WEB EXCLUSIVE: Full-length interview with IDS
Fraser Nelson 4:29pm
I
have interviewed Iain Duncan Smith for tomorrow’s Spectator. In print, space
is always tight and we kept it to 1,500 words. One of the beauties of online is that you can go into detail in political debate that you never could with print: facts, graphs (my guilty pleasure)
and quotes. Here is a 2,300-word version of the IDS interview, with subheadings so CoffeeHousers can skip the parts that don’t interest them. I’ve known him for years, and remember how
hard it was to get out of his room four years ago when he started on the subject of gang culture and the merits early intervention. Now, he’s in the DWP, able to enact all he spoke about. He
believes the riots will transform Cameron’s premiership in the same way that 9-11 did Blair’s. Britain as a country, he says, is in the last-chance saloon. The riots were a warning: not
a crisis, but a prelude to a crisis unless they are fixed. James Forsyth’s cover story tomorrow looks at how likely Cameron is to do so. But here’s IDS:
Most politicians who hang pictures of battle scenes in their office do so from a sense of nostalgia. For Iain Duncan Smith, it is about militaristic feng shui. Since becoming Secretary of State for
Work and Pensions, the former soldier has approached his job as he would a battle. The abstract pictures he inherited from his predecessor, Yvette Cooper, have been replaced with scenes of the Duke
of Malborough’s victories. When a group of officials came to visit him just after he changed the decor, they told him it felt like the Ministry of Defence. "That’s right," he
replied. "I want you to know that from now on, this is the war room."
The London riots were, for him, simply the most spectacular manifestation of another war: that being fought, and lost, on the streets of Britain’s inner cities. Until now, he says, many people have believed that gang warfare existed only in America and in television series like The Wire. "People didn’t think it was happening two blocks away." But it was, he says, and his north-east London constituency is a case in point. "There has been gang war going on in Waltham Forest. Each postcode gang is at war with another. There’s evidence that they had a truce during the riots, and were swapping information with each other."
Duncan Smith believes that the looting was a mixture of professional gangs, who would set a building ablaze then rob a jeweller’s store, and opportunists who were swept up in the crowd. The
original Tottenham riot, he says, was spontaneous. ‘There were groups like the Socialist Workers Party inciting a lot of anger. But when people saw the police couldn’t control both the
riot and the looting, the penny dropped. “Everybody — here’s the
game. There’s looting to be had here.”
Gangs
And having outwitted the police, he believes, London’s gangs will try to do it again. That was why the government’s main response to the riots has been to set up a committee on gangs, which Duncan Smith will lead jointly with Theresa May, the Home Secretary. The key, he says, will be to act with urgency on the proposals of the Centre for Social Justice (on whose advisory board I sit). The centre produced a report on gangs called Dying to Belong. Its first recommendation was for police forces to agree a definition of gangs, so as to assess the scale of the problem.
"The Met have now accepted that, by our definition, there’s at least 100 gangs in London but it could be anything up to 200," Duncan Smith says. The remedy he prescribes is a technique used in Boston and applied by police in Glasgow: to offer gang members education and protection. Those who refuse are told there will be no hiding place. "Most of the kids didn’t want to be in the gangs at the beginning," he says. "If you’re not in the gang, then you’re against the gang and they will target you and your family. A lot of these kids are desperate for a way out."
Where this approach has been tried, he says, the effect has been profound. "The gang system starts to implode. It happened in Boston. Cincinnati did it very well. Strathclyde is doing it
brilliantly. Criminality, violence and attacks on young people start to fall. The areas become safer, more secure. Then decent people take back the streets, as they did in New York, and suddenly
those communities start to thrive again. Work starts to return. It
is do-able, you just have to keep at it."
And what makes him thing gangs were at the centre of this? “There is pretty good evidence,” he says. “ I was talking to my borough commander in Waltham Forest and he said there
was very good evidence that they moved around a lot and they were co-ordinating locations and some of the social media network.”
Family intervention
When we meet, Duncan Smith is fresh from the first meeting of the gangs committee. May will present findings in October alongside what Duncan Smith says will be a "timetable for action" that demonstrates the government means business. They are also looking at a plan to intervene in 120,000 families who cause the greatest problems. Here, the action list sounds long and expensive. Yet Duncan Smith works in a department facing steep cuts (as if to remind everyone, there is a picture of a chainsaw-wielding forester in its foyer). Can he afford such an expensive programme?
"Yes, it’s called good management," he says, with a note of exasperation, as if he’s been asked the question a hundred times before. "We’re spending a lot of money
sending them off to offenders’ institutions, to prison, intervening at all sorts of stages. You can save a lot of that by getting these interventions right, earlier on." It would mean
offering "remedial education, work programmes, job interviews, drug addiction rehab, by using
the correct targeting and money being spent anyway."
He has been struck by research by Karen McClusky into the opportunities there are to prevent a young child from turning to crime. “She tracks what happens to one person, who ended up doing life by the age of 18. She starts from the day the person was born and walks you through what happened to them. At each point she stops, and says: now here is a signal they were sending us. What if we’d intervened at this point? But we didn’t. We did was something else so things progressed. Now they are in their first bit of violence, did we intervene here? No.”
He talks with an extraordinary, almost suspicious enthusiasm – as if early years intervention by governmental authorities is, without the slightest doubt, the single most effective cure for the broken society. Why so messianic? “I’m passionate about it because if we get this right, as they have shown in Colorado over 25 years, whole communities are turned around by early intervention. Early years work at the beginning with the kids, and early intervention all the way down the chain. Alongside the work on gangs, early intervention is the next stage to resolving all of that problem. It’s turning a whole society around.”
And this gets to the heart of it: he believes this is not about repairing society, but renewing it. “I simply say the only purpose we should have in government on this is not remedial, it’s life change. That is what we have to do now.” But isn’t all this unusual for a Conservative. Wasn’t Reagan right when he said the most terrifying words in the English language are: “I’m from the government, and I’m here to help?”
"It cannot be the government doing this! The government can check the signals, but most of the intervention is done by the voluntary sector, private organisations, people who have proven
programmes that work. You don’t want some official trying to descend from on high and intervene. We’ve been doing that for years, and it’s all gone wrong. I’m talking about
intervention, but on a programme based around local communities. Government doesn’t do this. It can pave the way, set up the structures.”
Social bonds
The example he points to is Washington state in America, which publishes what Duncan Smith calls a "Which? buyers’ guide to interventions that tells you, for every dollar invested, how much you can absolutely say is saved within five years." It’s such a sure investment, he tells me, that the government could even use it to raise money: issue a ‘social bond’, use the money to save on welfare, and split the proceeds with those who put up the cash. As he says: “We could suggest to the private sector we create a social bond. We’d say: you can put your money into this for five years, and we’ll give you a guaranteed return because we think it saves us money. We’ll give some of it back to you, but the good thing is they have a guaranteed sum of money which the Treasury doesn’t touch for five years which they can invest in these programmes which are proven to succeed.”
Why would hard-headed investors buy these social bonds? “It plugs them back in to social responsibility - but not by lectures, or by getting something back. I was talking to Ronald Cohen
about this," he says. "We think this could be a marketplace as big as some of the late-1970s marketplaces in investment banking. It can release money which the government itself
doesn’t have to spend.”
Bipartisanship
Cohen is a Labour fundraiser who worked for Gordon Brown. He is one of many Labour names that come up as Duncan Smith discusses his various agendas. But the government has a majority with the Liberal Democrats and doesn’t need Labour approval. Why the olive branch? "Because this requires the best talents available. That’s why Frank Field, Graham Allen [both Labour MPs] and all these others are working with me to try and get this right: we care more about our society than we do for the political party. I don’t care if I’m attacked for it. I want to get Britain right — to me that’s more important than actually having a political spitting match."
Haven’t the LibDems already frustrated his families agenda? “You can’t generalise on this,” he says. “There are some Liberal Democrats who are very strong. There are
lots of Conservatives who don’t necessarily agree with the emphasis on family and marriage. So the Prime Minister has to give a lead. That’s what Prime Ministers are for.”
He’s about to do some work with Louie Casey, who was Tony Blair’s former Respect tsar. To hear him talk, is as if the former Tory leader has given up on the political party system.
Obstacles to reform
And his real enemies, of course, will not be rival political parties but the councils and police forces who may not sign up to a national gangbusting plan. "But people will have to stand in front of their electorate and say 'I didn’t care about this'," he says. Would he have liked to see Bill Bratton run the Met? “I’m in a difficult position because the official position of the government is it is open only to UK residents.” He’s hoping to meet him in London soon. “My answer to everybody who says we don’t want him, my answer to them is why wouldn’t you want to learn from someone who knows what they’re doing?”
Much of his plan depends on his conviction that the shock of the riots has given the country not just a sense of common purpose but a sense of urgency. His own gangs committee, he says, is working at full pace. “In October you will see a proper set of recommendations with a timescale for implementation.” The report, he says, will “set a template for what we believe as a national position every area should do and we’ll expect that to happen.” It then falls to the local councils. But will they all agree to national government’s plans? He admits that, even in London, different approaches have made gangbusting rather difficult.
“Reality changes you, rather than police being directed by politicians. I think the Met will accept they stared a nightmare problem in the face last week and they went to the brink. They now
recognise they have to change those policies. But it’s very patchy. Some boroughs like Waltham Forest and Islington, are doing good work - but then next door to them in the sort of Hackneys
and others, who are not doing that work. The result is that while it’s patchy. They [the gangs] spill over borders and then they come back again. But if it’s perpetual, each borough
doing something really strong on gangs, you bring the whole culture down. “
David Cameron's resolve
He seems absolutely sure that his own Cabinet is convinced of the urgency. "There has been a lot of focus on debt and the economic crisis. Now, we have to focus on the social crisis. The Prime
Minister made it clear that this, now, is his big focus. It is not possible to have watched or experienced any of these riots without realising that we’re in the last-chance saloon. This is
our warning. That wasn’t the crisis, but the crisis is coming. We can’t
let this go on any more, and I think the Prime Minister sees that."
I ask if the riots will change Cameron’s leadership, in the same way that the 11 September attacks transformed Tony Blair’s. "Well, I think he sees it like that. It’s been a
reminder to him. He’s now determined this is what he wants to do. It’s like a reinvention of Thatcher’s great drive. I always argued that the last Conservative government freed up
the markets, but what was missing was the next bit. Getting society in Britain ready to meet that change. We never did. We ended up with a sort of mid-20th century society, many locked away in
welfarism, and a 21st-century economy. We see now that one cannot meet the results of the other."
British jobs for British workers
Duncan Smith’s department is the old Ministry of Labour, and the globalisation of the British labour market is something he regards as fundamental. "So much is now produced by people from outside the UK. This is a very expensive option for us because we pay for welfare, absorb crime and health costs, then pay money for people from overseas. Labour got this wrong: this needed reforming." Thatcher knew this, he says, but “never got there.”
The problem has grown so ingrained, he says, because so many ministers — including Conservative ones — saw reform as optional. "If anything tells you that it’s not optional now, look at the 2.5 million jobs created under Labour out of which at least 60 per cent went to foreign nationals." Since Cameron took power, I say, the ratio has been even higher (figures would come out the next day, showing 90 per cent under Cameron’s first day). "It’s getting worse because we face the problem of having to reform a group that’s progressively less able to do the work. Last week was a wake-up call for us. But we should thank our lucky stars that we had one."



Previous






Andy Carpark
August 17th, 2011 5:25pm Report this commentDonald Pleasance is a smooth man. But IDS is a noisy man.
PayDirt
August 17th, 2011 5:41pm Report this commentMany of the examples are from the US. Would be interesting to know how many of these would fall foul of the European Human Rights dictats.
Tom B
August 17th, 2011 5:41pm Report this commentI hope IDS gets the backing to push these reforms through. A fine, intelligent man, and the kind of politician that reminds me that there are, in fact, decent people in public life. A rare breed.
men in white coats
August 17th, 2011 5:46pm Report this commentIDS is a normal man. But Andy Carpark is an Upney man.
jim.McCock
August 17th, 2011 6:38pm Report this commentHow is this a web exclusive? isn't it in the magazine tomorrow?
Igni Minat
August 17th, 2011 6:46pm Report this commentThe snails have eaten my marigolds again!
disenfranchised
August 17th, 2011 6:57pm Report this commentIDS is a military man. he knows the only solution to the problem of feral yoof.
the government have to bring back national service.
meantime, get the unemployed organised into gangs, will you IDS? that's road rebuilding gangs, of course.
we can solve all these problems if politicians dare do something bold.
any ex public schoolboys feeling bold today?
thought not.....
daniel maris
August 17th, 2011 8:09pm Report this commentIf employers can have their pick of 450 million Europeans, they are not going to find some tattooed layabout in Merther Tydfil worthwhile relocating their business for. They'll stay in Reading and import the labour from Lithuania or wherever.
Tinkering with the welfare system simply won't alter that reality.
The system is only get fixed by first providing a guaranteed conveyor belt from schooling to work. And before anyone tells me that will lead to a degenerate and usless workforce, let's remember that all those Poles whose work ethic is so lauded over here came out of the Communist system where there was such a link.
Dennis Churchill
August 17th, 2011 8:37pm Report this commentPayDirt
August 17th, 2011 5:41pm
Very true.
I see MigrationWatch published figures today (Daily Telegraph) suggesting it costs the taxpayer £1 billion a year just to house immigrants. Add that to the financial and other costs such as the lowering of the standards of education, due to language difficulties and it is obvious we must reinstate our immigration controls. No other issue has had such an adverse impact on our society.
We are still allowing Jamaican gangsters to stay in this country after they receive a criminal conviction—how can the government be taken seriously on crime reduction while this continues?
As for lawlessness, I see another case of Romanians taking over someone’s house and claiming squatters’ rights has occurred.
Dennis Churchill
August 17th, 2011 9:40pm Report this commentdaniel maris
August 17th, 2011 8:09pm
Exactly.
The idea that if you give someone a choice between going to work, probably doing a job they don’t like, for a disposable income the same or less than staying at home they will choose to go to work makes you wonder about the quality or even rationality of our political class.
Whether we consider the failures of our criminal justice system or our education system the same weakness is apparent: the denial of human nature.
2trueblue
August 17th, 2011 11:36pm Report this commentWhen I hear ministers talk about the value of migrant workers I think of the true cost. Housing, education, health, infrastructure, and the fact that this is a small island and we are just full up. I am not in any way prejudiced, but the reality is that we do not have the capacity to cope with those in the system right now and still our borders are wide open. I respect that people do a good job but if the money is going somewhere else to enrich another place then it does not make sense. None of it makes sense. It seemed a good idea and the result is it has not worked. The EU is one of our biggest problems as we are now not allowed to legislate within our own borders, so all of the above solutions are not going to happen.
daniel maris
August 18th, 2011 12:48am Report this commentYes, it does seem like gradually the message on the costs of immigration is getting around.
One point I always mention is that if we have 0.5% growth in population (as we do if we have met immigration of 250,000) , and 0.4% economic growth, we have negative economic growth.
Sadly, I can't see out political elite getting to grips with the issue now before we reach a real civil breakdown. It requires them to give up too many of their cherished notions: membership of the EU, commitment to free trade, human rights legislation and the refugee treaties.
If we need immigrant labour then we should import it on short term contracts with no citizen rights attached, as recommended by Migration Watch. Infrastructure costs should be paid for by employers.
The alternative is not nice. We saw how thing might go during the riots: islands of mutually hostile fortified commnunities based on ethnic or religious identity.
Dimoto
August 18th, 2011 12:55am Report this commentScary stuff, the man with all the (glib, sociobabble) answers.
Train wreck ahead !
This, on the day that the metrosexual liberals started the fightback to discredit the whole "hardline agenda" on the riots.
Sir Everard Digby
August 18th, 2011 7:18am Report this commentI could agree with some of his points were it not for the bizarre situation where:
We pay money to the EU.
The EU provides grants to companies to relocate from Britain.Some of that money will come from the contributions we make to the EU.
We permit migrant workers to come to the UK and export money from here to their own countries.
We pay some of our own nationals not to work.
We pay benefits to some migrant workers,for which they have made little or no contribution.
Both our own nationals and migrant workers get access to public services which are funded by the UK taxpayer.
Is it any wonder that our economy is struggling and our public finances are up a certain creek without a paddle?
This will only worsen as more countries join the EU with 'zero net contribution' clauses like Poland.
It is a fine political class solution.
Provide funding for an unaccountable organisation to export employment and spending power elsewhere and to import unemployment and additional service costs in exchange.
To sweeten the deal we will subsidise the outworkings of the situation for all parties.
Genius
Ken Clarke
August 18th, 2011 8:14am Report this comment' "So much is now produced by people from outside the UK. This is a very expensive option for us because we pay for welfare, absorb crime and health costs, then pay money for people from overseas. Labour got this wrong: this needed reforming." Thatcher knew this, he says, but “never got there.”
Because she thought chasing the phantom of Monetarism, whatever the cost, was more important? Whatever the reason, this sounds like being wise after the event: if the Thatcher government knew this, why would UK production have gone down a good 20% on their watch?
ButcombeMan
August 18th, 2011 8:28am Report this commentWhich explains why Stephen House Chief Constable of Strathclyde is likely to become Met Commissioner (assuming he wants it). It may also explain why Hugh Orde appeared (sadly & unwisely) to throw his dummy out of his pram earlier this week. (He knows it).
PayDirt
August 18th, 2011 9:37am Report this commentMr Toad is preparing to take on the stoats/weasels and the like, but where is Ratty and Badger?
Rattan
August 18th, 2011 9:38am Report this comment"He believes the riots will transform Cameron’s premiership in the same way that 9-11 did Blair’s".
So he'll spend billions on illegal wars, knee-jerk reactions and distractive headlines while completely failing to comprehend and deal with the root causes of the problem?
Fergus Kane
August 18th, 2011 10:49am Report this commentSome good points by IDS. It's reassuring to see people getting to grips with the idea that interventions should be evidence based.
As for the comments. One sided figures about the costs of immigration don't exactly make an informed analysis. You'll need to examine both the costs and benefits to see if immigration is working for us. And if it turns out to be a nuanced picture, you'll need the whole picture to work out what could be improved and how.
And before you start harking back to an all British Britain, ask yourself: when was this? what was it like?
Derek Emery
August 18th, 2011 11:07am Report this commentHow come UK graduates and A level leavers cannot find jobs against immigrants when A level results have improved for the last 29 years. This year one in 12 had A* results. Today's output must be little short of geniuses. How then do we equate this to CBI reports that even graduates can be barely literate and incapable of simple addition and subtraction and that many UK starters lack the work ethic?
Fergus Kane
August 18th, 2011 11:22am Report this commentBritish Workers for British Jobs.
Exactly Derek, we need to make sure our workers have what it takes. We can't simply blame immigrants, we have to look to ourselves to work out why our population can't or don't access these jobs.
Steve Palmer
August 18th, 2011 11:24am Report this commentI'm pretty much in agreement with Prof. Starkey.
Sociologists & politicians can talk about a 'the disaffected' & 'the underclasses' of Britain, as much as they want, but these people have always existed within civilised society, the only difference is that this generation of 'have nots' actually have a lot of material possessions, but have no desire for self advancement.
The rioters & looters in London last week, were not a poor, politically oppressed mass; they were looting for cheap Chinese made sportswear with elasticated waistbands, polyester sports shirts. PVC trainers & the latest fad in pocket electronics. Those getting sentenced for their crimes, this week, are getting 2 to 4 years in prison for less than $500 of loot!
This was not akin to the LA riots in 1992, where looters were primarily stealing food, nappies & family basics.
The old adage, "Don't do the crime, if you can't do the time," seems to have been lost on this 'underclass'. You can blame celebrity culture & bling products for tempting these rioters & looters into their crimes, you can even blame the politicians & police for dereliction of duty, but the fundamental problem lies in the fact, that, most of these criminals have never had a known a father to say, "No!"
The unpalatable truth is that most boys and girls of mixed, Afro-American-European parentage in cities, don't know who their real father is, or don't have regular contact with, said father. This is where Professor Starkey's argument, rings true for me, that white youth culture has taken on the traits of black youth culture.
Patois has crushed poetry, and rap (so often held as a paragon of black rhyming culture) has trounced lyricism in song construction. (Outkast are obviously exempt from this example, as they use lyrics to make the rap, with alliteration, rhythm & rhyme as secondary components.)
Hopefully a dose of correctional therapy, will teach these kids, that it just wasn't worth it and they'll all turn into model citizens, but what about the next generation of single parent kids. A growing number living with just mother (and siblings), getting by without their useless dad.
As a stay at home, house husband to 2 boys, I know many single parent mothers (and fathers), bringing up their children in inspirational ways, in difficult circumstances. And they are the rule, perhaps they can help our future society with the exceptions.
MentorWell
August 18th, 2011 11:43am Report this commentWe have gone in depth into mentoring as a response to gangs and the riots which includes reference to Iain Duncan Smith's report on tackling gangs: http://blog.mentorwell.com/mentoring-gangs-as-a-response-to-the-uk-riots-rhetoric-and-reality/
Mrs ML Bonwick-Jones
August 18th, 2011 12:22pm Report this commentIt as well as Labour premoting a lack of family values Tony Blairs Mantra 'Education Education Education did not work.
They spent millions on school buildings but didnot invest in teachers who were more interested in reaching targets,Labour just threw money at problems including the benefit system then just forgot about real people .
We have employers who prefer to employ foreign nationals as they are better educated and work hard, we have ploiticians who have set a bad example, a pc nanny state,police who are seen as social workers,people who are told nothing is their fault, so we now have a generation of people with no education,take no responsibility, who live in a me first culture,are unemployable, with no aspiration or inspiration, so no Labour's take no responsibility softy softy approach did not work they did not understand the fact that they had a duty and responsibility to make peoples lives better, so good luck Iain Duncan Smith and also may i say Michael Gove you both have a lot of work to do
oohkuchi
August 18th, 2011 12:59pm Report this commentI’m sorry, but what we need is a WAR on gangs--dawn raids, mass incarcerations, zero tolerance, and now. And what are we going to get? A “proper set of recommendations in October” with local communities spearheading some kind of social contract thingy? FFS
But, truth is I can hardly be bothered to get worked about this completely hopeless kid-glove response, because the real story, the real source of desperation for everybody native to this country, is in the last paras—the fact that migrants are taking 80 percent of jobs going in the UK. If this goes on much longer, never mind unemployed black gangstas, the whole of England is finished. IDS is focusing on the wrong target.
Mrs M L Bonwick-Jones
August 18th, 2011 2:28pm Report this commentyes we do need zero tolerance, whilst that would happen with a majority conservative goverment but they are in coalition with the hand wringing Lib Dems who would never allow such a thing and who would you chose to employ some well educated, hard working polite person from eastern europe someone similar to a person taking part in the riots.
Davidh
August 19th, 2011 5:10am Report this commentThat's quite a task. Not only take the kids out of the gangs but make them employable, too. From an employer's perspective, who would you give a job? The foreign worker who's dilligent and values the job or a local kid with an attitude and a hood? I've been a foreign worker in a factory myself and been promoted quickly just for taking care with my job and putting in some effort. Compared to many of the local employees who dropped and broke stuff, passed things on that weren't properly finished, came back late from coffee breaks etc etc.
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