Tuesday, August 24, 2010

A big fat nothing

Hello again.

Baffling Question of the Day which has prompted me to break my blogging silence is: why the hell are so many people taking 'the Big Society' so seriously?

From pretty much the first time I heard the phrase, it seemed blindingly obvious that it was nothing more than a fairly pathetic attempt to rebrand Thatcherism. You can almost see the Tory spinners sat in the pub, going "Maybe instead of talking about the 'small state', we should start talking about, I dunno, the 'big... society', or something", as they scribble 'big society?' on the back of a beermat. Sure, some vague policy ideas about devolving power and supporting voluntary organisations have been stuck on or sketched in since, but surely, at bottom, that's really all it is?

Yet working in the charity sector, I am constantly surprised by the number of people having entirely serious discussions about 'what the big society means for us'. Fairly understandably, this is mostly coming from charities involved in delivering services - and to be fair, most people seem to have a healthy cynicism about the contradiction between expecting them to take on the job of the state and cutting the very budgets that fund them. But the other day I swear I saw a discussion thread about the implications of the Big Society agenda for charitable campaigning, which just made me want to shout "NOTHING! THERE AREN'T ANY! The Emperor has no clothes - bloody obviously!"

Now, maybe I'm wrong. One of my pet peeves is political commentary that says 'Ha, you fools - if only you were as clever and enlightened as me' (see pretty much every socialist blogger on Lib Dem voters, although notably only *after* the coalition was formed). I think it's patronising, arrogant and unhelpful. So I really don't want to be one of those people. Also, it's entirely possible that the people having these discussions know more about this than me, rather than less. But I am genuinely baffled at how the voluntary sector seems to be treating the Big Society as a serious policy agenda worthy of consideration, rather than with the contempt it deserves. It seems to me that by doing so, they're giving what is basically Tory propaganda a credibility it doesn't warrant. Why is there such readiness to let them off the hook like that?

1 Comments:

At 10:13 pm, November 09, 2010, Blogger Christine said...

Sorry, it has taken me an unforgivably long time to respond to this...

I take your point, but I just can't agree that "you can only understand [the big society] if you forget about the cuts, and imagine it was being introduced anyway at a different time, without any cuts." To me it seems inextricably linked to the cuts, both ideologically and politically - it's the flip side of the Tories' hatred of the 'overweening state', and it's an attempt to spin that libertarianism into something more cuddly.

To be fair, I was in a government department on a shadowing scheme recently, and was certainly surprised by the extent to which the Big Society was genuinely centre-stage in their deliberations. But the overwhelming impression was, and is, of the whole civil service running around trying to work out what it actually means - which does nothing to dispel my initial impression that its genesis was in a propaganda exercise rather than anything more meaningful.

I don't disagree that taking away obstacles to community action is a positive agenda - and it will be great if something positive comes out of all this to that end. But I'm not optimistic at the moment... not least because the organisation my brother works for - which is all about community ownership and self-help, about as Big Society as you can get - is currently losing massive contracts as a result of the cuts. I think it's a disservice to them to suggest that the two things can be separated so easily.

 

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