I am standing to be the next leader of the Labour Party to address deep-seated inequalities which are holding back individuals, communities and our country. To do this we need to redistribute power as well as wealth.
There is a reason why ‘take back control’ resonated like no other political message of my lifetime – because it spoke to a wider truth that the people don’t have enough say over the things which matter to them. This has been hijacked by the political right but ‘take back control’ can be a mission statement that applies to co-operative and labour movements too. Co-operatism is a form of taking back control, that through a movement we empower people and regain trust. It is a tradition Labour has neglected for too long and means we will only ever have half of the answer.
Whether it is the vision of Robert Owen at New Lanark Mills to draw on everyone’s talents or the everyday inspiration of the Rochdale Pioneers – for centuries there has been a desire for alternatives to short-termist and exploitative models of capitalism.
The co-operative movement and party have many of the answers that Labour needs to help people shape and humanise the future economy. We need a renaissance in co-operative solutions as well as support to scale up the successes we already have.
Throughout my time in Parliament I’ve visited community co-operative enterprises and initiatives in towns and cities up and down the country; that hasn’t been by accident. It’s at the heart of my politics, and at the heart of a democratic and inclusive economy I want to see.
The message at the heart of my campaign is ‘we win together’ because for too long Labour has been top-down and paternalistic. I do not believe we can face up to the biggest challenges of our age without collective responses and without harnessing our collective talent and skill. I’m inspired by communities – thousands of them –coming together, pooling their knowledge and resources to change things for the better and treasuring the common good.
Co-operatives in all their many forms can provide so many answers to the issues facing people. We need our credit unions providing more financial services working for people rather than against them. Labour should support the development of community-owned services from transport to pubs. Let’s make employee-ownership the default option for business owners wanting to retire. Doubling the sector should be the start of our ambitions.
Preston has shown what a co-operative economy could mean, and what thousands of co-operative Councillors can do, just as Bristol has shown how a mayor can create a culture of shared decision-making. There is no bigger ‘anchor institution’ than people and their communities. Let’s help retain more wealth locally rather than let it leak away for shareholder gain.
I don’t need convincing that changing the person who pulls levers in Westminster or Whitehall will not get close to effectively responding to the challenges facing our country. We cannot leave essential issues like climate change and resources, artificial intelligence and automation or care and loneliness to the chill winds of market forces. We’ve always argued that the fruits of our labour should be more controlled by those who have produced it. We must do better.
The next Labour leader must help win power beyond the ballot box. I ask for your support so that we can all win together.
Thank you for giving me the chance to contribute to your deliberations about who should be the next Labour Party leader.
Now that the other candidates have secured the required backing to get on the final ballot, I hope you’ll consider giving me your support to ensure we have the broadest debate possible, and so I can bring my experience on the international issues that matter so much to our movement into that debate.
I grew up in a Labour family, and I always thought I understood the meaning of ‘solidarity’, especially when it was a local Labour councillor who helped us find a new council home after my Dad left us and we were turfed out by the bailiffs.
But I only truly learned what solidarity meant years later, when I became a lawyer and went to represent striking miners in the mid-80s, and saw entire communities coming together to share what little they had with those who needed it most.
For me, that kind of solidarity epitomises the Co-operative Party: the ethos that we’re all stronger together; but if any of us is suffering, we’re all suffering.
That is why I’ve been so inspired by your campaigns on tackling loneliness, exposing the reality of modern slavery, defending local communities from crime, and protecting our vital community spaces.
These are not issues easily solved, or indeed easily sold to a media that wants headline issues and simple answers, but that is all the more reason why you’re so right to campaign on them, because they are the issues affecting millions of the most vulnerable people in our society, who need to know someone is standing up for them.
That is why some of the issues I am most passionate about – the desperate shortages of social care and social housing; the over-crowding of our prisons; and of course, the human rights of persecuted communities overseas – fit into that same category.
That is the kind of campaigning I‘ve been involved in all my adult life, ever since I joined Labour 42 years ago, and started going door-to-door on my own canvassing and collecting subs.
I’ve brought that same campaigning, fighting spirit to my fifteen years in Parliament, and the seven front bench jobs I’ve done, including shadowing Boris Johnson for the entire two years he was Foreign Secretary, and taking him to pieces every time.
And I fought harder than any other member of the Shadow Cabinet – both privately and publicly – for a second Brexit referendum, and for Labour to lead the campaign to Remain in the EU – the most successful co-operative project of our lifetimes. And I’ll continue to fight against the cliff-edge, No-Deal Brexit we face in December.
It’s going to be a long, tough road back to power from where we are now, and we need an experienced, battle-hardened campaigner to lead that fight. That’s what I bring to this race, so I hope you’ll consider giving me your support to help me remain part of it.
I’ll be a campaigning Deputy Leader.
Winning the next general election means regaining the trust of the voters we’ve lost. My focus will be building a Party rooted in every community with powerful local campaigns that show whose side we’re on.
I fully back our previous two manifestos. These offer real solutions to the problems our communities face.
Great policies, however, aren’t enough. I’ll overhaul our campaigning and messaging to focus on 10 key policies that are easily explainable on the doorstep.
Any path to power requires us winning back the 50+ Leave-supporting seats we lost. As Deputy Leader, I’ll chair a Special Commission on rebuilding that support.
As Deputy Leader I will campaign for a New Clause IV that will enshrine Labour's manifesto commitments on public ownership into our Party’s constitution so that Labour never again supports privatisation and outsourcing. Public ownership is popular. It should be at the heart of what we stand for as a Party. My plan will help us stay in tune with voters who are sick of being ripped off by private companies which treat public services as nothing more than cash cows.
I support Open Selection so that members and trade unions can have a full and democratic say and make the decision about who is their Parliamentary Candidate in each and every General Election.
I’ve always stood up to the establishment and for the oppressed. Before being an MP, I was a trade union lawyer for a decade. As an MP, I voted against the 2015 Tory Welfare Bill and nominated and backed Jeremy in both leadership elections. When I successfully sued The Sun, I used the £30,000 compensation to fund a local internship.
As Secretary of the Socialist Campaign Group of Labour MPs, founded by Tony Benn, I believe the values of peace, equality and socialism are more necessary than ever.
Working class communities in all their diversity need a Labour government. Whoever is Leader, I’ll be a team player focussed on our main task: winning back power.
The Co-operative Party is crucial to rebuilding the Labour Party and must be at the core of our Labour values.
Co-operatives are a striking example of how to build a broad coalition of support, which is something I have always sought to do in politics.
It’s no secret that I’m a huge football fan.
Every opportunity I get I make my way to Tynecastle in Edinburgh to watch my team, Heart of Midlothian.
When the club hit financial difficulties back in 2013, I spent all my spare time helping to save the club as chair of the supporters’ co-operative, Foundation of Hearts. I always knew this was going to be a tough task, but we turned it around and got the club back on the road to recovery. It is now 80 per cent fan-owned by the 8,000 members of the co-operative.
Being involved in saving the club gave me first-hand experience of building a co-operative model, one which can offer a sustainable framework for football clubs and puts supporters back where they should be - at the heart of the club and its community. I also set up a local greengrocer co-op called “Dig-In” to provide a local high street with this provision.
As deputy leader of the Labour Party, I will champion co-operatives. I was proud to be on the Co-op Parliamentary Panel, and I’m honoured to have the support of former Co-operative Party chair, Gareth Thomas MP.
Our movement is hurting after successive election defeats, but it’s far worse for every person and family who needs a Labour Government.
We let them and the country down.
That’s why I want us to be honest and listen to voters and members, so that we understand what we got wrong.
We need to make the credible and co-operative case for public services such as the ownership of our railways from Thurso to Truro where the privatised ownership model has delivered a poor deal for the travelling public across the UK.
We must look at radical examples of co-operative ownership across our economy and industry that are appearing across the UK like the Glen Wyvis distillery in the Highlands, build on community ownership.
Co-operatives aren’t just about issues like transport and business though. They can help build the foundations of aspiration and community development.
Look at the community work of many co-operative credit unions across the UK which offer a serious mainstream alternative to the big banks, which is increasingly important at a time when access to free high street cash machines is falling month by month.
We must approach these issues with bold new thinking to ensure communities and local businesses aren't left behind.
We must stand up for every part of our UK, building on our values of internationalism and solidarity as a pro-UK and pro-European party.
I’m standing to be deputy leader because I want to change our party so that we can win again and transform people’s lives.
But I won’t be able to do it alone.
Winning together is how we get back to government, and the Co-Operative Party and wider movement is central to this vision. In me you will always have a co-operative champion.
Promoted by Joe Fortune on behalf of the Co-operative Party, both at Unit 13, 83 Crampton Street, London, SE17 3BQ, United Kingdom.Co-operative Party Limited is a registered Society under the Co-operative and Community Benefit Societies Act 2014. Registered no. 30027R
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