Break the cycle of failure
Nick Rogers outlines the immediate tasks of the Respect
unity coalition and calls on socialists to come together in order
to achieve a positive outcome
In the last week Respect members have received a four-page, A4-sized
brochure, in which national secretary John Rees, top Euro candidate
in the West Midlands and one of the Socialist Workers Partys
principal leaders, analyses Respects performance on June 10
and sets out the central tasks facing the coalition. His analysis
first appeared in Socialist Worker (June 26) and closely matches
the conclusions reached in Lindsey Germans article on the
elections in the July-August issue of Socialist Review.
Discussion of what Respect has achieved and what its future might
be is to be welcomed. Respect, after all, is at the heart of the
dilemma facing socialists over the coming months, as we struggle
to avoid an outcome that leaves us more divided than ever.
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In articles before June 10 (and despite serious reservations about
Respects organisational and political shortcomings) I argued
that socialists should vote for Respect and that good results for
Respect would strengthen the position of the whole left.
What then was the significance of Respects electoral performance?
And what future might Respect have?
June 10
Respect was forged by the SWP in close alliance with George Galloway
to give political voice to the movement against the war in Iraq,
which culminated with two million marching in London on February
15 2003. Respect was intended as a vehicle for a voter rebellion
against New Labour that would shake the establishment. Even on the
eve of polling day, there were confident predictions that Respect
would elect up to three MEPs.
The reality is that Respect can boast no MEPs, no London assembly
members, no new councillors. It garnered a quarter of a million
votes rather than the one million George Galloway set as a target
in January.
There was in fact a genuine electoral rebellion on June 10, albeit
from the xenophobic right. The UK Independence Party polled 16%
across Britain. Respects 1.7% palls into insignificance against
this result. Another electoral rebellion is worth recalling - the
15% polled by the Greens in the European elections of 1989. At the
time the Greens success was perceived in part to be a response
to Labours abandonment of unilateral nuclear disarmament and
Labours Neil Kinnock-inspired shift to the right - in other
words, a protest against the birth of New Labour. So relatively
new, previously insignificant parties can ride a populist electoral
wave.
For Respect, however, 2004 was not to be the year it wrote a new
page in Britains political history. Yet in a number of urban
centres - Birmingham, Preston, Leicester, Luton and above all in
London - Respect achieved decent results. In individual wards in
these areas votes ranged from 5% to almost 40%. In London Respect
failed by a whisker to elect Lindsey German to the London assembly
and, by a only slightly larger margin, George Galloway to the European
parliament (both with almost 5% of the vote across the capital).
In Tower Hamlets Respect topped the European poll with 20% of the
vote across the borough.
Given the predominance of first-past-the-post electoral systems
in England, there is some political advantage in a concentrated,
rather than an evenly spread, vote. This year Respect has failed
to seize the opportunity presented by the mass opposition to the
Iraq war and a set of PR elections. But patient grassroots campaigning
over the next few years could sink genuine roots in working class
communities and potentially could deliver a number of elected representatives
- councillors across Englands urban centres and maybe even
an MP or two. Hence George Galloways presumed intention to
stand in a London seat in the general election, likely in just a
years time.
Respects limited successes, therefore, provide a basis for
building a left alternative to New Labour. But only if the leaders
of Respect learn the lessons of the mistakes they have made.
John Rees makes no acknowledgement that Respect failed to achieve
its pre-election ambitions. Now, it is not a crime to set challenging
targets or even to talk up your political chances. But, remember,
the SWP abandoned the Socialist Alliance, effectively sought to
exclude a range of socialist forces and individuals, and refused
to endorse a number of explicit and principled policy commitments
at its January convention - all in the interests of building a broader
political alliance that could appeal to a mass audience. George
Galloway had even spoken about attracting liberals and conservatives
who were outraged with the government over Iraq.
A year ago at the Marxism 2003 event, SWP comrades (including Chris
Bambery at the session on Scotland) voiced criticisms of the Scottish
Socialist Partys handling of the anti-war movement. The SSP
supposedly had failed to bring on board as broad and as dynamic
an anti-war coalition as the SWP had managed in England. Furthermore,
the SSPs 7.7% in the Scottish parliamentary elections of May
2003, according to some, had failed to maximise the vote for a radical,
left alternative based on the mass opposition to Blairs war.
According to this thesis, in 2004 the SWP and its anti-war coalition
would provide the SSP with a master class in left electoral politics.
It is true that on June 10 the SSP failed to match its own breakthrough
of May 2003. The SSPs relatively disappointing 5.2% across
the whole of Scotland (10.5% in Glasgow) remains its second best
ever electoral result and is three times the size of Respects
percentage tally across England. It beats even Respects best
result (in the London Euro region). The actual turn of events on
June 10 begs the question of who needs to learn from whom.
John Reess analysis moves in the right direction when he affirms
that Respects future lies in forming a mass left alternative
to New Labour. Although he does not repeat Nick Wracks
argument about Respect being socialist, John Rees does assert that
Respect rests on three foundation stones - the socialists,
the left in the unions and muslims who have been radicalised by
the wars in Afghanistan, Palestine and Iraq. An excellent
aspiration, but hardly an accurate description of Respects
current condition.
Respect has failed to attract many of the socialists who came together
to build the Socialist Alliance. Outside the ranks of the SWP, certainly
a majority of socialist organisations and, very likely, a majority
of socialists have felt disenfranchised by Respects weak policy
platform and lack of democratic structures.
As for the left in the unions, Mark Serwotka has given his support,
but he is in no position to throw the massed ranks of the PCS behind
Respect. The Scottish region of the RMT has directly affiliated
to the SSP. In England, some RMT branches have supported Respect.
RMT general secretary Bob Crow, however, voted for the Greens and
Ken Livingstone on June 10.
Where John Reess three foundation stones formulation
does match current realities is in its description of Respects
support from muslims. All Respects high votes correspond to
areas with large muslim communities. John Rees refers to and dismisses
the accusation that Respect made a communalist appeal to muslims.
That criticism has certainly been overplayed. Muslim communities
are amongst the poorest in Britain. Traditionally these communities
have overwhelmingly supported the Labour Party. Every time New Labour
has acted against the interests of its own core constituency, working
class muslims would have been amongst the first to suffer the effects.
With the launch of the war on terrorism (only last week
a 230% increase was reported in anti-terror searches of black people),
disillusion with the economic and social policies of New Labour
has been forged into a potent sense of political betrayal. That
explains why these communities have been prepared to shift political
allegiances.
Respects founding declaration espoused a range of policies
that have formed the cornerstones of all left electoral challenges,
such as an end to privatisation and bringing back into public ownership
railways and other public services, a £7.40 minimum wage and
the repeal of Tory anti-union laws. In the context of discussion
about Respects approach to muslims, it is important to reiterate
that the declaration opposed all forms of discrimination based on
gender and sexual orientation and supported the right to self-determination
of every individual in relation to sexual choices.
Respects was an essentially leftwing electoral campaign, yet
one infected by opportunism. Some leaflets were bland to the point
of meaninglessness. The identification of George Galloway as a teetotal,
god-fearing opponent of abortion was a blatant attempt to appeal
to muslims as muslims. And what does Yvonne Ridleys selection
as Respect candidate in Leicester South have to recommend it other
than the candidates conversion to islam?
The support by many working class muslim communities for Respect
is to be welcomed. No other challenge to New Labour has been able
to relate successfully to an ethnic minority community that is part
of Labours core constituency. The question facing Respects
leaders - particularly the SWP - and all socialists in England,
is how to develop a more mature political relationship with this
community and how to extend Respects support in the working
class generally. The success of both challenges will depend upon
whether Respect is able to set in place the socialist and left union
foundation stones.
Tasks facing Respect
John Rees sets Respect three central tasks: continued campaigning
to solidify existing support; stalls and public meetings in new
areas to build new bases of support; and leaping on a coach to participate
in the July 15 Birmingham Hodge Hill and Leicester South by-elections.
A pretty narrow focus on electoral activity then.
And the distinctly old left John Rees proposes meals, picnics and
barbecues rather than the regular branch meetings so beloved
of the old left and trade unionists. How, in that case, is
the abandonment of branch meetings a method of building socialist
and trade union support? Will the SWP be organising on this basis
from now on? Or do the political grown-ups get to have branch meetings?
It is uncanny how easily SWP leaders fall into a New Labour mode
of thinking. At Respects founding convention in January they
advanced the proposition that we lefties could not be so self-indulgent
as to tell those outside the hall what we actually thought
about the monarchy or immigration controls. Now they mirror New
Labours attempt to undermine constituency Labour Parties.
There are three broad strategic tasks that are essential if Respect
is to be built as a socialist alternative to New Labour, based on
the working class - and they are not the same as John Reess
tasks.
First, Respect has to move from being an electoral front to a fully-fledged
campaigning organisation. When workers are on strike, when schools
or community centres are closed, when protests against imperialist
wars are organised, when fascists are opposed, Respect needs to
play a central role. Members of Respect should identify themselves
as such on public platforms, Respect placards should be printed,
Respect should be represented on organising committees.
In those areas where Respect has its strongest support, Respect
should seek to develop its relationship with muslims as members
of the working class. That means campaigning on issues such as police
stop and search powers, but also taking up cases of the most exploited
members of the community. In Tower Hamlets local sweatshops, conditions
of restaurant workers, home working, which particularly affects
women, are a scandal and involve Bangladeshi businessmen exploiting
Bangladeshi workers. This is an obvious target for Respect campaigning
in the area, alongside issues that affect the whole working class.
Second, Respect members have the right to be involved in making
decisions about the full range of Respects activities. In
other words, Respect needs to develop democratic and accountable
structures, and fast. Nothing for it but regular branch meetings.
How else are Respects campaigning and political priorities,
nationally and in the localities, to be determined? By the Respect
executive? By all those local steering committees elected maybe
once a year by slate?
John Rees and the rest of the Respect leadership will soon find
themselves with an inactive shell of an organisation if they expect
Respects activists - although well-fed - to obey orders from
on high with no right to propose or question.
What is more, Respects branches should not only meet regularly,
but also should discuss politics and organise public meetings on
a range of campaigning and political issues. The SWPs leaders
should not be allowed to get away with the idea that their Marxist
Forums have cornered the left market in serious political discussion.
Only in this way can Respect begin to take on a vibrant political
life of its own.
Third, Respects political identity needs to be strengthened.
Respect will prosper only by giving honest answers to the major
political questions of the day. As Tony Benn has said for the last
20 years and more, and George Galloway has been known to echo, we
must say what we mean and mean what we say. That means
full debates at Respects autumn conference. It means addressing
the question of our monarchical system of government, if we are
serious about tackling the crisis of democracy in Britain. It means
giving a straight answer to the question of open borders.
Womens rights, including the right to choose when it comes
to abortion (George Galloway has indicated that he has no wish to
impose his personal beliefs on others), are critical. As are gay
rights. Whatever the nature of Birminghams Peoples Justice
Party (as debated in the letters column of the Weekly Worker), its
members and supporters should be left in no doubt about where Respect
stands on these issues.
It is a fallacy to believe that socialists have to temper their
positions on issues of gender and sexual orientation to placate
the religious sensibilities of most working class muslims. In Tower
Hamlets in the 1980s the local Bangladeshi community were the bedrock
of Labours support (and were well represented in the membership
of the local Labour Party) at a time when the Liberals controlled
the council on a racist programme. Yet, as you would expect, the
local Labour Party, which was fairly leftwing, discussed whatever
issues it wanted and certainly never wavered on abortion or gay
rights.
It also means debating the issue of an elected representative on
a workers wage. Both George Galloway and Yvonne Ridley have
alluded to the need for MPs to have resources for research and campaign
activities if they are to be effective. Agreed. But in a democratic
left/socialist party should each elected representative control
their own political fiefdom, or should the allocation of research
and campaign resources be a collective decision? In the SSP, for
instance, these resources are centrally controlled and supervised
by an elected standing committee and the executive committee. It
is understandable that George Galloway might be reluctant to agree
to this arrangement while the internal structures of Respect remain
essentially ad hoc and are in practice under the control of the
SWP. Yet another reason why Respect needs a properly democratic
and accountable internal regime. Will George Galloway support moves
in this direction? Will a proper selection meeting be held before
George Galloways candidature in, say, Bethnal Green and Bow
is endorsed?
Of course the logic of these processes is that Respect will develop
into a political party with a full range of policies and a national
newspaper. The fate of the Socialist Alliance serves as a warning
- placing artificial restrictions on the evolution of any project
of left unity ultimately kills it.
The rest of the left
The partial nature of Respects successes means that Respect
has failed to establish hegemony over the left. The Socialist Party
returned two councillors. The 23 council candidates of the Socialist
Alliance Democracy Platform achieved good results. The Independent
Working Class Association won two seats in Oxford. Plans are afoot
to hold a socialist unity conference in the autumn. The Liverpool-based
Campaign for a Mass Party of the Working Class will probably be
involved.
Yet only Respect was able to mount a national challenge that gave
every member of the electorate the chance to vote for a left alternative.
Only Respect has been able to establish linkages with one section
of the working class. The history of the SWPs involvement
in the Socialist Alliance does not augur well for the future progress
of Respect, but at least in the run-up to Respects autumn
conference, as wide a range of socialists as possible should come
together to attempt to break the cycle of failure.
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