Who will shape a labour Third term?

    So, if you are committed to protecting the vulnerable in society,
    whose holiday reading do you trust? Tony Blair goes for worthy
    biographies of men who’ve ensured immortality for themselves on the
    political stage. Mr Brown apparently enjoys contemporary heavy
    weight thinkers, such as Noam Chomsky, the American radical,
    defender of the poor and scourge of corporate greed .

    The Blair/Brown feud has, of course, been intensified by the
    appointment of Alan Milburn as master of ceremonies (and manifesto
    content) for the forthcoming election – a Blairite whom, unlike
    Blair, is allegedly prepared to take on Brown.

    Milburn is wedded to the idea that the private sector and market
    competition delivers (not always true). He likes phrases such as
    “localism” and “active citizenship”.

    Brown better understands that social change must come through a
    revitalised public sector, a national child care strategy that is
    truly universal and an increased investment in early years. While
    he also recognises that future generations of women are unlikely to
    carry the burden of care and the state will have to do more.

    But will the chancellor be impeded – and at what cost to those at
    the bottom of the social pyramid? In London, a hugely expensive
    city, deprivation is acute despite seven years of Brown-ite
    redistribution. One in four children lives in a household with no
    wage-earner.

    Pensions too are a concern. The government, although notoriously
    timid about upsetting employers, is considering compelling
    companies to provide occupational pensions.

    Last week, at its annual conference, the TUC called for the
    restoration of the link between state pensions and earnings and
    asked for special recognition of the position of women via an
    equality audit.

    Less than 13 per cent of women are entitled to a full basic
    pension. By 2050, the full basic pension will, anyway, be worth
    only 7 per cent of earnings while those who have taken time out
    from paid work to care for children and dependents will be even
    further penalised. Female pensioners, on average, live on 57 per
    cent of a male pensioner’s income.

    A decent citizen’s pension, unrelated to work, has appeal. So, who
    is more likely to come up with a workable fair solution to the
    pension crisis – Milburn or Brown?

    That’s why this latest political spat is more than a matter of
    vanity, egos and power. It could dictate the kind of society we
    become.

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