Forward to the jamahiriya
No doubt many comrades will have been surprised to learn
that Respects Yvonne Ridley is to be opposed in the July 15
Leicester South by-election by Arthur Scargills Socialist
Labour Party.
The SLP did not contest a single seat in the European Union and
Greater London Authority elections on June 10, so comrades might
be excused for believing that it is finished. Well, not quite. Amongst
the 200-300 largely atomised, isolated individuals who remain members,
there are small pockets of what passes for activity. True, after
the expulsion in May of the last remaining organised grouping, the
ultra-Stalinite followers of Harpal Brar, the SLP is left without
much in the way of a national structure. But despite that, a few
branches, even the odd region, still hobble along.
That is the case in Leicester, whose comrades formally run the
East Midlands region. Or, more exactly, one particular comrade,
a certain Dave Roberts, the SLP candidate for Leicester South. Comrade
Roberts - who has previously contested the Leicester East constituency,
as well as local council elections, for the SLP - is also a member
of the national executive and enthusiastically put his hand up to
expel the Brarites at the May 8 NEC meeting.
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Roberts has a long history on the left. He was a member of Gerry
Healys Workers Revolutionary Party in the 1970s: that is,
until in the early 80s his then leader and guru, Royston Bull, decided
upon what amounted to a split. Bull was a journalist on News Line
and organised the WRPs East Midlands district. In the event
he took a slice of the active membership with him and even managed
to gain a sprinkling of adherents elsewhere for his grandly titled
Workers Party - headquarters: Stockport, Lancs.
Ideologically Bulls WP combined a millennial belief in the
fundamental superiority of the Soviet Union with an equally reassuring
mantra that capitalism was on the brink of a final, catastrophic
collapse. Basically Bull was moving from cod Trotskyism to what
amounted to the same thing - cod Stalinism. Not surprisingly within
a few years his WP had more or less lost everything. However, a
hard core of faithful disciples remained and they morphed first
into the International Leninist Workers Party and then simply took
the name of its journal, the Economic and Philosophic Science Review.
Having previously dismissed Scargill as a social democrat joker,
in 1996 the tiny grouping threw itself into entry work
in the SLP.
The EPSR is a bizarre, ranting, photocopied weekly, which enjoyed
a brief period of relative prominence when Scargill promoted Bull
as vice-president in 1998 in order to depose his previous Fourth
International Supporters Caucus courtiers - namely Brian Heron,
Patrick Sikorski and Carolyn Sikorski - from the leadership. Roberts
was voted onto the NEC as part of the clear-out, where he has remained
ever since.
The EPSR was notorious within the SLP, not so much for its laughably
amateurish appearance - at the turn of the 21st century its typewritten
articles were still cut and pasted into place - but for its overt
homophobia. Here is what Bull wrote in 1996, for example:
The homosexual disorder is not unethical as such, but its
demonic drives can lay sufferers open to a more conspiratorial prevalence
of such behaviour (EPSR October 8 1996). Thats right
- homosexuality is a disorder, whose sufferers
are more susceptible to corruption than the normal, run of the mill
bourgeois. After all, their sexual deviation arises
from retarded emotional-sexual development and thus
their sickness is self-evident.
That last phrase might be spoken when referring to communists
who can bring themselves to write such words, you might think. Nevertheless,
despite the fact that the EPSRs homophobia was well known
throughout the SLP - almost entirely thanks to the exposures carried
by the Weekly Worker - king Arthur saw to it that Bull and Roberts
were elected. EPSR supporters would vehemently defend such ravings
in public - usually denying that there was anything homophobic about
them - and to my knowledge Roberts has never attempted to distance
himself from them. Presumably he still holds to this vile bigotry.
Immediately after the 1998 NEC elections, Scargill instructed Bull
to close down his pathetic little rag. Of course, passionately believing
in the lurid nonsense he bashed out on his old Rimington every week,
Bull indignantly refused. He did, though, humbly offer to resign
as vice-president and carry on as a mere rank and file SLP member.
Scargill would tolerate no such temerity and Bull was out on his
ear within a couple of months - Scargill declared his membership
had lapsed. That was the end of the EPSRs brief
moment of fame and the entire gang walked out of the SLP.
All except Dave Roberts. At last he had emerged from the deepest
depths of sectarian obscurity and he was not about to give up his
glorious position - doing Scargills bidding. Besides, there
was important work to be done: in the absence of a dynamic membership,
the SLP would need support from high places if it was to function
properly, especially when it came to fighting elections - an expensive
business.
It was in this period that SLP delegations were sent to such socialist
utopias as North Korea, Serbia and Libya. I dont know whether
Dave drew the short or long straw, but anyway in September 1999
he found himself in Tripoli for an international youth conference.
Dave is no spring chicken, so he might have felt a little out of
place. But how could he turn down an opportunity to see first
hand and experience the gains of the Libyan revolution (Workers
Party of Belgium website)?
After visiting the National Soap Factory, Libyas largest,
comrade Roberts was apparently so inspired by what he had seen that
he delivered the following speech on behalf of the SLPs NEC,
which was received by rapturous applause.
He said: Brothers and sisters, it is a great privilege to
be here with you today on the occasion of your celebration of the
great Al Fatah revolution. Here in the Great Socialist Jamahiriya,
a free land amongst a free people, I bring you socialist and internationalist
greetings from the Socialist Labour Party in Britain.
Many young people who have been involved in the international
camps during the last eight years have seen at first hand and marvelled
at the great social and economic, political developments you have
achieved throughout your 30 years of revolutionary struggle ...
Those of us fighting for the liberation of our countries from
imperialism, and our people from capitalism, pay tribute to the
generosity of the Libyan people for the solidarity they have shown
to anti-imperialist and progressive movements throughout the world.
We hope one day to be able to return to a future celebration of
the Al Fatah revolution, and announce that we too have defeated
capitalism in our countries and are joining with you in the building
of a socialist world. In the meantime we say: Long live the Great
Socialist Libyan Peoples Jamahiriya. Long live Muammer Al Gadaffy.
Al Fatah forever!
Who knows - voting SLP in Leicester on July 15 could be the first
step in the achievement of a Scargillite jamahiriya
here in Britain. Then again, perhaps not.
Simon Harvey
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