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Weekly Worker 550 Thursday October 28 2004
Gods block vote
At the founding conference of Respect earlier this year, the Socialist
Alliance Democracy Platform put forward an alternative republican strategy
called Britain at the crossroads. This began by recognising
that mass opposition to the war in Iraq was a watershed in British
politics. The Labour government took the country into an illegal war on
false pretences ... one of the casualties of this war has been the credibility
of parliament.
The war destroyed the illusions that Britain has a democratic system of
government. Hence parliament failed to represent the majority opposed
to war, and failed to expose Blairs deception and manipulation of
public opinion. As a result there is a crisis of representation
at the heart of politics in Britain, which provides opportunities
for the far right and brings the danger of a more authoritarian state
and a threat to civil liberties.
Britain at the crossroads put forward the demand for a
democratic, secular and republican system of government, in which power
is in the hands of the people, and government is elected, accountable
and subject to recall. It proposed policies for equality, social
justice and unity with the peoples of Europe in a fully democratic, federal
state. It warned that the problems of war, poverty and injustice urgently
require the abolition of global capitalism by socialism.
The Socialist Alliance (DP) then proposed that the R in Respect
should stand for Republicanism and put forward a series of
democratic demands, calling for open borders and MPs to be paid the average
skilled wage. All these proposals were defeated by the votes of the Socialist
Workers Party. This weekend history will repeat itself. Socialist Alliance
supporters, both SADP and Socialist Unity Network, will put forward demands
for a democratic secular republic, womens rights, open borders,
the right to form platforms and tendencies and for cooperation with other
socialist forces in the general election.
The first full conference since the launch of Respect will finalise the
policies on which to fight the general election likely to be held in 2005.
One obvious gaping hole remains the question of democracy. Respect policies
offer less than even her majestys Liberal Democrats! George Galloway
made clear in his recent book that, unlike Respect, he is in favour of
a democratic republic. In June at a Respect public meeting in Luton, he
was asked about the crisis of democracy. In reply he confirmed his support
for republicanism. He told us that the Respect programme was not set in
stone and this issue would have to be reviewed at the next conference
(Weekly Worker June 25). So this weekend we will see whether Galloway
can deliver the SWPs royal head on a silver platter. The signs are
not good.
It is, therefore, the right time to reappraise Respect against the political
crisis which is unfolding in Britain. Four factors stand out. First is
the political crisis of the state. The parliamentary system (or constitutional
monarchy) is now under severe strain. It has been undermined by economic
and political changes reshaping the country. The integration of capital
in the European Union has weakened national sovereignty. The pressure
for democratic change in Ireland, Scotland and Wales has brought greater
autonomy and the growth of parties such as Sinn Féin and the Scottish
Socialist Party. At the same time the Blair government has concentrated
and centralised more power into its own hands.
The crisis of democracy is reflected in a growing sense of
powerlessness and alienation amongst working people. Labours constitutional
changes have made the system more unstable. The SWPs John Rees points
out that in the 2004 European and council elections, alienation
from the established parties saw a rise in turnout for those elections,
but a massive erosion of support for Labour and the Tories (Where
now for Respect?, www.respectcoalition.com).
He goes on to argue that the stability of the British electoral
system has depended on mass support for these two institutions since the
World War II. When the base of these two parties crumbles, it does not
do so in a night, or in a tidy fashion. The Labour Party has had the allegiance
of millions of working people and their mass organisations for generations.
The bitterness and disappointment with the establishment parties flows
in many different directions when it breaks free from its traditional
moorings.
The war in Iraq has speeded up this meltdown. Any imperialist war means
a crisis for bourgeois democracy. War grabs the attention of millions
and reveals in new ways that democracy is an empty shell.
Only last week we saw the transfer of the Black Watch regiment from Basra
to central Iraq - decided behind the scenes between her majestys
government and Bushs administration. The British parliament had
no say whatsoever. No votes were taken. Parliament was irrelevant.
George Galloway writes: We have a political system that is completely
unresponsive in the face of public opinion on a whole range of issues,
not simply on the war. Things happen now on the electoral level, on the
civil liberties front, across a whole swathe of issues that would never
have happened over most of the past 100 years (Weekly Worker December
4 2003). He points out that every MP who voted for the war did so
knowing that their constituents were against it. And most did so knowing
it was wrong. This is a crisis in bourgeois democracy. The mask has slipped.
Galloway concludes that we have a chance - if we properly grasp
what democracy actually means - of being the movement for democracy in
this country. And thats an extremely powerful position to be in
for a progressive left movement. Any new left movement has to prioritise
the concept of democracy and live by it internally and insist on it externally.
We need democratic control of the economy, of parliament, of society itself.
These are fine words, but they butter no SWP parsnips.
The second important factor has been a collapse of working class political
representation. Traditionally the organised working class was represented
through the Labour Party and the former Euro-Stalinist CPGB. The trade
union bureaucracy supported Labour and working class militants backed
the CPGB. Over the last 15 years this form of representation has collapsed.
The official CPGB was liquidated and the Labour Party moved
to the right. There is now a political vacuum on the left.
Flaying about in the vacuum is a disorientated and fragmented socialist
movement. In England this constitutes the third factor. Socialists in
the Labour Party have been emasculated. The Marxist groups outside Labour
have been unable to form a united party. The myriad of groups and parties
is enough to boggle the mind - the SWP, International Socialist Group,
Socialist Party, Workers Power, Communist Party of Britain, Independent
Working Class Association, CPGB, Revolutionary Democratic Group, the Alliance
for Workers Liberty, Alliance for Green Socialism, etc. The Socialist
Alliance and Respect are two responses to this vacuum.
Last, but by no means least, the fourth factor is the experience of the
Labour government since 1997. This has convinced trade union activists
that Labour is opposed to their interests. The RMT and FBU are no longer
affiliated and other unions are reducing their financial support. The
movement was in a similar position at the end of the 19th century, when
trade unions began breaking from the Liberal Party. We can only expect
the ferment in the trade unions to grow when Labour steps up its attack
on public sector workers.
Taken together these factors point in one definite direction. We desperately
need a republican socialist party - a mass party of the working class.
Such a party recognises the crisis of democracy and boldly
proposes political struggle for democratic demands as a lever for social
change. The advanced part of the working class, the only genuinely democratic
class in society, will be drawn to such a programme. Those who think we
should champion socialism and not democracy reveal their ignorance of
the relationship between the two. The struggle for democracy prepares
the way for socialism.
A republican socialist party is a party for all socialists. It is a party
that can unite socialists from the Labour left with revolutionary Marxists.
It is not like the Labour Party based on an alliance of liberals and socialists.
Neither is it a revolutionary Trotskyist or Stalinist Party. It is a party
on similar lines to the Scottish Socialist Party. Given the current state
of political consciousness and working class organisation, this would
be a major step forward.
If this sounds like pie in the sky, we should remember that in Scotland
the socialists have already got their act together and organised themselves
into a republican socialist party. I have argued many times to a sceptical
audience that the SSP is just such a party. The recent Declaration
of Calton Hill nails republicanism firmly to the SSP mast. In Scotland,
Wales and Northern Ireland, the crisis of democracy takes
the form of the national question. It is only in England that the English
question goes unrecognised.
Rees discusses the SSP model in debate with Murray Smith (Socialism
in the 21st century International Socialism August 2004). He compares
the SSP, as a broad socialist party, with the SWP, a revolutionary
party. The latter wins in theory if not in practice. Rees praises
the SSP, but as an example to be avoided unless there is no choice. The
SWP would not aim to build a broad socialist party, although
they would join one if, as in Scotland, it was set up and proved successful.
This is the same view as the CPGB. In Scotland this leftwing-sounding
economism meant the SWP was the rearguard or laggard of the republican
socialist party.
Rees is of course making the wrong comparison. The SSP should be measured
against Respect. Here a workers party is the alternative to a united
front party of a strange kind. But could Respect be seen as
a peculiarly eccentric English version of a republican socialist party?
Certainly it is not republican. It is hardly socialist and is not a party.
Yet if we listen to George Galloway on republicanism he urges patience.
The coalition is just being set up. The programme is not set in stone
and republicanism may be adopted at this conference. So the jury is still
out. It will be delivering its verdict on Sunday! But dont hold
your breath. Eighty-nine motions in three hours is two minutes each. Can
the fate of the nation and its crown be decided with such speed?
Let me turn now to the thorny question of muslims. Respect should be congratulated
for winning the support of working class muslims. Any republican socialist
party would certainly seek the same support. Neither should we have any
problem with winning the support of muslim people, not just workers. It
is no different from seeking the support of gay people or women. Communists
champion the liberation of all oppressed people, not simply workers. If
our enemies choose to call us a muslim party or a gay
party or party for women, then so much the better for
us. The only question is, what price has to be paid? The interests of
the working class are sacrificed if such support comes from adopting opportunist
policies and reactionary ideas.
Does Respect pass this test? Rees explains that Respect rests on
three foundation stones - the socialists, the left in the unions, and
muslims who have become radicalised by the wars in Afghanistan, Palestine
and Iraq (Where now for Respect?, www.respectcoalit-ion.com).
Here we have the idea of the Respect party as a coalition of special interests.
Who represents the socialists? It is obviously the SWP that will speak
for them and wield their block vote over the weekend. Who represents the
trade union interest? As yet a few branches, but no national unions or
general secretaries with a million votes in their back pocket. If we look
at the proposed national council slate, we can see those who might represent
these two parts of the tripartite system: comrades such as Chris Bambery
(SWP) and Linda Smith (FBU).
Who then represents the muslim interest? Not the Muslim Association of
Britain, which, while a popular target for socialists, has not joined
Respect. We can point Dr Naseem, chair of the Birmingham Central Mosque,
Abdurahman Jafar of the Muslim Council of Britain (in a personal capacity)
or the journalist Yvonne Ridley. Surely these people will not outvote
the SWP?
Except of course they have a secret and powerful weapon in god himself.
We know that god does not like gays or womens rights or abortion.
He is bound to make his influence felt on these matters. We have recently
seen the hand of god raising the arms of SWP members against the extension
of abortion rights up and down the country. Lindsey German gained the
remarkable power to speak in tongues, when notoriously declaring that
womens and gay rights were not shibboleths at Marxism
2003. So there may not be a majority of muslims in Respect, but gods
block vote has power beyond all mortal reasoning.
In February this year I argued: When we look at the broader picture
in the socialist movement, the organisations who are unlikely to join
Respect include the Socialist Alliance Democracy Platform (SADP), the
Communist Party of Britain (CPB), the Socialist Party, Workers Power and
the Alliance for Green Socialism. The SADP should seek to open a dialogue
with these organisations to see if a common approach is possible. If the
SADP rejects Respect as currently constituted, we are not alone. Will
the non-Respect forces be prepared to work together? If so we have the
possibility of a viable political strategy outside Respect. Much will
depend on the politics of the SADP (Weekly Worker February 17).
After the Respect conference we will need to review where we are now.
But I can at least end on an optimistic note. Last week the Socialist
Party, Socialist Alliance (DP), the Alliance for Green Socialism, AWL,
RDG, CPGB, Socialist Unity Network and Workers Power took the first tentative
steps towards a new socialist alliance. The fight for a republican socialist
party is set to continue.
Dave Craig
Revolutionary Democratic Group
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