Home Westminster UnionsMedia Activism

Is it time for Hain to leave the stage?


by Paul Linford    
January 11, 2008 at 6:12 pm

I have, in the past, been a great admirer of Peter Hain. Up to around about 2002/3 he was a strong progressive voice within government who was occasionally given licence to challenge the orthodoxy as when, for instance, he advocated a higher top rate of tax.

There is a plausible counterfactual argument for saying that, had he resigned with his old ally Robin Cook over the Iraq War in 2003, as his former admirers on the left would have expected him to, he could conceivably have mounted a successful challenge to Gordon Brown in 2007, standing as an experienced former minister on an anti-war ticket.

But it is clear that at some point around that time, Hain lost his balls. He failed to speak out against a war he must in his heart of hearts have opposed, and gradually, his left-field contributions to government policy-making dried up.

Never having been entirely trusted by the right and with his credibility on the left now badly compromised, it did not surprise me in the least that he performed so poorly in last year’s deputy leadership election, when he found his whole USP had been successfully purloined by Jon Cruddas.

For me, that is what is so tragi-comic about Hain’s current predicament – the fact that he spent £200,000 on a campaign which ended in near-humiliation for a man who once entertained serious aspirations to, if not the premiership, then certainly the Foreign Office.

Since then, he has gone on to win one small but important victory as Work and Pensions Secretary, overcoming Treasury objections to secure a £725m rescue package for 125,000 workers who lost pension rights when their employers went bust or wound up their schemes.

But even had the row over his campaign donations not occurred, I think it likely that he would have left the Cabinet at the next reshuffle, and hence I cannot help but think his time at the top of British politics is now drawing naturally to a close.

Who knows – if it meant Gordon could bring in Alan Milburn as Work and Pensions Secretary and stage a public rapprochement with the Blairites, then this is one crisis that the government might even be able to turn to its advantage?

Sunny’s update: Anthony Barnett at OurKingdom also weighs in on Hain’s future.


-------------------------
Share this article
          post to del.icio.us

About the author
Paul Linford is a regular contributor to Liberal Conspiracy. He is a digital publishing manager and former Parliamentary Lobby journalist where he was political editor of the Newcastle Journal for seven years. He has an 18-year career in newspaper journalism and lives in Belper, Derbyshire, with his wife and two children. A committed Christian, his faith informs his own belief in progressive politics and the view that a society must always be judged by how it treats its most vulnerable members. His eponymous blog combines a mixture of the personal and the political and has become particularly renowned for its commentaries on liberal-left politics. He is also a leading voice in support of an English Parliament and other democratic reforms. Also at: Paul Linford blog
· Other posts by Paul Linford

Filed under
Blog , Labour party , Westminster


4 responses in total   ||  



Reader comments

The consequences of Hain leaving are clearly too awful for you ‘Liberals’ to contemplate.

Who knows – if it meant Gordon could bring in Alan Milburn as Work and Pensions Secretary and stage a public rapprochement with the Blairites, then this is one crisis that the government might even be able to turn to its advantage?

Very good point.

3. Paul Linford

Justin makes a similar point to me, though he puts it rather more bluntly:

“Two hundred grand to be beaten in a popularity contest by Harriet bloody Harman? If I was him, I wouldn’t be wondering if it was worth carrying on in politics, I’d be pondering whether it was worth carrying on living.”


Reactions: Twitter, blogs
  1. Peter Hain, what a shame « OurKingdom

    [...] not so Dizzy who tries to find the Mc behind the Man. PSS and now Paul Linford on Conspiracy, signals Iraq from a different [...]



Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

 
Liberal Conspiracy is the UK's most popular left-of-centre politics blog. Our aim is to re-vitalise the liberal-left through discussion and action. More about us here.

You can read articles through the front page, via Twitter or rss feeds.
RECENT OPINION ARTICLES
TwitterRSS feedsRSS feedsFacebook
10 Comments



21 Comments



7 Comments



14 Comments



5 Comments



24 Comments



36 Comments



29 Comments



33 Comments



9 Comments



LATEST COMMENTS
» Matthew Stiles posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» jim posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» Sean posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» matgb posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» Matthew Stiles posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» eastender posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» Rich G posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» Bob B posted on Survey: Tory cuts are 'depressing confidence'

» PDF posted on Labour leaders debate on Newsnight: quick thoughts

» former Para posted on Bloody Sunday: when it's right to reopen history

» VS posted on Labour has no choice but to embrace political pluralism

» Richard W posted on Yes, BP does need its ass kicked

» Alun posted on Labour has no choice but to embrace political pluralism

» sally posted on Yes, BP does need its ass kicked

» sally posted on Bloody Sunday: when it's right to reopen history