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Weekly Worker 574 Thursday April 28 2005
Little Britain and
their points systems
Eddie Ford looks at the nationalist right in this election
Next week the mainstream parties will be facing electoral challenges
not just from the left, like the big hitters of the Scottish
Socialist Party (58 seats) or the Socialist Workers Party-George Galloway
Respect (26).
So, apart from the fascist British National Party (118) and National Front
(13), voters will also be faced with a clutch of nationalist and Little
England groups and organisations. We have the United Kingdom Independence
Party (Ukip, 496 contests), the Veritas Party (62), English Democrats
Party (21), English Democratic Party (2), Third Way (2), Get Britain Back
Party (1), English Independence Party (1), Imperial Party (1), New England
Party (1). Additionally, many of the eccentric single-issue parties
and independents, like the Publican Party - Free to Smoke
(Pubs) or Families First UK, will no doubt be peddling politics of a distinctly
rightwing or reactionary bent.
How do we communists assess groups like Ukip, Veritas or the English Democrats
Party? Would it be right to describe them in any way as fascist
or neo-fascist? Certainly, Robert Kilroy-Silk, the popinjay
founder and leader of Veritas, has on more than one occasion been compared
to Oswald Mosley, fuhrer of the British Union of Fascists (albeit a very
second or third-rate version).
Regrettably, for some time now, the left has been heavily prone to theoretical
and linguistic slippage, or to the over-usage of certain terms
and labels. Like something out of the Young ones comedy show, we have
all seen the tendency, amusing or otherwise, to label all and any rightwing
individual or group as fascist or even Nazi. Far
from serving to help the left to win friends and gain influence over society
as a whole, this definitional fickleness has in fact acted to further
marginalise the position and ideas of the far or revolutionary left.
More concretely, the way terms like fascism, Nazism,
racism, national chauvinism, etc, have become
virtually interchangeable has proved to be particularly deleterious for
our movement. Furthermore, our Socialist Workers Party comrades, for one,
have a consistent history of labelling just about every far right organisation
it comes across - such as the Front National in France or the Freedom
Party in Austria - as either Nazi or neo-Nazi.
This can only blur our understanding of the phenomenon of fascism and
lead us to spectacularly misunderstand the nature of the period we live
in - and hence the tasks that confront us.
Thus, if we approach this question historically, as opposed to ideologically,
then it is quite clear that Nazism is a particular German form of fascism
and that the word Nazi is an contraction of national
socialist. Adolph Hitlers National Socialist German Workers
Party was just one of many similar, tiny groups which sprang up in Germany
during the troubled, liberal Weimar republic established after German
imperialisms humiliating defeat in World War I. At the heart of
national socialist doctrine was a morbid obsession with the
Volk, a word which when directly translated into English becomes people
- but has almost none of the foaming intensity or meaning of the original
German term.
It was Hitlers utter devotion to the fascist ideal of the Volk that
caused him to write that the liberal was concerned with the individual
and the communist with humanity, but the national socialist fought for
the rights of the Volk. Armed with this world view, fascism sought the
complete destruction of the independent labour movement. Unions were crushed,
and reformed into professional organisations within the state-controlled
corporative system. Terror was accompanied by the drive to
build an ideology premised on a bizarre Nazi pseudo-science which categorised
the world into a hierarchy of races: the Aryans
perched at the very top, the Slavs, blacks, gypsies and Jews down at the
very bottom.
In other words, fascism is therefore the antithesis of the revolutionary
movement: a very direct opposite, almost a reflection, and ultimately
an alternative future to communism if the working class is defeated. Benito
Mussolini and Hitlers movements came into being and temporarily
thrived under particular and concrete conditions where the question of
socialist revolution had been posed point blank - and bloodily answered
in the negative.
From this scientific socialist perspective, it is not theoretically permissible
to remotely describe Ukip, Veritas, the EDP (both versions), etc, as either
fascist or proto-fascist. Indeed, for communists, even to describe Ukip,
for example, as racist is surely to misuse the word. What Ukip pushes
is a virulently petty, and astoundingly ignorant, Little Britain
national chauvinism which incorporates official anti-racism but firmly
rejects the liberal nostrums of multiculturalism - with its talk of celebrating
diversity and difference, and so on. Rather, the
nationalist ideologues of Ukip, Veritas, etc want a forced, top-down assimilationism
whereby Britishness (for the Patels as well as the Smiths)
is defined by the degree and intensity of your loyalty to all the national
myths and fictions of post-imperial/World War II establishment Britain.
The very opposite, of course, of our voluntary, bottom-up, communist assimilationism
which looks forward to the eventual merging of all the various nations,
countries and peoples of the world.
A cursory examination of the general election manifestos produced by the
non-mainstream rightist groups reminds one of nothing more than a glorified,
and vaguely comical, charter for disgusted of Tunbridge Wells,
combined with an incredibly narrow obsession with the EU - depicted as
a rapacious evil empire which would ruthlessly crush 1,000
years of uninterrupted English history given half a chance. The flip-side
of this unrelenting hostility to the EU and all its diabolical works is
populist rhetoric against asylum-seekers and immigration in general.
In this vein Ukips leader, Roger Knapman MEP, tells us in the foreword
to its manifesto that people sometimes tell me that Ukip is a single-issue
party, then adds: The point is that the single issue of freeing
Britain from the EU overrides all others - no other issue can be properly
addressed while we remain in the EU. For instance, we are no longer free
to choose our own policy on asylum-seekers because this is now subject
to EU directives.
The Ukip manifesto attempts to steal at least some of Michael Howards
clothes by fulminating: But too often rights favour the criminal
rather than the victim and the unruly pupil rather than the teacher,
etc. Ukip will repeal the 1999 Human Rights Act, preferring to rely on
British custom, our common laws and the principles of the European
Convention of Human Rights, which are based on individual freedom rather
than state control.
As for immigration controls, we read the following: The Conservatives
have promised to impose quotas on immigration. Given that Britain has
accepted EU control over the treatment and assessment of asylum-seekers,
this is no more credible than their promise to ignore EU fishing policy.
The first responsibility of a British government is to its own population,
not to those who would like to settle here. All British people, including
our ethnic minorities, want immigration brought under control. Having
taken Britain out of the EU, Ukip would aim to approach net immigration
both by imposing far stricter limits on legal immigration and by taking
control, at last, of the vexed problem of illegal immigration. Adopt a
points system for evaluating applications for work permits
based on an identified need for specific skills and other tests of suitability
- such as Britishness tests.
Not surprisingly, these sentiments are echoed, if not repeated almost
word for word, in the Veritas manifesto, which informs us: Our manifesto
is based on our two core beliefs: (1) we must be able to govern ourselves
as an independent nation; (2) we must maintain and protect our personal
and constitutional freedoms, for which many have fought and died over
the centuries. Neither belief is compatible with continued membership
of the EU. All our policies are therefore based on our intention to leave
the EU immediately.
With this aim in mind, Veritas make the following pledges: End the
governments open door policy and admit only those needed
because of their skills. They will be expected to speak English, pass
health tests, have no criminal convictions and integrate into the British
way of life; and impose a three-year general moratorium on
immigration, whilst we develop an Australian-style points system
- though of course Veritas will always admit people on genuine compassionate
grounds.
As if cloned in the same evil laboratory, the English Democrats Party
- whose star candidate, Gary Bushell, is standing in the Brit town
of Greenwich - also thinks that there should be a points system
for entry to the UK which is based on the Canadian model - well,
it makes a change from the Australian model, I suppose. EDPs manifesto
goes on to outline how points should be awarded for, among other
things: educational and professional qualifications; family links with
England; financial resources; the ability to speak English. In other words,
entry should be determined by our needs as a society and the ability of
newcomers to be absorbed into the prevailing public culture.
Naturally, any one who takes the time to trawl through the various other
anti-EU manifestos will find the same message - enough is
enough, we are a little island, it is time to raise the drawbridge and
retreat into national purdah.
Communists, it goes without saying, find the views of Knapman, Kilroy-Silk,
Bushell et al to be quite obnoxious and vile. But we have to face the
bitter truth that we have heard disturbingly similar rhetoric from George
Galloway. In his now notorious comments in the Morning Star (February
12), comrade Galloway actually reproduces the language of Ukip and Veritas
by calling for a points system to determine which migrants
are to be deemed useful to British society (in reality British
capital) and should therefore be allowed in, and which are not. How are
comrade Galloways views essentially different - when it comes to
concrete, programmatic actualisation - from the putrescent outpourings
found in a Ukip or Veritas general election manifesto?
Communists recognise that Britains official ideology, whether expounded
by Michael Howard, Tony Blair or Robert Kilroy-Silk, is undoubtedly nationalist,
or national chauvinist, and that British nationalism today - except for
the fascist fringe - is multiracial and multi-ethnic. We need
to counterpose to this currently hegemonic bourgeois anti-racism our own
internationalist and proletarian anti-racism and programme, which means
by definition unequivocal opposition to all left variants
of British nationalism.
Eddie Ford
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