Alan Thornett went along and here’s what he made of it.
About 1,000 people attended the Compass conference on Saturday with the title No Turning Back. They were by no means all members of the Labour Party, though there were few there from the far-left. Compass, of course, is the soft left of the Labour Party and the overwhelming impression was one of Labour Party loyalism. Anything can happen inside the LP after the events of the past few months but if Compass is to be a part of any kind of serious opposition to Brownism they have a very long way to go. Compass is quite a few notches to the right of left Labour MPs such was John McDonnell or Jeremy Corbyn who were as far as I could tell not there.
Harriet Harman spoke in the opening plenary and was given a disconcertingly polite reception. Compass speakers were insistent that they were against a leadership contest and wanted Gordon Brown to remain in place until the election. The issue they said was policy not personality. The implication seemed to be to back the Brownites against the Blairites — yet Brown is as much the architect of New Labour as Blair. There was no mention, for example, of any challenge to Brown from the left at LP conference.
The most left-wing speech in the opening plenary was Caroline Lucas (unfortunately I was not able to stay until the final plenary where Paul Mason was speaking, along with Polly Toynbee and Evan Harris) who not only brought in a welcome ecological dimension, which was woefully absent in the event, but called for example for “not only a minimum wage but a maximum wage”. This had apparently been rejected at the Green Party conference.
There were 30 workshops during the course of the day. One of the biggest was one on the them of “A New Socialism’ — in which Caroline Lucas again spoke along with Along with Jon Cruddas, Adam Price of Plaid Cymru and Salma Yaqoob of Respect.
Jon Cruddas was rather disappointing in this but the others were more interesting. On the title of the workshop Caroline Lucas said that she had no problem with the word “socialism’ but was very wary of the word ‘new’ being put in front of anything. Both Salma Yaqoob and Adam Price made left-wing speeches.
Salma Yaqoob made the strongest attack on new Labour I heard during the day. She condemned them over the closure of LDV Vans in Birmingham and called for government intervention to save it. She called for the taxing of the rich and heavily attacked new Labour’s racist immigration policy which she said had prepared the ground for the election of BNP MEPs. She also made a broad appeal for left unity and in particular for the prevention of clashes between left candidates inside and outside of the LP at the general election.





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