When I asked Progress’ new strategy board to elect me as the organisation’s chair this week, I made clear I thought we had to move on from our longstanding label as ‘the New Labour pressure group’. I have spoken about the need for change in the Independent newspaper today.

New Labour’s instincts are alive and well in today’s Labour party, thanks in no small party to the vibrancy and commitment Progress members bring to our movement. We will only succeed in winning back the trust of the British people and changing the country if we embody the spirit that won three elections and apply it to the new challenges we face.

The next Labour government will face an economic environment far tougher than the last. That means we must be even more determined to be robustly on the side of the public not vested interests, and even more focused on enabling people to create sustained wealth and jobs as well as debating how we share prosperity as widely as possible.

So our values remain the same, but if we continue to attach ourselves to a name that is now part of our history, we allow people who want to marginalise us to claim (wrongly but persuasively) that we are wedded to policies that have had their day.

Instead, I want us to be explicit and proud of the fact that the change we brought as New Labour means we are now the organisation that reflects the views of mainstream, grassroots Labour activists. We make a vital contribution to the battle of ideas and the battle on the doorstep to win in 2015, and Progress members are helping ensure Ed Miliband’s changes make Labour more inclusive, outward-facing and reflective of the communities we seek to represent.

Progress membership has grown considerably in the face of nonsense from a small but vocal minority claiming we are factional and not a proper part of the Labour family. But I want us to be even bigger and bolder in the years ahead. Moving on from a label that risks anchoring us in the past will allow us to play an even stronger role shaping our party’s future.

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John Woodcock MP is chair of Progress

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Photo: Dominic Campbell