SLIPPING in where we left off, Keir Starmer removed a portrait of Margaret Thatcher at No 10. He was then criticised by the usual suspect sources, with Telegraph condemning his ‘act of spite’, while the Mail said he was a ‘political minnow’ when set against a woman of ‘vision, courage and moral clarity’.
Starmer said it’s not about Thatcher, he just doesn’t like ‘pictures of people staring down at him’.
An oddity here is that the painting was commissioned by Gordon Brown after he invited Thatcher to tea at Downing Street.
Whatever the reasons for that commission, it’s best to turn that portrait to the wall, as it were, as Thatcher’s monetarist policies have had many bad consequences.
For starters, her belief in the sanctity of privatised monopolies has given us the crisis at Thames Water, and left us with shit in our rivers and seas.
Oh, and privatised rail services cadging a lift from the state. Oh, and private companies earning a guaranteed fortune off the state, whether or not they do a decent job.
Oh, and as Transparency UK has just reported, £4.1 billion worth of Covid contracts going to those with known connections to the Tory party. And £15 billion in contracts said to have ‘raised corruption red flags’.
And then there is our crazy housing market, created in part by Thatcher’s desire to sell off council homes and turn voters into grateful Tories, and then not replacing those sold-off homes. Added to which around 40% of former council homes are now said to be owned by private landlords.
This, in turn, created a precarious rental market that offers little protection or certainty for tenants (yup, another Thatcher benefit).
George Clarke, architect, writer and broadcaster, said on the Today programme last week that governments over the past 40 years have failed to provide affordable rent for social housing and instead been ‘obsessed with home ownership’, leading to a ‘collapse in the entire system’ (yup, another one).
Here’s an idea. Instead of the state paying housing benefit to people on low incomes – money which in many cases will go straight to private landlords – why not build them social housing?
Another Thatcherite belief, still persistent among many, is that cutting red tape and allowing business to do as it wishes will always bring benefits. What is might also bring, along with other considerations, is the making of avoidable tragedies such as Grenfell.
Not sure where that leaves Thatcher’s ‘moral clarity’, but there you go. Obsessively disliking Thatcher after all these years might not be healthy; but neither is obsessively venerating her while overlooking inconvenient truths.
Having started with art, let’s return there, by shaking a head at the Thatcherite rabble known as the Taxpayers’ Alliance. This obscurely funded organisation was given top billing in a lamentable report on the BBC website.
Birmingham City Council owns an artwork collection valued at almost half a billion pounds, which you might think was good for the people of Birmingham. We have been to the city twice in the past year or so, and each time the art gallery has still been shut for renovation, although the reopening is due to begin next month.
As the council is said to be bankrupt, the Taxpayers’ Alliance says it should sell off its art collection, proving again the worth of that Oscar Wilde quip about a cynic being some who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.
According to this thin logic, art has only a financial value and should be flogged off when money is tight. What about art having an intrinsic value to our wellbeing, lifting our spirits and broadening our minds. And what, too, about the fact that such paintings were often given to councils in trust.
As the art historian Dr Bendor Grosvenor said on X/Twitter: “The Taxpayer’s Alliance used to push this daft story every year, as if councils should sell off their museum collections. Bizarrely, the BBC is now pushing the same story, and of course quotes the Taxpayer’s Alliance.”
Art galleries are spaces of joy and marvel that should be treasured and preserved. Doing the alliance’s tawdry bidding would strip Birmingham of its art while solving almost nothing.
But nothing for something is what you get for following Thatcher with your eyes closed.