Power, Influence and Policy in the Labour Party

Dave Levy
2 min readAug 14, 2024

I have been published on Labour Hub. In the article, I reflect on the powerlessness of Labour’s ordinary members, and look at the long term plans of Labour’s right and PLP starting from Evan’s 1999 report proposing the destruction of membership rights and diminishing of the CLP influence.

by dfl1955, CC 2016 BY

I look at the introduction of all-member meetings and registered supporters and their later repeal and the reforms and their repeal to conference procedure that have the same effect.

I am of the view that the registered supporters made no [arithmetic] difference to Corbyn’s victories and the whole experiment was based on a right wing fantasy of their true popularity, as was their experimenting with all-member meetings. The true reason that they can’t win modern leadership elections is because the LP elects the most left wing person that they think can win. Corbyn won because we thought no-one could do so, and Starmer won because he lied.

On Conference, once the Parliament of the movement, I said,

The Blair reforms were designed to isolate the membership from policymaking. The creation of the NPF and the contemporary motion threshold for Conference made member-led policy formulation difficult. The restriction of the number of debates and the preference given to first-time delegates also made the

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Dave Levy

Brit, Londoner, economist, Labour, privacy, cybersecurity, traveller, father - mainly writing about UK politics & IT, https://linktr.ee/davelevy