Like its far-left cousins, Left Unity will fail at the ballot box

Is there anything more egotistical than starting your own political party? Only founding your own religion, with you as the deity, beats it. From Oswald Mosley to George Galloway, from David Owen to Robert Kilroy-Silk, those politicians who have started parties have planet-sized egos. And like the New party, Respect, Veritas or the Social Democratic party, a new party may briefly sparkle, but inevitably will gutter and snuff itself out.

Filmmaker Ken Loach is the latest egotist to take the trip. In early 2013 he co-signed a letter in the Guardian calling for a new political party to take on austerity and defeat capitalism. Within a few months the new party, Left Unity, was claiming 9,000 members and 100 local branches. On 30 November it will have its official launch with celebrity supporters including ‘Trigger’ from Only Fools and Horses, and the guy who wrote We’re Going on a Bear Hunt.

There has even been breathless talk of Left Unity representing the start of a ‘UKIP of the left’. So what is Left Unity, and how likely is it to succeed as a lasting political force? Left Unity is not the latest spawn of splits among Trotskyists. Trotskyism, famously parodied by Monty Python in Life of Brian, relies on constant splits, purges, expulsions and denunciations in pursuit of ideological purity. Left Unity may contain refugees from the Comrade Delta turmoil inside the Socialist Workers’ party, but it is not a Trot faction.

Nor is it the plaything of the unions. Arthur Scargill flounced out of the Labour party in 1995 after Tony Blair’s reworking of Clause IV to found the Socialist Labour party. It secured three per cent in the seats it fought in 2010, and every one of its candidates lost their deposits. The Trade Union and Socialist Coalition brought together candidates from the trade unions, the Socialist party (formerly known as Militant), the Communist party, and others to fight the 2010 election. Its parliamentary candidates secured an average of 371 votes, or one per cent.

Instead, Left Unity is the creation of trendy lefties, with little practical electoral experience or working-class credentials. Its leading lights, as well as the Oxford-educated grammar-school boy Loach, include academics, actors and the general secretary of that epitome of middle-class leftism, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. For example, its leader in Brighton is professor of poetics at the University of Sussex and author of a book about Marx and poetry. In Cambridge the coordinator is a former Green party agent. In other parts of the country, the local coordinators are drawn from the fragments of the far-left. This is the party for leftish readers of the Guardian, not horny-handed readers of the Mirror.

Despite the obvious failure of leftwing, anti-austerity candidates in the depths of the crash in 2010, Left Unity intends to stand candidates on a leftwing anti-austerity platform in 2015. Its policies might be summed up as 1945-style socialism (near-identical to Scargill’s outfit; so much for ‘unity’ on the left). You might wonder how popular a return to the state owning the commanding heights of the economy might be. The evidence, from the 1960s onwards, is that the party offering more state control is usually destroyed at the polls. The animating idea of Left Unity – that the masses become radicalised in a financial crash – is demonstrably false. Elections from Germany to Australia make the point. Die Linke, the German left party much admired by Left Unity, lost 12 of its 76 seats in the Bundestag in September’s election.

And what about Left Unity’s 9,000 new supporters? On 28 September just 70 of them turned up to a conference in Manchester to discuss the new party. Whatever idealism drove them to attend was soon dissipated by endless sessions on the Left Unity constitution. Whether to be a federation or have one member one vote, whether to organise in Northern Ireland, the role of black sections, whether unions should be allowed a block vote, quotas for women: the 70 comrades from Left Unity managed to cover ground in a single day it has taken the Labour party 30 years to debate. Needless to add, none of these scintillating issues was resolved.

It is always difficult to make predictions in politics, but here are a few: Left Unity will remain a tiny, irrelevant rump. Many of those drawn to its cocktail of simplistic slogans and celebrities will fall away when the dreary realities of life on the hard left become clearer. Its candidates will fail to win support at the 2015 election. None of them will save their deposits. More people bought Royal Mail shares than vote for the far-left. Left Unity will then descend into the traditional far-left post-election ritual of blame, denunciation and walk-outs.

Loach is 77. His prize-winning films, from the 1960s onwards, have raised important issues such as homelessness and poverty, or brought the civil wars in Ireland and Spain to the big screen. He rightly has a place in the pantheon of social-realist filmmakers. Loach’s contribution to cinema will be his legacy. A misguided and doomed attempt to break the mould of politics will not.

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Photo: Malek Cabrera