is doesn't accurately describe Labour's policy or position), aswell as social liberal and prehaps Third Way. Although I am sure many would argue that Third Way is a real idealogy and does encompass the shift towards the centre that Labour undertook during the 1990s. I think that either Social Liberal is included along side neo-liberalism, or that they are both removed. As they are both equally as dubious. --Welshsocialist (talk) 18:40, 1 April 2010 (UTC)

Just trying to assign some sort of liberal label to their ideology seems a little bit odd to me, and even if we were to do it, social liberalism would be more apt. But I agree with Welshsocialist that it's best if we remove both terms.UBER (talk) 00:48, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
I still support removing all references to liberalism, but for now I've replaced neoliberalism with market liberalism, which I think is the more accurate term for what we're trying to say (ie. that Labour has gotten a little too cozy with business groups for a social democratic party). Thoughts on this change? Seems like a good compromise, given that the earlier one produced some confusion.UBER (talk) 01:01, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
This book by N. Scott Arnold says something related to our squabbling on page 3:
Modern liberalism occupies the left-of-center in the traditional political spectrum and is represented by the Democratic Party in the United States, the Labor Party in the United Kingdom etc.
Here we have a fairly reputable source classifying Labour as modern liberal. This one goes a lot further than the others.UBER (talk) 01:19, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
Its worth having a look at the debates on the various articles on liberalism to see just how confusing the situation is. This is compounded by the way in which "liberal" is a generic label in the US with a different history. Uber, you need to stop editing the article while discussion continues. --Snowded TALK 08:47, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
Which Wikipedia policy do you believe yourself to be espousing? AJRG (talk) 09:00, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
That changes should not be made on controversial discussions while debate continues. --Snowded TALK 09:03, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
Which policy are you quoting? AJRG (talk) 09:15, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
I have already responded to you on this point in an over extended discussion above. This is basic 101 wikipedia stuff. --Snowded TALK 09:21, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
Which policy? AJRG (talk) 09:22, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
If it quacks then its a duck--Snowded TALK 09:28, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
No Wikipedia policy supports your position then... How about a Wikipedia guideline? AJRG (talk) 09:33, 2 April 2010 (UTC)

I think that we should concentrate on trying to resolve this dispute over social liberalism and neo-liberalism in the Labour Party rather then start to argue over what is within the rules and policies of Wikipedia. Neo-Liberal was also going to be a controversal inclusion in an idealogy box for a centre-left political party, but it was discussed and a resolution was found, even if it wasn't ideal and has an usual info box. Personally, I do wonder if the social liberalism is not already covered by the social democracy idealogy, since a lot of the believes seem to be the same. --Welshsocialist (talk) 15:50, 2 April 2010 (UTC)

Many of the sources I've quoted above make an explicit distinction between social liberalism and social democracy. AJRG (talk) 16:12, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
There are vast similarities between the two, but they're not quite the same. We seem to have a lot of users in agreement here that neoliberalism does not belong in the infobox. Why, dare I ask, is the article being held hostage by some apparent consensus established a long time ago? I will reiterate again: I reject categorically the inclusion of neoliberalism in the infobox, although I wouldn't be opposed to dropping some line in the body of the article about how some have accused the party of being neoliberal. Failing that, I will start a RFC over this article. Failing that, we'll go to mediation. Simply put, neoliberalism is unacceptable. I urge those supporting this viewpoint to compromise to something reasonable: remove all references to liberalism.UBER (talk) 16:24, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
If anyone is puzzled as to why liberalism has a place in the ideology of the Labour Party, the historical answer is here. The first MPs sponsored by the Trade Unions stood as Liberal-Labour. AJRG (talk) 16:33, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
I understand and acknowledge these facts, but the current infobox makes no distinction between current and historical positions, as does the infobox of, say, the Democratic Party in the US. That could actually be one solution for including both market liberalism and social liberalism. We divide the party's ideological tendencies into Contemporary and Historical, placing social liberalism under the latter camp. How's that sound? I'm just trying to come up with a reasonable compromise here. Seeing neoliberalism in that infobox makes my bloody blood boil, and I'm not even British.UBER (talk) 17:38, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
A distinction between social and fiscal political position might prove useful too. AJRG (talk) 18:26, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
Yes I agree with that. I'll wait a few days to see what people think about these proposals. Hopefully we can come to some sort of reasonable understanding here. I have to stress for the umpteenth time, in a message directed particularly at Snowded, that the current version of the infobox is absolutely unacceptable and will be vigorously changed until it conforms to Wikipedia policies (like this one, for starters).UBER (talk) 18:30, 2 April 2010 (UTC)
You haven't answered the point that I and others have raised - namely the prior talk page discussion and citation record on neoliberalism. At the moment you are just making an assertion. For the record I originally opposed its inclusions, but when I went through the references the citation support was pretty over-wealming. My blood boils that it is the case, but that is a personal opinion about what has happened to the Labour Party and is not relevant, what counts here is citations. A second point here relates to the confusion being made between the political origins of the ideology and/or its leaders and if that ideology is current (the information box). Some material is relevant for the main body in looking at origins, but to be in the info box there needs to be a clear citation to show that it is current that satisfies WP:RS and [[W{:WEIGHT]] --Snowded TALK 20:22, 2 April 2010 (UTC)

Can you provide these citations here? Or give us a direct link to where they can be found? On your last point: you're violating your own standards by ignoring social liberalism, which is clearly supported by numerous reputable sources.UBER (talk) 21:03, 2 April 2010 (UTC)

No, I've followed my own standards. If you look I have given a response to each of the social liberal citations rather than just making a general point. They establish that social liberalism (like many other isms) are part of the evolution of ideas within the Labour Party as our many others which are not mentioned. THey do not establish that the Labour Party has a social liberal stance. It is, as I have said before, the danger of using a google search to associate two terms and it can lead to bad scholarship. --Snowded TALK 05:24, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
See New Labour's Ideology: A Reply to Michael Freeden (Steve Buckler and David P. Dolowitz, The Political Quarterly, January 2000, Volume 71, Issue 1, pp102-109), quoted above. AJRG (talk) 09:18, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Thats about the only one that comes close. However it is published in 2000 (not 2002) and is a response; its an article which is part of a controversy that is a decade old so its not a definitive statement. --Snowded TALK 09:32, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Thanks for the correction to the date (amended above). See also Samuel Beer's article in the Economist. If you have a rebuttal for Buckler and Dolowitz, please add it (with quote) to the sources above. AJRG (talk) 10:23, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
I have responded already--Snowded TALK 11:32, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Reliable sources please. AJRG (talk) 11:34, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
I'm not proposing inclusion of the material, I am doing you the courtesy of responding to the sources your various google searches pop up. --Snowded TALK 11:38, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Without sources, how is that any more than a personal opinion? AJRG (talk) 12:37, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Its not clear if that response is part of your general game or if you genuinely don't understand the point; the pattern of your edits over a range of articles would indicate the former not the latter but I will assume good faith for the moment and explain it again. If material is proposed for inclusion it needs reliable sources to support it. You are proposing inclusion of material and have used google to find multiple references that link contain "social liberalism" and "labour party". I have been through those sources and responded on each one to challenge its relevance (google can be a dangerous thing without knowledge of the field). There is no requirement to produce a source to prove a negative. --Snowded TALK 12:50, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
What authority are you claiming for this assessment? Your assessment of the sources on neoliberalism has been challenged. AJRG (talk) 12:56, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Where an assessment is challenged, then its discussed. 101 stuff this really. I suggest you read the various comments of different editors around the neo-liberal issue they are all on this talk page and you won't need a google search to find them --Snowded TALK 13:06, 3 April 2010 (UTC).
So your assessment of the sources above for social liberalism is no more than your personal opinion? AJRG (talk) 13:23, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
I have provided a commentary on your sources to which I note you have not responded. --Snowded TALK 13:47, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
I was busy finding sources. I've responded now. AJRG (talk) 19:44, 3 April 2010 (UTC)
Well you've been busy finding quotes containing key words, its not the same thing. I can see a couple of responses by you, none to the substantial points. I doubt that Nye Bevan would agree that he was a social liberal, would be interested if you can find anything in In Place of Fear to back that one up! The fact that there is a coincidence of policy between social liberal views on health care and those of a socialist Labour Party doesn't work. Ditto Keynes, on that basis any western government taking a keynsian view can be so labeled which would be absurd. This is rather like our prior disagreement on an NLP related page (the one which gave rise to your extended range of interests). Its OR to make linkages of that nature. Some of your quotes have more weight but those responses don't work. --Snowded TALK 06:40, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
Try and quote me properly - I didn't say that Bevan was a social liberal (though some of the Bevanites might have been). I said that the social liberalism of Beveridge was the ideology enacted by Nye Bevan as the Welfare State. The Labour Party is a broad church, as you mention below. AJRG (talk) 10:30, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
I think I was fair; you continue to make this error of confusing intellectual origins and/or coincidences or common policies as some form of evidence for adoption of social liberalism. The socialism of Bevan game may have used material and ideas that you can find in social liberalism, but that doesn't make him or the post war Labour Government socially liberal. --Snowded TALK 10:46, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
The comment by Norris (above) is pertinent here. The ability to interpret the same policies as expressions of different ideologies has kept the Labour Party (mostly) together over the years. AJRG (talk) 11:07, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
Interesting comment. The history of the Labour Party is fraught by ideological battles and varying forms of entryism. IN the 1930s there was significant common membership with the communist party, CND conflicts, Millitant (I could go on). All good stuff, but the issue is what is the ideology now. --Snowded TALK 11:25, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
The first Trade Union sponsored MPs stood as Liberal-Labour. Samuel Beer, in The Economist (reference above) notes a speech by Tony Blair in which he expressed regret that the decision to form a separate Labour Party had too often resulted in Conservative governments. Pretending that a broad church like the Labour Party has a single ideology is flawed - democratic socialism is an umbrella term. AJRG (talk) 11:51, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
I can't see any editor arguing that it has through its history had a single ideology. In the current day and age democratic socialism is a good umbrella term, especially as the current party has less diversity than of old in large part due to centralised control. --Snowded TALK 12:09, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
Forget it I see them above. I'm going through them now.UBER (talk) 21:05, 2 April 2010 (UTC)