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Weekly Worker 574 Thursday April 28 2005
SWP backs Reg for Sedgefield
Should communists support Reg Keys? Phil Rawlinson is not convinced
Perhaps the most prominent non-party challenge to New Labour in the general
election has been that of Reg Keys in Tony Blairs own north-east
constituency.
The war in Iraq is the central, indeed only, focus of the Reg Keys
for Sedgefield campaign. His 20-year-old son, lance corporal Tom
Keys, was killed while serving as a military policeman in Iraq in June
2003.
Keyss campaign has been backed by a number of celebrities, including
musician Brian Eno, poet Benjamin Zephaniah, pop-science academic Richard
Dawkins, actor David Soul, Scottish National Party leader Alex Salmond
and the former independent MP for Tatton, Martin Bell.
Interestingly, Keys is also being actively supported by many Respect members
based in the Durham/Teesside area, including John Bloom, the Respect candidate
for the September 2004 by-election in the neighbouring constituency of
Hartlepool. Respect is contesting just one seat in the north east, Tyne
Bridge, which is out of reach for most supporters in the region on anything
other than an occasional basis.
Much as one may sympathise with Keyss bereavement, and pleasurable
as it might be to see Blair embarrassed on May 5, it is hard to see why
any principled socialist should want to jump on this particular bandwagon.
There is little sign that he has been genuinely radicalised by his experiences
or that his political trajectory is in a leftwards direction like, say,
the Respect-supporting Gentle family who also lost a loved one in the
Iraq conflict.
Keys has no programme at all. Regs pledges are confined
to the following four broad platitudes:
- No more illegal wars: I will not support or condone British involvement
in any more illegal wars or invasions, nor support the USA in any illegal
actions.
- No more lies: I will not lie to my constituents or to the country,
nor keep quiet while lies are told by the government.
- No more betrayals: I will not betray the trust of those who have elected
me nor of the young men and women in our armed forces who swear an oath
of allegiance to their country.
- Reg Keys - a real constituency MP: I will live in the constituency
- I have no parliamentary ambition other than to serve my constituents
(www.keysforsedge-field.org.uk).
Our Reg has nothing to say about any policy issue. We do not know where
this honest Joe type stands on the future of the health service,
on asylum-seekers, on immigration, on privatisation - on anything.
Even Keyss opposition to the war is couched in narrowly legalistic
terms - that Blair led the UK into the conflict on the basis of a false
prospectus with his claim that the Iraqi regime possessed weapons
of mass destruction. Because of this deception, Keys argues that the prime
minister has forfeited the peoples trust and is morally unfit to
govern. When asked on Radio 4 a few weeks ago how he would have viewed
the issue had it turned out that WMDs were present in Iraq, Keys conceded
that he would have supported the war and accepted his sons death
as a regrettable necessity.
This, surely, is not the basis of opposition to the conflict on which
the Stop the War Coalition was formed and the mass demonstration of February
2003 was mobilised. And, for all our criticisms of the language of international
law in which the case against war is usually argued, it was not the basis
of Respects creation either. Many of us, and certainly those active
in the left, were opposed to the war because it was an imperialist act,
regardless of whether or not Saddam Hussein had WMDs.
The prospect of witnessing Blair face a re-enactment of the famous Portillo
moment of 1997 may be enticing, but I doubt whether Reg Keys will
take the PM to a recount. In any case, he is certainly not a candidate
worthy of communist/socialist support.
Phil Rawlinson
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