- Labour Co-ordinating Committee
The Labour Co-ordinating Committee (LCC) was a factional body inside the British Labour Party established in
1978 and wound-up in1995 . In that period it moved (along with many of its members) from a group established to challenge to leadership of the party from the left to the vanguard ofTony Blair 's drive to modernise the party's organisation and policies.The LCC was established in 1978 to co-ordinate the efforts of the Labour left. As such it was extremely broad including, for instance, members of the
Campaign for Labour Party Democracy ,Labour Briefing and the fiercely anti-Trotskyist National Organisation of Labour Students .In
1981 the LCC supported the campaign ofTony Benn againstDenis Healey for the deputy leadership of the party, but many were deeply unhappy with Benn's campaign and approach and the LCC began to evolve into a body aiming to rescue the party from the mess it found itself in as the SDP split and Benn's campaign imprinted an image of extremism in the minds of the voters.The anti-Trotskyists of NOLS were central to this period - as they were able to successfully outmanouvre the far left groups, having developed the skills in the bitter struggle with the
Militant Tendency inside the student movement.In
1983 the LCC organised a major conference "After the landslide" to examine the lessons from the party's catastrophic defeat of that year: the tone the conference set - that organisational and political modernisation and change were essential wer to become the dominant theme in the party's internal life in the following decade.Robin Cook came to prominence as the LCC's principal voice in parliament andPeter Hain was a notable voice outside Westminster. At this timeCherie Booth was also an active member, serving on the LCC executive.Under
Neil Kinnock 's leadership the LCC became fully engaged in the titanic struggle with theMilitant and the LCC was broadly supportive of the leadership, though it backedJohn Prescott 's1988 unsuccessful challenge to deputy leaderRoy Hattersley .However the defeat of the Militant left the group without a real cause and membership began to decline, though the group also sponsored the launch of a new discussion journal "Renewal" in
1993 and firmly repositioned itself as a group of modernisers rather than on the "soft left ".In
1998 with a moderniser firmly in the party driving seat, the LCC voted to wind itself up.External links
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/06/16/nletter116.xml The full text of Tony Blair's letter to Michael Foot written in July 1982]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.