Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Essay on Stuart Hall: The Penultimate Thatcher Criticism

Part 3:  The part before the last part...

IV: The Close Reading

            An important essay by Stuart Hall on ghd crisis of the left and the struggle against Thatcherism was “Face the Future” (conveniently collected in a book of his prose on Thatcher entitled , The Hard Road to Renewal: Thatcherism and the Crisis of the Left).  The essay was written in 1984 during a rather critical time in the Thatcher regime.  While the year 1984 did not see the fulfilling of George Orwell’s promise of totalitarianism, many leftists viewed Thatcher as a dangerous first and second step to the fulfillment of his horrific vision.  Thatcher won reelection in 1983 riding the wave of popularity caused by her handling of the Falkland Islands crisis.  A victory against the Argentine government resulted in a surge of patriotism and popularity for the Conservative party coming into the election and offset the fact that the economy had not improved much since Thatcher began as Prime Minister.  Winning a good old fashioned war helped propel her party into the majority for a second consecutive time.  As a fascinating side note, George Bush the elder is the only politician for which the strategy of winning a prop war did not result in re-election (he was that bad).  1984 was the first full year of the second part of Thatcher's rule and another election wouldn't be held anytime soon.  Britain had entered the middle period of Thatcherism and the end was not near.  The struggle against Thatcherism had to be reignited for the left to have any hope in the future. 

That is where Stuart Hall’s essay comes into play. “Face the Future” focuses on how the GLC is the most important font in the battle against Thatcherism (Hall p.233) even saying so in his first sentence.  He sees the GLC as the beginnings for a true socialist movement to grow out of.  For those not in the know, the GLC stands for Greater London Council and it was a form of local government that dealt with administrative concern for the greater London area.  Its duties ranged from setting up social events like concerts to other city services like waste disposal (Hall p.234).   Hall sets up the argument that the GLC serves the function that the Labour party should in Britain.  It had provided a socialist alternative and had been successful in applying this alternative to everyday life.  The GLC started to build a new bloc for the forces of socialism in the form of engaging feminists, black activists, young radicals, and the gay community (Hall p. 237).  They provided a successful ideological alternative to Thatcherism on the local level and Hall sees Thatcher’s quest to shut down the GLC as both a turning point in her popularity and rendered the consequences of her “authoritarian populism” visible to the public.  To see a popular governmental organization shut down simply because it had differing philosophies with the current administration produces the unfriendly smell of the anti-democratic tendencies of Thatcherism.  Keeping local institutions alive was central to defeating Thatcherism.  Hall saw the battle for keeping the GLC around as a microcosm of the major ideological debate of the times.  He states this battle as the battle of “profit motive and possessive liberalism against, which Thatcher represents; and the camp of collective social need and public interest, which the labour movement, even in its most degenerated form, has always represented.” (Hall p. 233).  Labour has not fulfilled the role of collective social need so the GLC moved in and accomplished what Labour should have been doing in the first place.  The success of the GLC is the reason Thatcher wanted it shut down.  It has succeeded with a different ideological outlook than the current administration and like Miss America said in the great Woody Allen film (this is paraphrased), Bananas, differences of opinion must be tolerated, but when the opinions are so different they must not tolerated and then that person becomes a subversive (leave it to Miss America to perfectly sum up how Thatcher feels about the GLC).

 A main point brought up in this passage is how the GLC brought together people that the mainstream Labour party failed to reach out and connect with.  Labour formed too little of an intellectual support group and suffers from, in Hall’s own words, a poverty of ideas (Hall 236).  The disconnect between the young radicals of the leftist movements and the Labour party displays how much of a failure Labour was during the Thatcher years.  The GLC took non-political people and brought them into the political struggle.  It entranced and engaged with young activists and radicals and made them part of the movement.  It is true that the GLC did not always know exactly what to do with these young radicals and their ideas, but they made the first step and opened up their ranks to them.  As of the time of this essay, they have not been able \ to combine their different support groups into a cohesive, organic social bloc, but to the credit of the GLC, it has realized that the most prudent question of contemporary politics is how to form a successful bloc.  Again to the credit of the GLC, they have not shied away from this task, but have openly embraced it (Hall p. 236).  The GLC started by embracing groups that Thatcherism had  long left for dead.  Black activists were included in the political agenda and given a say in the issues at hand.  Feminists were able to participate in the mix and the gay political movement had been given genuine support.  These groups represented the future (and still do) and helped to diversify and strengthen the resistance movement to Thatcherism.

Another key point in Hall’s defense and embrace of the GLC is the GLC’s commitment to modernity and the alternative lifestyle.  This greatly differs with a favorite Thatcher slogan of “There is No Alternative” (Hall p.237).  The GLC moved socialism away constantly playing defense and a policy idea of a return to the days before the Tories took over.  The old ways are not going to solve any of Britain’s problems.  The GLC has succeeded by not falling into the trap of a socialist nostalgic glow.  They have made new, concrete ideas of an alternative style.  By making problems more concrete to the public and giving them concrete alternative solution, the GLC has provided a successful break from the no alternative rhetoric that comes from the Thatcher administration.  The GLC stresses collective needs and solutions and the essential fact that people must think of themselves as part of a collective rather than “ratepayers” (Hall p. 234) or a person who pays for a public utility.  At first this seems like simply a descriptive term with no ideological background behind it.  Well that kind of thinking is wrong and whoever is thinking those harmful thoughts should take a quick break to refresh their mind (watching a classic episode of The Simpsons usually does the trick).  Now, as we return to our discussion, the term ratepayer does entail an ideological background.  It serves to disassociate the people from the service and makes the service seem like a cold, isolated government practice.  By thinking of themselves as ratepayers, people fail to identify themselves as citizens who need housing, clean streets, education or any other collective needs (Hall p. 234).  The term ratepayer dissociates the citizen from the community and their collective needs.  It stresses individual greed over collective needs and harmony.  Thatcherism has ideologically reconstructed the world into possessive individualist terms (Hall p. 234).  In Stuart Hall’s eyes this is a bad thing.  A very, very, very bad thing.  

Hall also argues that the GLC has successful politicized areas of everyday life to show how a radical leftist administration can identify positively with popular cultural life and can feed off the energy it has created (Hall p.238).  How did the GLC do this one might ask?  First off, good question, it is always a pleasure to see the reader paying close attention so far into an essay.  For your efforts, you shall be rewarded with the answer.  The GLC has increased the quality of modern city living by subsidizing public entertainment and opening up public grounds for the people to enjoy.  Parks have become active centers for concerts of a diversity of musical genres and it is all sponsored by the administration in power.   By democratizing and making urban living more enjoyable and affordable, the GLC has won the hearts of the city folk.  Showing people what a leftist administration can do by not watering down their policies has won many a young radical following for the GLC.  Stuart Hall sees this as the GLC’s greatest success.  He closes his essay by expressing this belief , “It is one of the aspects of GLC politics – by rooting itself in the everyday experience of popular urban society and culture, and becoming a leading force in moral and cultural life - …that socialism could become the politics and culture of the future…” (Hall p.238).  The GLC is the start of that future.


In a broader sense this small essay in Hall’s collection, The Hard Road to Renewal: Thatcherism and the Crisis of the Left, plays to some major points in Hall’s overall ideology.  Hall finds much failure with the larger Labour and socialist movement and expresses great pessimism in the future of the movement.  This essay provides Hall with a glimmer of hope as to what a successful socialist regime could look like.  He is describing a real life example of what he would like politics and culture in Britain to become.  “Face the Future” deals with how socialism could effectively take hold in British politics and society. The GLC is the blueprint into how to obtain a successful socialist government.  This essay also plays to the ideas of diversity and engaging with young radicals.  Too frequently Hall sees that the problem with the major Labour party is their disconnect from young leftists and their disconnect from groups of people that have been left behind under the politics of Thatcherism.  Here Hall sees the GLC engaging with young radicals, feminists, gays, and black activists and sees this acceptance as a beginning to diversification and the creation of a new socialist bloc.  Everything is coming together.  This article also plays to Hall’s belief that one of the reasons socialism has not taken a'hold a'yet is that the Labour party (which should represent its platforms) doesn’t advocate a modern, alternative approach.  Labour is stuck in the past with the spirit of 1945 and hasn’t modernized.  The GLC is a modern organization with modern solutions that provide a concrete alternative to Thatcherism.  It has provided a difference of opinion, and thus become dangerous to the Thatcher administration.  IT is easy to see why she meant to shut it down and why she eventually did.  Stuart Hall sees the GLC as a concrete beginning to putting his ideas and the ideas of true socialism into practice.  It is a blueprint into seeing socialism work effectively and with a great diversity of the people.  An added bonus to that is that the people seem to like it.  As Bart Simpson would say, “sorry mom the mob has spoken” (also as a side note Britain should build a monorail...). 

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