Your at-a-glance guide to John McDonnell’s barnstorming conference speech

Last Updated: September 25, 2017By Tags: , , , , ,

John McDonnell, delivering his speech to the Labour conference.

The least that can be said about it is that it will give the Tories plenty to deride at their own conference.

The reason the above is the least that can be said is, Tories ALWAYS try to ridicule Labour policies. Then they proudly announce a load of nonsense rubbish, get their friends in the right-wing media to push it as the only realistic option, dupe enough of the nation into supporting them at a general election and we end up – well, we end up in the mess we’re in today.

As a result of this Tory stupidity, the UK is not so much a proud island nation voyaging to new horizons as a leaky, sinking boat, weighed down by fatted passengers, who expect a malnourished crew to bail them out – using punctured buckets.

Those Tory speeches haven’t happened yet, so let’s enjoy Mr McDonnell’s words while we can. He was certainly correct that it has been Labour’s historic role to lead the UK into each new era, and if he gets the chance to execute the plan he has outlined, Labour will fulfil that duty again.

In This Writer’s opinion, he identified all the right issues. Whether he came up with the right answers is up for debate, but his choices certainly seemed popular with the party rank-and-file.

If you didn’t catch the speech and want to know what his proposals were, here they are:

  • Creation of a Strategic Investment Board, to put money into key research projects, employment and wages, with fair distribution of investment across the UK.
  • Supporting entrepreneurs, small businesses, the genuinely self-employed and massively expanding worker control and the co-operative sector.
  • Re-nationalising rail, water, energy, and the Royal Mail.
  • Crossrail to be built in the north; HS2 extended into Scotland. Midlands Connect to overhaul transport there. Electrified railway lines from Cornwall to London.
  • Investment in the zero-carbon economy, for example the Swansea Tidal Lagoon.
  • Full protection of the rights of EU citizens in the UK and UK citizens in other EU countries, and a promise to give Tories “the political battle of their lives” if they try to water down or undermine protections on employment, consumer or environmental rights.
  • Close the tax loopholes and avoidance scams used by the mega-rich, making sure the rich and the giant corporations pay their way, to pay for public services.
  • Scrap the public sector pay cap; introduce the real Living Wage at £10 per hour; introduce pay ratios at the top; and address the gender pay gap.
  • Restore basic employment rights, repeal the Tories Trade Union Act, set up a new Ministry of Labour and restore collective bargaining.
  • Cap credit card debt.
  • Scrap tuition fees.
  • End Private Finance Initiative deals and bring those that currently exist “back in-house”.

He wrapped up by saying, “The Tories have tried to change people’s view of what is normal and acceptable in our society. They want us to accept that in the fifth richest country in the world it’s normal and acceptable for people to be saddled with debt; for people to have to work long, often insecure, hours, stressed out, struggling to find time with their family; for people not to have a pay rise for years no matter how dedicated you are or how hard you work; for young people to have no prospect of owning their own home; for disabled people to be pushed to the edge by the benefits system; or for carers to be struggling without support or recognition.

“Let’s make it clear – we will never accept that this is normal or acceptable.”

So which do you prefer? The Tory version of “normal or acceptable”? Or the Labour alternative?

I know which I’d rather have – but is it really possible?


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7 Comments

  1. Mike Hart September 25, 2017 at 4:39 pm - Reply

    Of course it’s possible. It will be a struggle to tame the vested interests that are ripping this country off, but with determination and a fair wind….

  2. Mike Coulson September 25, 2017 at 5:05 pm - Reply

    One thing I disagree with is HS2, I want to see it scrapped & investment put into local services. I fully support renationalisation but HS2 is a white elephant!

  3. Christine Bergin September 25, 2017 at 5:20 pm - Reply

    It is feasable if Quantative easing is used to support thr country instead of the banks. They played fast and loose with the banking system and deserve to suffer the consequences. If they fail us all again then let them rot.!

  4. Ray September 25, 2017 at 9:38 pm - Reply

    I watch the speech live on tv and it is really good to know someone gets it, he talked common sense, in plain english that we can all understand,can`t wait for labour to be in power,go labour.

  5. Florence September 25, 2017 at 10:09 pm - Reply

    Of course its possible. Anything is possible. The era of Quantitative Easing – free money for the banks / rich taken from the rest of us, is at its natural end. It has gone on far, far too long. If anyone had suggested in 2007 that £436bn would be found to funnel into private accounts including those in tax havens via largely state owned banks, people would have been incredulous. The alternative being proposed is way less expensive than QE.

  6. Barry Davies September 26, 2017 at 8:36 am - Reply

    Very good speech, but failed to point out that to renationalise the water gas electric and railways we need to leave the eu, and I still see no reason to give eu nationals rights that other migrants don’t have it is bigoted and divisive.

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