Mission accomplished! Unfortunately, the euphoria is short-lived as we return to the dismal news coming out of our own economy: unemployment rising to over 260,000 with the increase in October nearly equaling the entire rise in 2007; service business activity contracting at an alarming rate; the EU Commission opening excessive debt procedure against the Government and Minister Lenihan suggesting a mini-budget next year, with more cuts to come.
I would like to say there's a battle going on but a battle assumes there are two sides fighting. In Ireland, there isn't. The consensus that we have to prioritise the fiscal meltdown is almost complete. And let's be clear – this is nothing less than an attack on the public realm. And critical areas will not be spared. Health, education, and social welfare together make up nearly 70 percent of current spending. If the Taoiseach's promised cuts occur it's hard to see how these areas will escape. Unless we cut capital spending which, in essence, is a cut in future growth.
If the fiscal meltdown is the first item on the agenda, we are all in trouble. The Government is attempting to hold the deficit at €11.5 million. It will worsen and this will have knock on effects next year as revenue continues to nose-dive with job losses and wage cuts. Even more depressing is that the main parties – Fianna Fail and Fine Gael – are debating over who can cut more effectively.
In this respect, the Left's silence could be fatal. Is the Left arguing for increased borrowing? Substantial taxes on capital assets and high incomes? Draining the Pension Reserve dry? Are Labour spokespersons saying that public expenditure cuts, in principle, are wrong? That, indeed, we need to ramp up spending? If so, how will this be sustained over the recession cycle? Not only is there no connecting of the dots, there are a lot of dots missing.
In effect, the Left has vacated the fiscal ground, just as it had vacated the larger economic ground years ago. With no alternative analysis, never mind even an outline of a programme, the public will understandably assume there really is no alternative to the bloody evisceration of the public realm. In the battle between Hayek and Keynes, between a revamped neo-liberalism and a pragmatic social democracy, the latter are the losers because they have no champions, no tribunes.
Enda Kenny has spoken of leading Government within twelve months. Twelve months may be laughable but the prospects of a resurgent Fine Gael is worrying. Immediately following the last general election, Kenny claimed that his party would be the largest party after the next general election. They now have a healthy lead over Fianna Fail. They are set to become the largest political party at the local level after the elections next year. They are the only Opposition party to publish a comprehensive critique of the deteriorating budgetary situation. They have put forward specific proposals in this regard. Their economic spokespersons seem to be everywhere. All in all, they look like a party that is serious about leading a Government, despite the shortcomings of its leader.
Polly Toynbee, despairing of another Labour Party, called for an 'FDR moment', a championing of expansion and government intervention, a programme that can give people confidence and that most elusive political asset: hope. This requires ambition on a large canvas – an ambition of policy, an ambition to grab the levers of government to make that happen. It also requires a determination to challenge your opponents from whatever party, whatever constituency they emerge.
Whatever about the prospects of this happening in the UK (and I believe it more likely than not because at least the British Labour Party has such a tradition to fall back on), the tea-leaves here are more depressing. The Left does not have the look of leading a government, of developing the policies to lead a government. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the critical issue of fiscal policy. To argue for a social democratic expansionist programme, the Left must develop a credible fiscal platform to launch that programme. Simply opposing cuts is far from sufficient. The Left must go beyond that and show how public expenditure, buttressed by increased borrowing and taxation on unproductive capital is absolutely essential to financing our way out of the recession. That is the first task. There are many more after that.
The stakes are high. If the Left does not take matters in hand, it may well find its support increasing as former Fianna Fail supporters go in search of another party. It may well win a number of seats in the next general election. But without its own unique analysis, it will be irresistibly pulled towards another right-wing led coalition, hamstrung by a consensus it didn't attempt to challenge, without any mandate for an alternative strategy which it never bothered to seek.
For me, anyway, that is really depressing.

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