Respect gets noticed
Can Respect capitalise on the continuing disillusionment and erosion
of support from the two main parties? The July 15 by-elections in
Leicester South and Birmingham Hodge Hill saw both Labour and the
Tories lose votes to the Liberal Democrats, while the unity coalition
achieved a good showing - 3,724 votes (12.66%) for Yvonne Ridley in
Leicester and 1,282 (6.27%) for John Rees in Birmingham.
Although Labours losses were massive compared to those of the
Conservatives, and although it lost one seat to the Lib Dems and came
within a whisker of conceding the other, Michael Howard will be much
more unhappy than Tony Blair. Blair knows that only the Tories can
stop him winning the next general election - probably to be held next
spring - and with it the promise of a record third full term as a
Labour prime minister. Blair will expect his majority to be slashed,
but, as things stand at present, despite the almost complete absence
of trust from the electorate, it looks as though it will be a working
one.
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The Tory leadership, stung by criticisms that it had not fought
hard enough in last years Brent East by-election - where the
Conservatives also lost ground while the Lib Dems gained a formerly
safe seat from Labour - every day bussed in scores of MPs from Westminster
to both constituencies in the week before July 15. To no avail.
The Tory share of the vote in both seats dropped by around three
percent relative to their tally in the 2001 general election.
So the support given to both main parties is largely sullen and
reluctant. The Liberal Democrats are the main beneficiaries of protest
votes, particularly in view of the perception that they opposed
the war on Iraq. June 10 showed that the far right - in the shape
of the UK Independence Party and the BNP - can take advantage of
the Tories continued disarray, but there is also a huge vacuum
on the left which the Lib Dems cannot really fill. True, they can
pose left in Brent, Leicester and Birmingham, but what about all
those seats in Middle England, which they must also
target and, in truth, are more likely to win in a nationwide poll
than inner-city constituencies?
That is where Respect comes in. However, if that vacuum is to be
filled, it will require consistent hard work and the transformation
of Respect into some kind of a principled socialist party. It will
also require a sober assessment of where we are now. That is why
the hype in the coalitions post-election press release - now
a leaflet - is unfortunate:
We have sent shock waves through the whole political establishment.
Thursdays by-election results show the sea change which is
happening in British politics
The voters have dealt Tony
Bliar a massive blow
spectacular votes in both seats.
Yvonne Ridley went further: England now has a four-party system
- and the mainstream parties better get used to it. We have made
our mark on national politics. Or George Galloway: We
have established ourselves as the fourth party in British politics
and we are building for the general election, when we will give
them another shock.
The claim to be Britains fourth party was one
that Arthur Scargill used to make in the early days of the Socialist
Labour Party. It was equally ill-founded then - although at least
with Respect you could say it is based on coming fourth in two by-elections!
But let us be realistic. The Euro results on June 10 - well under
two percent - reflect much more accurately Respects true support.
And those results included some remarkable highs, as well as returns
that can only be described as derisory. In fact Respects percentage
vote decreased in both Leicester and Birmingham five weeks later
- hardly surprising in view of the concentrated effort the mainstream
parties are able to put into by-elections.
The results, while healthy, are far from a breakthrough,
as claimed. It is true that Respect is now starting to be noticed
in the media, but Tony Blair is hardly spending sleepless nights
just yet over this particular challenge. We also have to consider
the basis upon which Respect appealed to voters, particularly in
Leicester South.
Certainly its platform was leftwing - left populist, to be more
accurate. It firmly opposed the war and occupation of Iraq, along
with privatisation and the Tory anti-union laws. It
put forward some eminently supportable demands on pensions, health,
education, asylum rights and the environment. Nevertheless, this
does not represent a coherent manifesto - we all know that the platform
was kept deliberately vague on many issues and there has been a
studied silence on others - abortion springs immediately to mind.
It has to be said that Yvonne Ridleys success in a constituency
with a large muslim population owed far more to the fact that she
is a recent convert to islam than to Respects platform. In
fact she was a very poor candidate from a working class point of
view. She has no record of fighting, or even speaking out, for workers.
As she made clear in her interview with this paper, she has not
the slightest understanding of the socialist tradition. Like comrade
Galloway, she dismisses with contempt the idea that working class
representatives should stand on a workers wage (Weekly Worker
July 1).
Unlike the workers in Leicester whose votes she sought, Yvonne Ridley
sends her daughter to a private school. Thanks to her high profile
as a former detainee of the Taliban, she was featured prominently
in Harpers and Queen.
Its article noted: Things changed when Ridley had her daughter,
Daisy ... Suddenly, she couldnt do the after-work drinks,
where all the networking was done and deals were struck. For her,
motherhood was like being in a three-legged race with a ball
and chain on the legs. Her solution to the problem was to
send Daisy, now 11, to boarding school in the Lake District
In the holidays, Daisy often flies out to join her mother and the
two of them take off on travel expeditions.
The article continues: As we wander back to Ridleys
villa, with its airy rooms and marble floor, I comment that private
education doesnt come cheap. She gives me a semi-smile: In
my bleakest, blackest moments I look at Daisy and I think, Porsche
Boxster! (Harpers and Queen March 2004).
Former SWP member Andy Newman has done a little research and has
come to the conclusion that the boarding school in question must
be Windermere St Annes - the only one that fits the description
given in Harpers and Queen. Comrade Newman, writing on the
Socialist Unity website, notes that fees at Windermere St Annes
are up to £16,380 per year (for comparison, top drawer
schools Eton and Marlborough charge £19,000 and £20,000).
Ironically Respects policy on education demands a system
that is not dependent on the ability to pay, that is comprehensive
and gives an equal chance in life to every child, no matter how
wealthy or poor their parents, from nursery to university
(Founding declaration).
Comrade Newman points out that, since Yvonne Ridley is a single
mother with a job that necessitates long periods away, her decision
to send her daughter to boarding school is perhaps understandable.
But, as he says, there was a nearby alternative in the state sector:
Dallam School, a member of the State Boarding School Association,
is in the Lake District as well (that particular area was
chosen so that Daisy could be near her mothers family).
So far the Socialist Workers Party has made no comment on the fact
that Ridley sends her child to a private school. Perhaps, now that
this information has come to light, we can expect her decision to
be condemned in equally stringent terms to those used in the case
of Diane Abbott, who also decided to shun a state alternative. She
was called a New Labour education hypocrite (Socialist
Worker November 22 2003).
l In Leicester South, the SLPs Dave Roberts won 263 votes
(0.89%) - 38 more than RU Seerious of the Monster Raving Loony Party
(225). Independent Pat Kennedy, representing a local campaign to
save six special-needs schools from closure, picked up the support
of 204 voters. Some on the left suggested that Respect should have
stood down in his favour.
Peter Manson
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