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#GE2010: Escape from Deficitland (v1.0)

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Paul Mason | 10:30 UK time, Sunday, 11 April 2010

Last night, at precisely 21.08 Peter Mandelson emailed the Labour faithful with his "State of the Race Memo #2". It makes clear that Labour has no intention of trying to escape from what I call Deficitland.

"As in 2001 and 2005, the incoherence of Tory tax and spending plans is the slow burning fuse under the Tory campaign and we do not need to rush our fences in detonating it."

Now if Deficitland were a computer game it would be one of those -style shoot-em ups, set in a bleak, deserted landscape full of harsh De Chirico shapes and shadows.

The protagonist would be a politician whose mission is not to kill the deficit - which would be symbolised by a Godzilla monster - but to realise that he has no weapons to kill it and to escape to a nicer place.

His enemies would be economists, pundits, businessmen and economics journalists. There would be a points system for zapping them, from Tim Besley to James Caan to me and Faisal Islam.

But the aim - just like in the famously subversive computer game - would be to escape.

However as Lord Mandelson's memo makes clear, Labour has no intention of trying to escape from Deficitland. It wants to go on zapping the Conservatives' tax plans.

If there is one article in today's papers that is worth a read it is the Sunday Times piece by which explains the rationale for this. Quoting a Labour minister they say:

"Gordon and Peter believe they can do to the Tories what they did to them almost two decades ago. Many people have counselled them to concede and move on to other subjects. But they think attack remains the best form of defence."

This, in a nutshell, is the state of the campaign. In four weeks time we will look back on Labour's tactical decision and know whether it has worked or not. In the meantime, you can read my previous blog as a kind of "how to" guide to playing Deficitland - and my early morning clash with Alistair Darling as a worked example of the gameplay.

Happy zapping.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Didn't Soft Cell do a song about 'Deficitland'?

  • Comment number 2.

    I think the very interesting article, Debt - A conspiracy of silence, in today's Independent is also worth a read.





  • Comment number 3.

    THE PHONEY WAR

    #2 tawse57 interesting article...yes, John Moulton was indeed one of the first to call this impending financial disaster.

    ...however, in the following 80's it wasn't Thatcher that came to our rescue, it was North Sea oil.

    We can only now hope that her war of distraction (The Falklands Conflict) turns up trumps with new found black gold...though it's not looking good.

    Disappointment for UK as drilling firm says Falklands well has produced 'poor quality' oil so far



    Moulton states...

    'The political debate talks of a few hundred million here and there – it needs to be about tens and scores of billions. Neither party has plans to deploy actions for the economy remotely commensurate with the size of the problem. Is it possible that it is time for some serious political leadership to emerge? We need radical treatment – not cosmetics.'

    Weimar Germany was in the same predicament in early thirties Germany...and we all know what serious/radical poltical leadership emerged from the ruins.

  • Comment number 4.

    Psychologically, this is probably a good strategy for Labour. My thoughts on the "behavioural politics" of this campaign:

  • Comment number 5.

    There is no politically acceptable escape from deficit land in the context of the current political landscape.

    All the parties have noted what happened to the Tory lead. The truth is the people would vote for the austerity needed to slay godzilla but only if a positive vision and end game was presented to them in a coherent, compelling passionate and unleveraged way to make them want to make the sacrifice.

    The current crop of political leadership does not have the confidence of its electorate or any kind of new coherent vision fit for a new world.

    Not of them can deliver what the collective intelligence of the british people knows is required.

    That is why nobody has a clear lead nor (in my opinion) is likely to get one sufficient to form a single party government and if they do it will be a tiny majority.

    The collective intelligence of the british people is hedging its bets, being rather flirty and non committal trying to buy a bit of time until a suitor with more compelling credentials emerges. I dont think anything that emerges in terms of policy detail of wives web cams will change that base line dynamic.

    It will either be a hung parliament or such asmall majority that it may as well be. No clear mandate will be given.








  • Comment number 6.

    I don't see what the problem is - as long as a political party can assure that house prices rise 1.5% per month forever and that all public sector workers can retire at 60 on two-thirds their salary then they would get in with a landslide majority.

    All this economic turmoil, hundreds billions of billions in QE - what is QE? - bonds, etc, is like speaking Greek to most people!

    Oh...

  • Comment number 7.

    'THE MAN WHO NEVER WAS' AGAIN?

    If I read Paul correctly, a 'Niccolo Mandelson' email, to the Labour faithful, indicates the strategy to be followed by Labour against the Tories.

    Did not the Germans find documents attached to a 'drowned' courier, washed up on the tide (WWII) that made clear the invasion strategy WE were about to follow?

    You get my DRIFT?

  • Comment number 8.

    Watching Ö÷²¥´óÐã Breakfast News.

    ‘Labour is promising’… ‘cos Ed Miliband says so?

    After 13 years.

    And it’s guaranteed, not with a Minister’s career on the line, oh no… with compo using, er, here’s a surprise, more of the public’s tax revenue.

    Huge. I am sure this will be given all the due deference such substance deserves by those who sit ready on our behalves to shred any hint of desperate spin being sold as policy.

    ps: What is the point of interviewing a politician, or Ed Miliband for that matter, if all he can do is grin and say he can't say anything until later.

    It makes almost as much sense as these PRasnews slots where we get what a pol 'will say' which, bearing in mind the value of what they do say, has little value at all save to pad a 24/7 news schedule with a spurious 'exclusive' claim.

  • Comment number 9.

    if i wanted to borrow money for a venture i would have to produce a detailed business plan. We don't get a detailed year by year plan. All we get are meaningless soundbites.

  • Comment number 10.

    AND THERE WOULD BE A QUID-PRO-QUO OF PAINFUL LOSS IF YOU FAILED (#9)

    And still we live within the lie. . .

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