|
Weekly Worker 571 Thursday April 7 2005
Wasted opportunity
George Galloway displayed his catholic credentials on the BBCs
Question time last week, when he firmly sided with the disgusting right
to life propaganda of the dead pope and George W Bush
It was quite a poor performance by George Galloway by any measure. Appearing
on BBCs Question time on March 31, he was not able at all to present
himself or Respect as a rounded or viable alternative to New Labour, let
alone look anything like a socialist. On occasion The Daily Telegraph
journalist next to him appeared more progressive and was often more rational.
A particularly low moment came when Margaret Hodge (minister of state
for children) said George had been expelled from the Labour Party for
good reason, as he was guilty of inciting British troops to disobey
orders and encouraging Iraqi troops to attack British troops.
He warned her to be careful. The Telegraph journalist would be able to
tell her of the possible consequences: Youve now libelled
me on national television, twice.
However, he did not clarify what he actually had said a few years back
- ie, that British troops should disobey illegal orders -
and that the second accusation had never been proven. But comrade Galloway
squandered an opportunity. Instead of making the case against the war
and demanding the immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq, he just kept
threatening to sue her. It made him look rather apolitical and painfully
vain.
Another chance for some decent politics was wasted when the discussion
turned to prince Charless hilarious mutterings against the media.
At the traditional five-minute press call during the Windsors annual
skiing holiday in Klosters, the microphones picked up his contempt for
these people, the assembled press crew (undoubtedly, he feels
pretty much the same for most people - after all, they are not part of
his slightly deranged world of fox hunters who wash their hair with his
organic Duchy shampoo).
Surely Galloway would use the opportunity to make clear his position for
the abolition of the monarchy, which he has stated on previous occasions?
But no. He chose to focus his contribution on the personal strains and
stresses that poor Charlie must be experiencing in advance of his wedding.
He closed with the plea that people should get off his back.
Later, he made a half-attempt at heckling the Liberal Democrat speaker
with a comment which seemed to include the word republic,
but nobody could hear him properly.
He gained a bit of ground when he supported the Liberal Democrats
call to stop sending female shoplifters to prison. But he would not go
any further on this question. He did not express any view on equivalent
male offenders or indeed on the role of prison as an institution and its
effectiveness or otherwise in combating crime and bringing about genuine
rehabilitation. In effect, he acted as a cheerleader for the Liberal Democrats
(this reminded me of the anti-war rally on February 15 2003, when Charles
Kennedy was allowed to address the crowd from the platform before supporting
British troops once the war started, merely five days later. The Socialist
Alliance was denied a speaker).
His worst contribution, however, came when the discussion focused on the
plight of Terri Schiavo, who at the time of recording had just died: The
courts killed this woman and I dont think there can be any justification
for it. It was wicked beyond belief and it is
happening not just in the US: it is happening now in Britain. We are sliding
towards a euthanasia society, where people can get snuffed out.
He could imagine a scenario where the NHS simply bumped people off to
save cash.
It takes quite a twisted sense of reality to arrive at the conclusion
that it is the pro-choice agenda that is on the march. Quite clearly,
the opposite is happening. Fuelled by the religious right, short-sighted
populism and the rightwing media, the anti-abortionists and so-called
pro-lifers are setting the agenda here and in the US. A political atmosphere
is developing in which more and more people are denied the right to make
even the most basic decisions over their own life and bodies, be it on
the question of the right to have an abortion or the right to a humane
death.
Galloway even argued that in cases similar to Terri Schiavos, doctors
should not accept any so-called living wills, in which an
individual states their desires when it comes to the conditions of their
own death. People could change their mind, he said. Most rational
people have no desire whatsoever to be kept alive in a vegetative state,
but Galloway had an answer for that too: some people actually recover
from such a condition. Clearly his views on the sanctity of life
must take precedence over the wishes of the person concerned - and Galloway
will come up with whatever argument springs to mind to justify this.
Surely we must defend the right of every human being to determine as far
as possible factors affecting their own life - and death - and firmly
deny politicians like Galloway the opportunity to overturn such decisions,
especially when their main concern seems to be displaying their religious
credentials to backward elements in the electorate. In the same way that
he wants to deny terminally ill people the right to decide the manner
of their death, he thinks women should be completely deprived of any right
to choose an abortion.
The executive committee of Respect should immediately dissociate the organisation
from such reactionary, religious and anti-democratic claptrap. If Galloway
is elected to serve as the MP for Bethnal Green and Bow, what would he
do if a case like Terry Schiavos was to be debated and voted on
in parliament?
According to the SWPs Lindsey German, he should do as his individual
conscience dictates - as is the practice in mainstream bourgeois parties.
In other words he will be a pro-life MP who promises to carry
on attacking the rights of vulnerable people. The membership of Respect
is supposed to remain silent and trust the leader to make
the right decisions.
This is not good enough - and it certainly is not going to build the kind
of organisation the working class desperately needs. Candidates claiming
to represent the working class must be accountable to it and to the organisation
that selects them. They must be bound by the democratic decisions of the
majority.
Nevertheless, despite Galloways vile views on such questions, we
will urge a vote for him in the general election. The central question
is the war and occupation of Iraq and the CPGB has adopted the position
of supporting working class candidates who opposed the war and now call
for the immediate withdrawal of troops. This tactic is aimed at differentiating
between candidates over where they stand on this key issue, while at the
same time attempting to drive a wedge between those who are from the working
class movement and those who are not. Galloway is clearly part of the
former, whatever his religious views.
The problem is that the current, formally revolutionary, majority in Respect
has politically subordinated itself to the religious and anti-democratic
agenda of their (largely phantom) allies in the Muslim Association of
Britain and the mosque. Given the popular frontist nature of Respect,
we regard it as vital to emphasise the centrality of class.
This is not, as an increasingly disorientated Tariq Ali dismissively says,
tribal politics - it is a straightforward understanding that
the working class alone is capable of winning the battle for democracy,
stopping wars and liberating the whole of humanity. Whatever the particular
motives, we believe that in todays conditions a vote for the Liberal
Democrats, or any other non-working class candidate, is to indulge in
ineffective moralism. Either that or it is to betray the cause of socialism.
Tina Becker
Print this page
|