Blairism may have had its day on this side of the Channel, but Bernard-Henri Lévy says that the English Third Way should be a model to his Gallic comrades
And then, for his own reasons and yet without disavowing himself or forgetting to recall that if he were French he would (and I quote) be ‘in the Socialist party’, standing alongside ‘those who are committed to transforming it,’ Tony Blair accepted French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s invitation to address the leaders of his conservative party. They gave him an ovation, which elicited new shrieks of alarm from the Left, mutterings of major excommunication and sweeping accusations of betrayal.
So my friends, we have two choices. Either Tony Blair is indeed a sellout, this bearer of ill and shame you have denounced for ten years. (In which case, why are you complaining?) Or he is one of our own, who has his rightful place in the family. Haven’t you said it already? Why this embarrassment? This squirming? Why the profusion of linguistically inventive slogans like Lionel Jospin’s ‘modern socialism’ or François Hollande’s ‘reformism of the Left’ — phrases that function as euphemisms for ‘social liberalism’ or just plain ‘liberalism’, the central tenets of Blairism?
How, in that case, do you dare complain that a president of the Republic leaps into the opening that you yourselves have created, taking for himself the heritage that is yours, and which you want only as long as you don’t have to say it aloud? The problem has been highlighted with renewed sharpness by Sarkozy’s adroit manoeuvre of ‘opening’ his administration to leading figures from the opposition.
It is time for the Left, our Left, to emerge once and for all from its ambiguities. It must give up its outdated Jacobinism, the Robespierrist inclination that forms its ideological identity. Hollande recently said in a memorable debate with French minister of the interior Michèle Alliot-Marie, ‘Yes, it’s true: I do not like rich people.’
The Left must — and this is key — break the spell the extreme Left holds over it. But the far Left is unfortunately in the process of resurrecting itself — while evoking Trotsky, Pierre Bourdieu or José Bové — and acting as a superego.
In other words, the Left must finally undergo, openly and transparently, a conversion to the market economy, liberalism, Europe, globalisation and human rights, which it has until now done only on the sly, clandestinely, condemning itself to hypocrisy and schizophrenia. Conversion or death. Either clarity or the chronicle, defeat after defeat, of a disappearance foretold.
Whatever you call it, Blairism is, more than ever, the only possible choice for a Left that has truly learned all the lessons it can from the totalitarian temptation.
Translated From The French By Sara Sugihara And Distributed By The New York Times Syndicate. © Bernard-Henri Lévy.
More articles from: Bernard-Henri Lévy | this section
Post this entry to: del.icio.us | Digg | Newsvine | NowPublic | Reddit
Advertisement
Melissa Kite meets Martina Navratilova, nine times Wimbledon singles champion and now pioneer of ‘tennising’ — an artistic technique that creates Jackson Pollock-style patterns
James Forsyth talks to Scott McClellan, former press secretary to the President, about his new book attacking the Bush administration, its methods and its deceits
Lord Lloyd of Berwick says that the government’s emergency legislation to overturn their lordships’ ruling on witness anonymity is part of a ‘gradual usurpation’ of our liberties
In the week of the Spectator Summer Party, Steven Berkoff recalls another of our celebrations at which he sought out the Tory leader and forgave his confusion of Brando and Dean
Rod Liddle says that it helps to be aged between 14 and 30, white and male. Being drunk and argumentative speeds things along. And no public policy seems to dissuade those who do the stabbing
Michael Bloomberg, the Mayor of New York, unveils his new partnership with Boris, and their plans to forge a transatlantic alliance between the two greatest cities on earth to promote state-of-the-art public policy, cultural links and economic prosperity
Rod Liddle says it is no surprise that Gordon Brown has ended up as surly and suspicious as he has: the memoirs of John Prescott, Lord Levy and Cherie Blair are appalling acts of treachery and avarice
David Cameron talks to Fraser Nelson about his local election triumphs, admits that he is not going to ‘agree on everything’ with the new Mayor of London, and says Boris should join the queue to become PM after him
The EU’s Lisbon Treaty was handled scandalously in the Commons, says Daniel Hannan. Now the Upper House has the chance to play its ancestral role as the conscience of the nation
Charles Leadbeater tells Matthew d’Ancona about the riches to be mined from online collaboration — and says that the Conservatives have a chance to launch a new form of politics
Choose from a full range of fantastic weekend getaways across the UK with Britannia Hotels. Book online for deals on seasonal entertainment, leisure breaks and much more.
Short break fares from only £34 check availability now.
Choose from a full range of fantastic weekend getaways across the UK with Britannia Hotels. Book online for deals on...
Short break fares from only £34 check availability now.
PORTA METRONIA, ROME Standing high on the top of one of the seven hills of Rome- the Coelian- this unique
ROME and PARIS: over 350 holiday rentals apartments listed: visit www.romanreference.com and www.parisreference.com or call +39 0648 903612.
Goldsmiths by Design Welcome to Ruffs! You have found a company of Goldsmiths that specialises in the manufacture, amongst other
Spectator Business | Apollo Magazine
Corporate | Advertising | Privacy | Terms
Spectator, 22 Old Queen Street, London, SW1H 9HP
All Articles and Content Copyright ©2008 by The Spectator | All Rights Reserved
Fergus Pickering
April 17th, 2008 5:30pmWhy is it that anything with the word 'left' in it (except in those magic words 'left-arm spinner' is so mind-numbingly boring?