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Cometh the Communitarians: A roadmap for social democracy
In the early twentieth century, R. H. Tawney argued that questions of ideology go against the grain of our national psyche. As a country we are “incurious to theory, take fundamentals for granted, and are more interested in the state of the roads than in their place on a map”, he wrote in The Acquisitive Society (1920).
There’s much about our present political moment that further strengthens these practical instincts. The pace of Labour’s political turnaround in recent years means there has not been much space for reflective conversations about the nature of social democracy. But as Tawney went on to say, “it is not enough to follow the road. It is necessary to know where it leads.”
This maxim is particularly important when in government. At the end of Labour’s last period in office, James Purnell and Graeme Cooke, writing in a 2010 paper for Demos, reflected that New Labour’s “ideological flexibility” brought the party “three major disadvantages in government”. It didn’t help prioritise when faced with difficult choices. It created “blind spots” that left important issues on the back burner. And, with no clear thread to connect policies together, it made it hard to create an enduring electoral coalition.
Keir Starmer himself is dispositionally disinclined towards the ideological – he has repeatedly said there is no such thing as “Starmerism”. What’s more, his government is now under huge and urgent pressure to “deliver change” in the most challenging of circumstances. As such, the bandwidth for big ideas feels even more constrained.
However, it’s not that the wider party doesn’t have them. The Fabian Society – where I used to work – has always been a key source, home to a rich intellectual tradition that has been central to Labour thinking over the course of its 140-year history. The Fabians are most associated with the big state, ‘democratic collectivism’ of Sidney and Beatrice Webb. However, in a recent Fabian pamphlet, I argued that there are two other strands of the Fabian tradition that are more relevant for the Left today.
The first is revisionism, whereby each generation of social democrats has sought to consider the appropriate ‘means’ by which their ultimate ‘ends’ can be achieved in modern conditions.
The second strand is the Fabian communitarians – most notably G. D. H. Cole and R. H. Tawney – whose theory of change was rooted in the power of local people and the relationships they form with each other. While communitarianism has long been part of the Fabian story, it has tended to be a subplot. But the big state has been struggling for some time to get to grips with the complex nature of contemporary problems. So the time has come to reverse the balance of history and make the communitarians the mainstream of social democratic ideas today.

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