How seriously to take Phillip Blond? It’s a question that’ s been niggling at me.
A sophisticated, urbane (and Tory) correspondent emailed in over the weekend to point out the the Phillip Blond article I quoted on Saturday was worse than I thought.
Not only does Blond conoujour figured and returns from the vasty deep (One trillion investment, 5% return, 50 billion cash to exchequer) but worse, he seems to believe that this sum will arrive every year. Either that or he believes that a Capital injections is used wisely in creating and temporarily meeting an annual cost to the exchequer*
(By the way, handing people asset vouchers has a history of ending badly for the poor and very well for a small number of wealthy people. Ask Mr R. Abramovitch)
Anyway, this leads me to to my question. How seriously should anyone take Philip Blond? Obviously my good freinds at the Fabians, the Guardian, New Statesman and Independent would like to take him very seriously indeed, as he represents a sort of lefties platonic ideal of a Tory.
It’s striking too that his most hagiographic profiles have all been in the mildly leftish press (and Radio 4). Given this, and the implications of what he actually proposes, which would be a massive redistribution from someone who claims to oppose redistributivion I can’t help thinking that no bright Tories would fall for the material he presents for a minute.
All of which leads me to think that Blond is influential not for what he thinks, but for what he represents, and I can safely discard his actually writing and focus on his achievements as a socio-politico-cultural phenomenom.
This suits me, because Blond’s writing is bad. I mean it’s terrible, obscure, vague, confusing, imprecise and muddled. You don’t so much read it as wrestle with it. Faced with the prspect of trying to work out what a “radical communitarian civic conservatism” actually means**, you retire defeated, and fail to note that a paragraph which talks about the significance of extending property owning democracy rests on a crisis defined by a decline in “wealth, excluding property”. Faced with this sort of thing, I’m inclined to call the whole thing nonsense and leave it resting in the corner, unread.
But perhaps I’m wrong – perhaps Tory Policy thinkers do take Blond seriously, and he’s not merely a helpful caricature of a moderate Tory, blown up into unwarranted significance by lefities who desperately want to have a figure on the centre right to debate with.
So, Tories, help me out. Is Phillip Blond in any way useful to read as a guide to the thinking of the real players in the Conservative party – or is he a political condom – a useful cover when attempting to achieve your goal, but destined to be rapidly dispensed with once the chase is complete?
*There is another possibility. That he uses the word “return” extremely vaguely as a one off profit from sale, rather than an actual return from the investment.
** It’s a sort of contradiction palindrome, no?- communitarian civics and radical conservatism.