Catalyst (think tank)

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Catalyst is an independent left wing think tank based in London, United Kingdom, set up in 1998 to promote policies directed to the redistribution of power, wealth and opportunity. It is not aligned to any political party but is generally sympathetic to the Labour Movement and describes itself as "an organisation of the left".

The organisation was founded at the high point of Tony Blair's modernisation of the Labour Party and struggled to attract funding, especially from the trades unions who had originally been expected to be the most sympathetic to its redistributionist platform. Trades unions, concerned at further exclusion from power either by the electorate or the new Labour Party leadership, took a sharp turn away from too deep an association with the Left at this time and only begun in 2005 and 2006 to develop an increased if cautious interest in left-wing thought as a new generation of activist trades union leaders has emerged

Former right wing but egalitarian Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, Roy Hattersley, was an early supporter, as was John Edmonds, General Secretary of the GMB Union, who had a deep commitment to full employment strategies. Hattersley made the point that he had stood still while the Labour Party had moved from the far Left to the Right over his head.

Catalyst attracted intellectuals and academics on the centre-left associated with Tribune, Red Pepper, the Grassroots Alliance, the Full Employment Forum and a variety of similar groups who were in danger of being left high and dry by the rapid drift to the Right under Blair. The departure of Brian Gould to New Zealand removed an alternative focus for policy formulation and Robin Cook, who later re-emerged after the Iraq War as an alternative leader on the Left, appeared to choose engagement with rather than resistance to Blairism at this time as did most of those associated with the "soft Left" What's Left group in Parliament.

However, Catalyst was never a political or campaigning organisation and restricted itself to public policy work on redistribution and looking at soft areas like identity politics and public administration that were often neglected on the Left in favour of economics and social policy. It was never associated with the so-called Hard Left.

Catalyst's first Director was former Director of Policy at the Labour Party, Roland Wales and its Founding Board of Management included Marjorie Thompson, Mark Seddon, Mike Watts, Nyta Mann, Pat Coyne, Tim Pendry, Hilary Wainwright, Richard Stone and others, with a prestigious Advisory Board. Its lack of funds did not stop it from putting out a series of pamphlets, some of which proved contentious including Simon Partridge's revisionist view of nationalism which was avowedly "Left-Burkean" and it adopted creatively low cost ways of making itself known. Its Annual Reception became a high point for centre-left political exiles from within the Labour Movement to meet and catch up.

It not only survived the modernisation period but re-emerged strengthened in recent years with a new generation of academics and intellectuals prepared to develop alternative democratic socialist policies. It remains a potential co-ordinating point for democratic socialist thinking if and when the intellectual environment changes once again.

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