Close Menu
Mirror Brief

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash

    August 2, 2025

    Super League: Leigh 20-16 Warrington Wolves – Leopards stage late fightback

    August 2, 2025

    They escaped Ukraine’s frontlines. The sound of drones followed them

    August 2, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Mirror BriefMirror Brief
    Trending
    • Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash
    • Super League: Leigh 20-16 Warrington Wolves – Leopards stage late fightback
    • They escaped Ukraine’s frontlines. The sound of drones followed them
    • Why some Palestinians aren’t convinced by Starmer’s promise
    • Barclays follows HSBC in exit from banking industry’s net zero alliance | Barclays
    • Venture firm CRV raises $750M, downsizing after returning capital to investors
    • TV union and women’s group call for this year’s MasterChef to be shelved | MasterChef
    • Glam, Easy, a Little Bit Sleazy: Electric Purple Is Fall’s Color-To-Watch
    Saturday, August 2
    • Home
    • Business
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • World
    • Travel
    • Technology
    • Entertainment
    Mirror Brief
    Home»Politics»Reform’s tales of wasteland Britain won’t work. There’s a far larger market for hope | Gaby Hinsliff
    Politics

    Reform’s tales of wasteland Britain won’t work. There’s a far larger market for hope | Gaby Hinsliff

    By Emma ReynoldsAugust 1, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Reform’s tales of wasteland Britain won’t work. There’s a far larger market for hope | Gaby Hinsliff
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Sheer joy. That’s how it felt watching England’s Lionesses romping gleefully across the pitch after their victory in Basel – not just because they won but because of the way they did it, with an exuberance and a resilience and an obvious love of playing together that makes them irresistible to watch. That 65,000 people came out in the drizzle for their homecoming parade down the Mall was testament not just to the deserved new popularity of women’s football but also to the longing for a national event that, even if only briefly, made us feel cheerful, expansive, as if all things were possible.

    So it’s interesting that for her summer beach reading Rachel Reeves picked Abundance, the American journalists Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s blueprint for the more permanent rebuilding of hope and joy. It’s a pro-growth, techno-optimist rallying cry for progressives to reinvent themselves as purveyors of plenty and good times in contrast to the right’s crabby, mean-spirited “scarcity mindset” – which revolves around the belief that there isn’t enough good stuff to go round and therefore the priority is snatching it back off immigrants or the poor or whatever bewildered former ally Donald Trump accuses of ripping America off.

    Klein and Thompson argue convincingly that for decades western consumers have been fobbed off with an abundance of stuff we fleetingly want – fast fashion, cheap flights, more streamed content than anyone has time to watch – but a paucity of stuff we actually need, such as affordable homes near where the good jobs are, or cheap green energy. Where the authors will divide the room, however, is by claiming that’s partly down to years of liberal politicians attaching well-meaning strings to public building projects, from environmental protections to procurement rules to US zoning laws for housing, which although noble in intent collectively make it impossible to build. It was Reeves’s jolting recent description of red tape as a “boot on the neck” of business that first made me wonder if she’d read the fervently deregulatory Abundance. Though it focuses on the California housing crisis, there are enough relatable stories – the nimby neighbours fighting affordable homes because they’d prefer more car parking, or the decades wasted failing to build a high-speed rail link between Los Angeles and San Francisco – for it to have done the rounds at Westminster and among Australian progressives too.

    Like all snappy bestsellers, it’s sometimes glib. Klein and Thompson talk a great game about facing up to reality – if you can’t have speedy housebuilding and generous protection for bat and newt habitats, say, which do you want most? – yet place enormous faith in the magical ability of still-unproven technologies to solve problems without creating new ones. Their vision of a utopia involving driverless cars, lab-grown meat and bounteous vegetable crops from so-called vertical farms (essentially giant greenhouses powered by renewable energy) would sound more convincing if it weren’t for horror stories about autonomous driving or the struggle to make vertical farming remotely viable in Britain. But there’s something undeniably appealing at its heart.

    Plenty is an innately American idea, at home in the land of bottomless refills and vast open skies and permanently reaching after more, bigger, better. But from a British left perspective, what’s interesting is its relationship with altruism. Scarcity makes people selfish, anxious, distrusting of others and prone to hoarding whatever they’ve got: think of shoppers fighting over loo rolls in lockdown. But in times of abundance, we relax, becoming more generous.

    Klein and Thompson’s proposals for a 21st-century era of plenty – build lots of affordable housing and prioritise super-cheap clean energy to lower household bills and unleash industrial innovation – aren’t exactly revelatory to a Labour government already committed to most of this (though in Britain some might add the need to reform an electricity market where prices are still artificially pegged to gas). What Labour hasn’t yet nailed, however, is the emotional framing that turns rather worthy but dull-sounding infrastructure projects into the genuinely exciting makings of a better life.

    Somewhere in abundance theory are the glimmerings of a story that brings together otherwise disparate policies and people. What Ed Miliband and Angela Rayner, the two natural abundance politicians on the cabinet’s soft left, share with those on the technocratic right like chief AI cheerleader Peter Kyle, is mostly a mindset: an ebullience, an enthusiasm, and a refusal to see everything as hopeless that matters to progressive parties, because they’re in the business of hope. Never more so, arguably, than when the right is deep in the business of doom.

    Nigel Farage’s great appeal to his followers used to be the fact that he liked a drink and a laugh; that he was so obviously enjoying himself. But lately his party has begun to sound bitter, nihilistic, oddly hysterical. Claiming that Britain is on the verge of societal collapse plays well on X, already awash with nonsense about no-go zones in Birmingham and civil war in Europe, but perhaps less well in daylight. Britain has big problems, many of them deep seated. But it’s still a country where people wash their cars in suburban driveways on a Sunday afternoon, not a post-apocalyptic wasteland where we’re all one step away from barbecuing rats for supper. There’s undeniably a market for politicians wallowing angrily in dreams of a better yesterday. But I suspect there’s still a bigger one, out there in the rain, waiting to catch sight of a better tomorrow.

    Britain Gaby Hinsliff hope larger market Reforms Tales wasteland wont work
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleRay Dalio sells his last remaining stake in Bridgewater, steps away from hedge fund’s board
    Next Article 15 of the Best Hotels in Sardinia for a Taste of La Dolce Vita
    Emma Reynolds
    • Website

    Emma Reynolds is a senior journalist at Mirror Brief, covering world affairs, politics, and cultural trends for over eight years. She is passionate about unbiased reporting and delivering in-depth stories that matter.

    Related Posts

    Politics

    Why some Palestinians aren’t convinced by Starmer’s promise

    August 2, 2025
    Politics

    Three million on NHS England waiting lists have had no care since GP referral | NHS

    August 1, 2025
    Business

    Trump fires BLS head as tariffs cause stock market drop

    August 1, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Top Posts

    Eric Trump opens door to political dynasty

    June 27, 20257 Views

    Fundamental flaws in the NHS psychiatric system | Mental health

    July 11, 20255 Views

    How has Ryanair changed its cabin baggage rule – and will other airlines do it too? | Ryanair

    July 5, 20254 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Technology

    Meta Wins Blockbuster AI Copyright Case—but There’s a Catch

    Emma ReynoldsJune 25, 2025
    Business

    No phone signal on your train? There may be a fix

    Emma ReynoldsJune 25, 2025
    World

    US sanctions Mexican banks, alleging connections to cartel money laundering | Crime News

    Emma ReynoldsJune 25, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Most Popular

    Eric Trump opens door to political dynasty

    June 27, 20257 Views

    Fundamental flaws in the NHS psychiatric system | Mental health

    July 11, 20255 Views

    How has Ryanair changed its cabin baggage rule – and will other airlines do it too? | Ryanair

    July 5, 20254 Views
    Our Picks

    Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash

    August 2, 2025

    Super League: Leigh 20-16 Warrington Wolves – Leopards stage late fightback

    August 2, 2025

    They escaped Ukraine’s frontlines. The sound of drones followed them

    August 2, 2025
    Recent Posts
    • Tesla found partially liable for a deadly 2019 crash
    • Super League: Leigh 20-16 Warrington Wolves – Leopards stage late fightback
    • They escaped Ukraine’s frontlines. The sound of drones followed them
    • Why some Palestinians aren’t convinced by Starmer’s promise
    • Barclays follows HSBC in exit from banking industry’s net zero alliance | Barclays
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    © 2025 Mirror Brief. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.