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Compulsory voting at elections was the most popular measure to bring
more democracy to Britain in a poll held at the Fabian Democracy Day
conference.
Ed Miliband MP gave the keynote speech, arguing that democratic
reform to address inequalities of power must be an integral part of a
progressive agenda.
Introduction
Let me start today by acknowledging the debt we owe to Charter 88,
founded twenty years ago next year which has kept the flame alive
across a whole range of areas around constitutional reform.
And also the debt we owe to the Power Commission and a whole range
of organisations over the last few years for taking up this issue and,
agree with them or disagree with all their conclusions, raising the
issue of the health of our democracy
And the latest contribution to this debate is the Fabian pamphlet
published today which talks importantly about the role of political
parties and how they can be renewed.
For me today's Conference is about a simple starting point:
recognising that the pursuit of equality is not simply about the
tackling of inequality on the basis of opportunity, but also on the
basis of power. Powerlessness is a great social evil just as much as
poverty.
So the changes announced in the Governance of Britain document are
fundamentally important from a strengthened Parliament, to constraints
on the royal prerogative, enhanced powers for select committees over
public appointments. That is why Jack Straw and Michael Wills are
taking forward an important national debate.
Equally the changes in local government that Hazel Blears is leading
are crucial: giving more powers to local government, over services like
economic development and transport.
But that's not what I want to focus on today. I want to talk about
something more challenging: going beyond national institutions, beyond
local elections. My argument is that while we need to strengthen the
institutions of representative democracy whether parliament or local
government we also need new and deeper forms of engagement so that
more people have a chance to be involved particularly in the local
issues that affect their lives.
Essentially, this is about a different kind of state in the way it
governs, the way it makes decisions, the way it is held accountable.
In this speech I want to say
Why we need to do this because it's right in principle, because we
can't solve many of the problems we face without it and because it is
right for our time.
How we do it not by being wide-eyed about people's wish to sit on
committees but understanding the ways in which people can get involved
and being willing to undertake experiments in democracy as we seek to
engage people
I will be laying out some of the ground as this is a big priority
for the new government but I'd like to discuss with people here how
to develop it.
And finally, what it means for progressive politics not as some
would suggest that by giving power away we give up our ability to do
good but that doing so recognises the reality of how progressive
political change happens.
Why we need to do this
Let me start with the why.
Fundamentally, it is about addressing inequalities of power, just as
we have taken measures to address other inequalities over the last ten
years.
I have seen it in my own constituency whether it is to do with the
housing estate being knocked down with people living there not being
given proper information or youth services being designed without young
people having a genuine voice.
An American academic, Archon Fung, has talked about three ways in
which representative democracy is necessary but not sufficient.
First and most obviously, different forms of engagement can provide
a richer and more textured conversation between and with people about
their preferences which we may only get periodically, if at all, from
debates at elections. And it can make for better policy-making as a
result.
Second, sometimes mechanisms of representative democracy provide
insufficient accountability---for example over local decisions about
public services, such as local policing priorities. Part of the
solution may lie in direct local public accountability on these issues
Thirdly, and most critically, there are many issues we face in our
society that cannot be solved without people's involvement. So, for
example, we can't address the issues of young people feeling they have
nowhere to go if the services are designed by adults.
These are timeless reasons why representative democracy on its own
is not enough. But there is an additional reason why this agenda is
right for our time.
Because while twenty, thirty and forty years ago, our society was
characterised by the deference that meant people would accept
representative democracy on its own, today they don't.
People want and demand more power over their own lives, people are
less likely to trust those in authority, whether it be politicians,
public service professionals or business.
It seems to me incredibly important that this decline in deference
is welcomed by the Left and the fundamental challenge for progressive
politics it seems to me and the one we must face together is to
convert that scepticism about those who govern and rule into a positive
force for change in communities and nationally.
And to prevent the alternative which is that that scepticism is
converted into cynicism, a sense that nothing can change and that
politics is a waste of time.
What is it that prevents cynicism becoming scepticism? It has to be
democracy. Not simply a narrow once every four or five years democracy
but a much richer form of democracy which allows participation well
beyond it.
How to engage people
So the challenge is to find new ways of reaching out to people and involving them in the democratic process.
This is hard. It is difficult. There are no cheap gimmicks. I saw
the Leader of the Conservatives saying yesterday that he doesn't need
citizens' juries to tell him what to do about education. He doesn't
need citizens' juries to tell him what to do on health. I disagree. I
don't think are simple answers on these issues, and I don't agree that
communities gain nothing from coming together to discuss them.
We can discuss these issues in my surgeries. We can discuss them in
public meetings. But structured discussions allow a richer and more
informed debate, and allow communities to debate it amongst themselves
as well as with government agencies.
This must start at the level of national policy-making. Following
the prime Minister's speech last Monday, the citizens' jury concept has
received huge amounts of publicity.
How can citizens' juries or forums contribute to the policy-making
process? At a minimum, instead of the old style of consultation
documents from Whitehall which reached a select few they represent a
new way to have a conversation with people.
To be clear about this, citizens' juries work best when they address
specific areas of concern which ensure that policy-making is done on
the basis that it understands people's needs and concerns.
That is why this week, Ed Balls discussed his Children's Plan at an
early stage with parents and young people, why Jacqui Smith is talking
about issues of police accountability next week and why in health, some
of the key issues around access will be discussed at a group of
citizens' juries round the country.
But nobody suggests citizens' juries are a panacea on their own for
problems of participation. My argument today is that they must be part
of a broader set of experiments in democracy. And a different attitude
of mind and orientation on the part of the state so that every effort
is made to involve people in different ways.
Above all, this must be about local issues that directly touch
people's lives where they feel they currently have too little voice or
say about the things that matter to them.
We must be honest about the paradox here. On the one hand, people
are no longer happy simply to trust that the local health service knows
best, the police know best, the MP knows best. But at the same time, no
one can claim that everyone wants to sit on a committee they don't.
So bringing democracy to our local services means making decisions
transparent, but it also means recognising that different people at
different times want different levels of involvement.
At the most basic level this is about providing information. So for
the people on the housing estate which is being knocked down, the most
basic requirement of the state must be information. We need to be
honest that still too often the state fails to meet this minimum
requirement.
And the good thing is that increasingly we see new sources of
information not controlled by the state, but increasingly generated by
users themselves from Netmums which provides childcare and parenting
information to Patient Opinion which provides user-generated
information about healthcare.
For some good information will be enough but for others it will not.
Good consultation, which many local authorities and other agencies are
pioneering, is important. And this is why citizens' juries can be
important.
But as I have indicated, transparency and consultation will be
inadequate in many cases given the demands of citizens for a say and
given that their involvement can make a huge difference to the services
that are provided.
Developing forms of participation and involvement which go beyond
these basic requirements is a major priority for the new government.
Across major public services we want to find ways in which people can
better involved in the decisions that affect them.
Take policing. There can be a lack of engagement with the public,
that can allow scepticism to convert to cynicism: so people don't share
the dilemmas of the police. That is why Jacqui Smith will be holding
conversations with the public next week.
In some parts of the country, the police now conduct local beat
meetings each month so that individuals can be involved in shaping
local police priorities and understand the decisions that affect them.
And we want to build on this.
We have pioneered youth budgets for young people themselves to
decide how local resources are spent. I know from talking to young
people in my constituency what a difference this makes. For the first
time, when they ask for resources I can actually say that young people
themselves will decide and that has a transformative effect on their
willingness to engage as well as what is provided.
Some parts of the country have gone even further and given local
people a direct say over the spending of local resources, building on
what has been pioneered in Porto Alegre in Brazil. Already there are 10
pilots to extend these experiments to the UK and we need to build on
these experiments where they have worked, and be honest where they have
not.
Sometimes it is not just the state ceding power temporarily.
Everyone knows a public asset in their local community that is
underused, or a public asset that has been sold off that could have
transformed a community. So there is an important agenda here giving
local people within community organisations the chance to have direct
control over local assets like community centres. And thanks to money
we made available last year, 20 projects are now going to go forward to
show what can be done.
And there are examples round the country which show the effects this
can have. The Goodwin centre in the Thornton Estate in Hull started as
a result of being given its land directly from the local authority, and
used that to involve the community in the transformation of the area.
Local people were involved in how the centre was built and how it
provides services. Where before there was no GP, no children's centre
and little open space, the Goodwin Centre provided them.
And with greater information, with greater consultation and with
community control of assets, it is important to have clearer rights to
redress. That is what the Community Call for Action will strengthen.
So the bedrock needs to be local democracy. But for local democracy
to thrive, we need to go beyond ballot-box politics to involve people
in new ways and at different levels.
Progressive Politics
So renewing our democracy means renewing it at local as well as
national level. These are some of the areas as well as our national
political institutions that need to be addressed. But in doing so, we
need to tackle a fundamental question for the Left about these issues
in the process of giving power away, do we hamper our ability to make
progressive change happen?
There has been a left tradition which we could caricature as the
Fabian tradition. It has always been democratic, but it has
concentrated on mechanical reforms, occupying the state and using the
power of the state to achieve progressive ends.
Some people in this tradition will worry that community assets go to
people who can't get elected indeed I hear it in my own constituency.
Of course there is a danger of capture. Of course there is a unique
legitimacy that comes from being elected. But mechanisms of
accountability can be built in as in Hull, where eight out of 11on
the board are elected representatives from the local area.
Some people will worry that this agenda will lend itself to usual
suspects and can't go beyond them. That's why mechanisms like the
citizens' jury have an important role and more generally, we need to
design systems of participation which can bring people in without huge
commitments of time.
And what about the role of political parties? This is a challenge to
them too to find ways in which they can renew themselves as community
institutions encouraging their members to take part in the institutions
of the community, for example, by encouraging people to become school
governors, participate in tenants' associations and health boards.
But the strongest response to these criticisms of ceding power is to ask how political change happens.
We have learnt that if we want change at local level, of course it
needs an active state but it also won't happen without the active
involvement of people. The Goodwin Centre has transformed Thornton in
Hull because of the active involvement of local people.
Sure Start has made a huge difference in my community because
government funding is allied to the active involvement of local people,
so that it is an institution rooted in the community.
And of course it's not just true at local level, its true nationally as well.
When we think about the great changes that have happened in the last
ten years whether it is gay rights, international debt and
development, or greater disability rights they haven't happened
because simply or even mainly because progressive government wanted
them to happen, but because advocacy and campaigning groups helped make
them happen.
But to make this really happen, we need a society in which more of these organisations can campaign for change.
That is why we are working with the charity commission to make it
clear to the third sector that they can campaign in support of their
demands if they further their charitable purpose: because of an
understanding that part of being a charity is the ability to stand up
for those for whom your organisation was founded.
The progressive cause needs the engagement not just of some groups
of citizens, but of those who because of their circumstances are at
most risk of disaffection.
And the progressive cause needs the voices of the marginalised to be
heard, and a government willing to act being pressed and persuaded by a
civil society that demands they act whether on child poverty,
inequality or the threat of climate change.
Conclusion
To build a successful progressive politics, we will keep reaching
out both to people from outside traditional politics and beyond
traditional party lines. This is the new government's approach:
building a progressive consensus from the centre-ground of politics,
optimistic about Britain, finding new ways to engage people and never
opting for simplistic solutions.
And it is in contrast to David Cameron, increasingly narrow in his
approach as he attempts to shore up his own base, pessimistic about
Britain and opting for simplistic solutions to the problems we face.
I have tried to lay out an agenda that goes beyond changes to our
national institutions, and goes beyond strengthening our local
institutions. Both are important, but we can go beyond it.
I have argued that we need to go beyond the ballot box to engage
people locally in the decisions that affect their lives. It is hard and
difficult but it is absolutely necessary to achieving the kind of the
country we want to see.
Not just because the changes are right in themselves. But
fundamentally because of this: if scepticism becomes cynicism it will
always favour reactionary forces not progressive causes.
Progressive politics relies on people believing that we can change our world for the better.
That needs a stronger, more vibrant democracy than we have. If we
build it, then I believe we can change our country for the better,
address the inequalities of power that exist and build the progressive
Britain so many of us want to see. |