Saturday 14 September 2019

'A History of Modern Britain' by Andrew Marr


This will probably be the thickest book I read this year.

Similar to my experience reading 'Cameron at 10' last year, learning about modern British history made me feel like I was at that bit of an SFF novel where a character learns about the background of their world and how the current crises have come about. Britain's confused relationships with America and continental Europe are a major thread throughout our post-WW2 history.

Major catastrophes such as the Second World War cause major changes: class barriers had been broken down as people from all backgrounds came to together to either fight and die as soldiers, or worked together on the home front. The different classes began to understand their differences were mainly material, and there was greater awareness of poverty and a desire to do something about it. Government wartime control of health, transport, food (the diets of a lot of poor people actually improved during the war years - the meager rations they received were more food than they could have afforded before the war), and other industries, combined with the wartime ideals of Britons all working together to help each other out and fight a common enemy, was like a trial run for socialism.

And so, after the war, there was landslide victory for Attlee's Labour party, who had campaigned along the lines of (I'm paraphrasing), "Let's use state planning, which helped us win the fight against fascism, to win the fight against poverty and illness."

The Attlee government created the NHS and massively expanded the welfare state, causing a huge increase in living standards across the country. It is a shame such a government would probably not have been elected if it weren't for the horrors of World War 2. 

(The First World War had a similar effect: in its immediate aftermath, the government extended suffrage and embarked on a huge social housing policy, to make the country "fit for heroes who had won the war" - without these policies, many of the soldiers would have returned from the war to live in slums and been unable to vote for their government.)

Reading about how the Attlee government was made possible by WW2, I now understand (and further abhor) the 'Lexit' argument that did the rounds a bit back in 2016: the Left should vote for Brexit because it will be a disaster that would force the country to come together in crisis, and make a leftwing government more likely as a result. Even among those ostensibly on the right, those that think No-Deal Brexit would be a disaster in the short term seem to think the cost is worth it if in the longer term the country is brought together through hardship. How often is the Blitz and WW2 mentioned in discussions of Brexit? We survived the Blitz, we can survive Brexit! Brexit will be tough, but it'll bring some wartime spirit to the country and bring us together!

Are the people craving Brexit and the (idealised) wartime spirit really craving a socialist government, without realizing it or wanting to realize it?

Britain was triumphant in WW2, but it was ruined economically and literally. Post-war governments were not honest with the electorate about how weak the country was after war: they had a "don't talk about it in front of the children/voters" approach. They didn't want to ruin the triumphant, positive mood winning the war had instilled in the populace. The crumbling British Empire was no longer a superpower, and was dependent on American aid for years after the war. To keep the aid coming, Britain became the more subservient partner in the "special relationship".

Having defeated an extremely racist ideology in World War 2, with a lot of help from colonial soldiers, the British government thought of Britain as the opposite of the Nazis, i.e. not racist (obviously, there was a lot of racism in Britain). British citizenship was extended across the colonies: colonial subjects were now British citizens who could move to Britain if they so wished, and would be welcomed with open arms. There was also plenty of work that needed doing to rebuild the country. This was essentially freedom of movement across the commonwealth; however, transport was expensive so not as many people could afford as would do today. Nevertheless, a lot of people did come.

One of the first ships of immigrants to arrive was the HMT Empire Windrush, from which the Windrush Generation gets its name. Symbolically, the ship was a re-purposed Germany Navy Troopship captured during the war. Knowing this, reflect on the recent Windrush scandal and what it says about the current state of our nation.

The Suez Crisis of 1956 is often seen as the time when Britain proved to the world that it was no longer a superpower. The Egyptian president nationalized the Suez Canal, which had been under Anglo-French control. The British and the French wanted to invade to retake the canal, but America and the USSR had other ideas. Both knew that if the British and French were kept out of Egypt, all of the old colonial powers would be out of the Middle East, leaving it open for them to influence. It was the only time during the Cold War that America sided with the USSR against its supposed allies. International pressure and domestic anti-war protest led to the invasion force being withdrawn before they had recaptured the canal. Britain and France humiliated on the world stage.

The French government learnt from this that America could not be trusted: they would betray their allies in a heartbeat if it benefited them. France turned away from the US to focus on its continental allies, to build what would become the EU. Britain was unsure what to do: it was stung by the betrayal, but had been dependent on America since WW2 and wanted to maintain the "special relationship". British governments since WW2 have been divided over whether Britain should be closer to America, or closer to Europe, and this constant division has meant that Britain has never been as close as it could have been with either.

When Britain was first trying to join the EEC (which became the EU), it was blocked twice, with the French president De Gaulle being the most vocal opponent of Britain joining. The European nations were worried that Britain was too close to America, the Betrayer, and would be a Trojan horse for American interests in Europe. They were also deeply concerned about Britain dragging the Commonwealth into Europe with it, especially with the 'freedom of movement' mentioned above (tighter immigration controls were later introduced). Continental Europe was more racist than Britain, and didn't want all those non-white, non-European people from Britain's colonies getting to the mainland.

Britain joined the EEC in the 70s, under the Conservative government of Edward Heath. The next Labour government held a referendum on whether the populace actually wanted to be in it (the referendum had been Tony Benn's idea: he wanted Britain out).

The campaigns on both sides focused on how food pricing was affected by membership: both sides claimed their option would result in cheaper food. Prior to joining, Britain had imported most of its food from the Commonwealth, now it was getting it from the continent. The Yes campaigners said European food was cheaper; the No, that Commonwealth food would be cheaper. Neither campaign really talked about the ways the EEC was planning to develop and grow over the decades, becoming increasingly a federal Europe. Neither side seemed to think that was important. Both Labour and Conservatives were divided over EEC membership: neither was a 100% Yes or No party.

(I spoke to a man from New Zealand the other week, who said that a lot of people in New Zealand and Australia had been disappointed when Britain went closer to Europe and away from the Commonwealth. Their trade with Britain decreased, and they had to find new markets to sell their food.)

Many Brexit supporters have said they would have voted No in 1975 had the campaigns mentioned the plans of a closer union; many felt betrayed and lied to, when the EEC became more than a trading arrangement: when it became the EU.

Britain's early years in the EEC coincided with a bunch of other major changes to the country, which in some minds were causally linked to EEC membership. Decimalization of currency meant coins such as shillings and farthings, which went back to Anglo-Saxon times, were replaced by the more rational system of pounds and pence we have today - Britain's history and tradition was being eroded, thought some, leaving them with a sense of alienation. Industries declined and industrial strife increased. The government went to the IMF for a loan to help its finances. The oil crisis of '73 and '79 caused huge disruptions, especially when combined with the more frequent strikes... leading to the Winter of Discontent, and the election of Margaret Thatcher.

Thatcher's reforms were... divisive, to say the least.

Paradoxically, she privatized a lot of public services, while also increasing central government control of others and removed powers from local authorities. Prior to the Thatcher years, local elections had been about the local candidates and how they would use local powers to improve local areas. As local powers were taken away by central government, local elections increasingly became a proxy vote on the government in power.

She crushed the unions and allowed industries to die. The state would interfere less in business: the Market would reign. Mass unemployment arrived in modern Britain for the first time: this shifted power away from workers towards employers. When employment is high, workers are in demand and have greater power to push for better pay: when there's always a significant number of people unemployed but wanting a job... well, we can just hire one of the other people if you don't want low pay.

Mass debt also arrived. Right to Buy meant council tenants could buy their homes at a massively reduced price. The deregulated financial sector was happy to lend mortgage money. Britain's obsession with house prices and house buying was born. At the time Thatcher came to power, a greater proportion of Brits lived in social housing than in many communist countries. Now it's less than 20% and there are endless headlines about the housing crisis. The government doesn't build much social housing, and the private sector is incentivised to build and sell slowly to keep prices high.

While Thatcher had been pro-Europe to start with, she increasingly became anti-Europe during her time in office, as the federal project accelerated. The big disagreement came over the European Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) - the different European currencies would work towards maintaining agreed exchange rates with the German Deutcshmark through monetary policy: this would make the planned transition to a single currency easier. Thatcher hated this idea, but the Treasury and much of her party was broadly in favour, which combined with the Poll Tax fiasco brought about her downfall.

Thus, the Conservative party divide between what would become Leavers and Remainers grew, and soon it would grow again.

In 1992, Germany was going through an economic boom after reunification. Britain, not so booming, was struggling to keep the pound up to the value of the Deutschmark. The German government didn't want to ruin the boom because it needed money to help former East Germany. John Major's government kept pushing up interest rates until homeowners and businesses were in danger of defaulting. Major wanted to ride out the storm, keep Britain in the ERM, so the country could be at the heart of the developing union.

But it was not to be. The government cracked, and Britain exited the ERM on Black Wednesday.- 16th September 1992. Economic recovery followed, and the Conservative Eurosceptics became more confident. In its aftermath, the Referendum Party was founded, which had a single policy: hold a referendum of Britain's membership of the EU.

Tony Blair's New Labour easily beat the humiliated Conservatives, winning the largest majority in Labour's history. But there were problems. Labour had been out of power for two decades: the new ministers had no experience of government and made a lot of mistakes. Blair took to courting all the newspapers, telling them what they wanted to hear, which inevitably turned them against him when the lie was revealed. Blair wanted to bring Britain closer to Europe, have Britain join the Euro, but struggled to balance his European aspirations with his courting of the anti-EU press. Lies, half-truths, and twisted truths became increasingly common from politicians: outright lying to the press and the electorate was being normalized among the political class. Blair got the nickname Bliar.

Oof, this is a long post isn't it? This book ends in 2007, with Blair's resignation and some descriptions of recent changes to Britain, which we're so accustomed to now it felt that they were once new. Increasing surveillance through CCTV. Increasing concerns about data protection - who buys our personal data, and is this important? Increasing Internet usage - Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, warned in 2006 that it could be used to spread disinformation and undermine democracy. Immigration was increasingly becoming a major political issue: refugees from the Middle East were fleeing conflicts (which Britain was a part of) and settling in Britain, more people from Europe were coming over here. Islamophobia had become more common since 9/11 and 7/7. Politicians were often talking about the long term and economic benefits of immigration, while neglecting to mention the short term costs: the extra burden on public services, and worsening the housing crisis (to homeowners this was a good thing since it meant higher house prices). Since mass unemployment had arrived with Thatcher, the idea that 'immigrants are stealing our jobs' became more common and more convincing...

(A more recent paperback edition continues the story to 2017.)

Knowing the historical context for our current affairs is important, and as you can probably tell I learnt a lot from this book and enjoyed it.

Marr's writing flows well and he has come great turns of phrase. My main quibble is that he gets obsessed with the Westminster drama: with the characters and their relationships to each other, which often feels like fluff and filler. This is probably his training as a Westminster journalist at work. The news is what the politicians are doing and saying; the history is what the politicians did and said. I would have preferred more emphasis on how the country as a whole changed. When lands beyond Westminster are mentioned, it is usually because the people in Westminster have to respond to events there.

There's plenty of description of the drama around passing legislation, but comparatively little about how the legislation affected the country. This prevents him from being too critical of any politician's actual record and legacy. Criticisms are typically leveled at their character, and how they interacted with colleagues. There are segments on topics outside of Westminster, but they read like he would much rather get back to Westminster. It sometimes feels more like 'A History of Modern Westminster and its Occasional Relations with Other Lands, with Minor Digressions onto Other Topics'. This makes the book feel broad but shallow. That's fine, I guess: there's plenty of suggestions for further reading in the notes.

I did enjoy this book a lot, though I do feel a slight disappointment that it isn't the book I wanted it to be, but that book would never have written by Andrew Marr: he's a journalist, not a historian.


'Random Acts of Senseless Violence' by Jack Womack

Image may contain: textOn the one hand, this novel is a very impressive achievement, an extremely believable tale of a family descending into poverty as society collapses, told as 6 months of diary entries written by a 12-year old girl. The way the language shifts over the course of the novel is incredibly, masterfully done - from plain and simple English written by a girl doing well at school and living in a nice area, to paragraphs of street slang written by a girl struggling to get by as her life collapses.

On the other hand, this is an extremely believable tale of a family descending into poverty as society collapses. It's not a fun book; it's so bleak. I can appreciate it as a technical and imaginative achievement but I can't really say I enjoyed reading it, especially in the current political climate.

Bit too real.