When the Labour party is using its devastating defeat of 1983 as a benchmarking exercise to analyse the 2015 election, something has gone seriously awry. But you would not necessarily know it if you read Margaret Beckett’s report in to why Labour lost a winnable election quite so convincingly last May. Indeed, there are three contentions of dubious worth contained in just the fifth paragraph alone throughout a report that underwhelmed in the hard-hitting analysis it originally promised. Seven months on from the election, this report is too timid and perhaps already too late. Its conclusions – designed to help learn the lessons and win in 2020 – are remarkably bland for a party reeling from election defeat and now fighting incessantly with itself.

The election result was not ‘a surprise’ to those who recognised during the previous five years that Ed Miliband had largely failed to cut through to the British electorate as a viable candidate for prime minister. Nor to those of us who understood the centrality of the economy in determining an election, and Labour’s failure to establish any sort of lead on this totemic issue. The report stretches credibility with an early section on the fixed term parliament, which surely affected the Conservatives just as much as the Labour party and its rival, as well as complaining that the Tories had the original idea of sending voters direct mail. Labour’s much heralded ‘five million conversations’ did little to stem a comprehensive defeat, but the analysis should – though no doubt will not – end the party’s obsession with #Labourdoorstep. In seats where the party needed to win against the Conservatives, Labour’s share of the vote increased by a paltry 0.6 per cent. Whereas in safe Labour seats it increased tenfold, which would rather tally with the analysed announced during the election campaign that three of the five million conversations were occurring in safe Labour seats. Grassroots campaigning must always be backed up by a strong central campaign, and directed to the right seats at the right time.

Labour did not have such a strategy in place by time of the 2015 general election. The decision to target some 106 seats was not just an act of extreme folly but also of arrogance and of a fundamental misunderstanding of the circumstances the party found itself in. Merely declaring that it would buck electoral history and return to government after one term in opposition did not make it any the more likely however often repeated. Beckett’s section on Ed Miliband’s leadership receives just 127 words, less than the section devoted to attacking the wicked media. That swathes of the press were at best unkind to Ed Miliband – or any Labour leader, for that matter – should not have come as an overwhelming shock to the party’s strategists, nor that those who buy newspapers tend to buy right-leaning titles. As ever, Miliband’s ‘courageous’ attack on Rupert Murdoch is referenced, though it had little discernible impact on the day-to-day lives of voters and thereby the result.

The analysis of the European elections in 2014 is just a passing reference in Beckett’s report, but the lack of analysis is as telling as it is short. That Labour would do badly is almost factored in, even though it was the first time in modern history neither Labour nor Conservatives had won a British national election. Instead, we are told, Miliband ‘made a thoughtful, and well regarded, speech’ on the issue of immigration to counter the vitriol of Ukip’s campaign. The speech does not immediately spring to mind, but neatly encapsulates Labour’s disconnect that a single speech can soothe an issue that is consuming its communities.

Where is the analysis that led to Beckett’s assessment that defeat was sewn-up well before the short campaign? Miliband was convinced, without a shred of evidence, that the nation had moved to the left and duly campaigned there. Scotland is not all to blame for the current frail state of the party. What is clear that if Labour does not finish itself off first, demographic changes eventually will. The Labour party cannot change the electorate. Instead, it must change to meet the electorate. It will have to do more soul-searching than this.

———————————

David Talbot is a political consultant. He tweets @_davetalbot