electronic Worker

Weekly Worker 267 Thursday December 3 1998

Party notes

Splitting the pack?

Socialist Worker of November 28 has at last officially announced the Socialist Workers Party’s intention to stand Paul Foot in the London mayoral elections in 2000 if the candidacy of Ken Livingstone is blocked by Blair. Previously, the London left had been kept abreast of developments through the pages of The Guardian or Radio Four. At least any ambiguities around Foot’s intentions have been removed, although new problems are raised.

Despite the fact that this report quotes Livingstone’s effective endorsement of Blairism - “I agree with 95% of what this government is doing” - the SWP is explicit that it will unconditionally support him in the (unlikely) event that he stands, “because [ordinary people] see him as a leftwing opponent of Blair’s pro-big business policies”.

Last week, we noted that all of this has been foisted on the London left without open debate or consultation. Despite negotiations around the formation of united slate for the European elections next year, the SWP has simply informed other organisations of its intention to stand the “socialist candidate”, Paul Foot, in the event of Livingstone’s bid being blocked. The SWP now further announces that Paul Foot is actually “part of a slate of socialist candidates for the London assembly” - a “united socialist list”.

Although there appear to have been some backroom haggling over such a slate, the SWP is in effect pre-empting any open, properly constituted discussion of a united left challenge in the London elections in 2000 by this announcement.

What are we to make of this move? We seem to be seeing an attempt to cut free of the pack in the field of electoral contest. As the largest organisation on the left at present, the SWP may be attempting to monopolise the field of opposition to Blair’s Labour, given the pretty parlous state of the rest. Its nearest rival - the Socialist Party in England and Wales - is in a state of near-terminal collapse and may indeed be grateful to be taken under the SWP’s wing. Other rivals, such as the Alliance for Workers’ Liberty, Socialist Outlook or the Communist Party, may have influence here and there, but even combined come nowhere near the numerical strength or political weight of the SWP.

Thus, if this is indeed an attempt to impose itself as the opposition, there are those who might say - as a friend of mine on the periphery of the SWP did - “who can blame them?” It would be perfectly understandable - all of us belong to a particular political organisation because of what we believe are its unique qualities, its superiority to others. Nobody should therefore begrudge the SWP’s move in this sense - if we were its size, we might very well do the same. The question is whether such a hegemonic move is attempted in a sectarian way - totally excluding other forces representing different viewpoints - or in a genuinely incorporative manner.

Whether the SWP is in the process of abjuring sectarianism must be extremely debatable, given everything we know about its history and contemporary practice. This is not a foregone conclusion, however. Other left forces in London must join with the Communist Party to press for inclusion, not exclusion.

Mark Fischer
national organiser


Socialist voice

Socialist Worker of November 28 urged its readers to campaign for the resolution below in “trade union branches, student unions, community organisations and campaign groups”. We should all back this resolution, but with the amendments suggested (text to be amended in heavy type; suggested replacement in square brackets).

“This branch/group/region

Notes:

  1. Cuts in public services have continued over the last 18 months since New Labour won the general election. London underground and air traffic control face privatisation. The private finance initiative is being used to undermine the NHS. Pay awards to teachers and healthworkers are at unacceptably low levels.
  2. Tony Blair is pursuing big business policies.
  3. New Labour leaders are trying to silence leftwing opposition within the party while giving the Liberal Democrats a greater say in government.

Condemns:

New Labour’s undemocratic attempts to stop Labour Party members voting for Ken Livingstone to be the party’s candidate for mayor of London even though nine out of 10 Londoners think he should be on the shortlist.

Believes:

  1. There should be a socialist voice, arguing for workers’ interests, in the London mayor election.
  2. Such a campaign, based on trade unions, Labour Party wards and community groups, could help build resistance to the cuts, job losses and attacks working people face.

Further notes:

  1. Ken Livingstone is calling for people to write in to New Labour headquarters backing his right to stand.
  2. Campaigning journalist Paul Foot is also prepared to stand as a socialist candidate in the election for London mayor, in the event of Ken Livingstone not standing.

Resolves to:

  1. Support Ken Livingstone’s fight to stop the Blairites stitching up the selection of Labour’s candidate for mayor and to write to the headquarters of the London Region of the Labour Party supporting his right to stand.
  2. Back Paul Foot standing for mayor as part of a slate of socialist candidates for the London assembly if Ken Livingstone is prevented from standing by Blair and the Labour Party [Delete and insert: “where such a slate is democratically negotiated and agreed by the left in London”].
  3. Call on New Labour leaders in London to debate their policies publicly with Ken Livingstone, Paul Foot and other socialists and trade unionists [Delete and insert: “the SWP in London to debate its policies openly with other left organisations, socialists and trade unionists. Any united socialist candidate must be prepared to stand on a minimum platform politically endorsed by the left and be adopted democratically at an open meeting where questions can be addressed directly to him/her].”

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