|
Weekly Worker 575 Thursday May 5 2005
Split the difference
This is obviously going to be a great night and a great week.
No, not a crowing Tony Blair, but Michael Howards rather optimistic
prediction of the Tories general election performance. As I write,
however, I am pretty confident Howard will be sorely disappointed, with
Labour securing a historically unprecedented third term
There has been much speculation about Blairs intention to abdicate
in favour of Gordon Brown at some stage - maybe very early on in the parliament,
maybe much later. Clearly though, the Blairite, or New Labour, project
of deLabourising Labour will continue with or without Tony Blair at the
helm, even if Gordon Brown happens to be safely ensconced in No10.
Indeed, Brown, for all his occasional - and often demagogic - recourse
to old Labour phraseology, has been one of the prime architects of New
Labourism. Therefore we communists were not exactly enamoured by the Vote
Blair - get Brown school of desperado politics, which adopted the
lesser of two evils approach at its most degenerate. No, communists
fight for independent working class politics, both inside and outside
the Labour Party - just as we do in parliament, the trade unions, etc.
Now, if by some freak occurrence, Howard had somehow managed to clamber
his way into No10, we could have expected some speedy action. By May 9,
he would have ended the requirement for the police to fill out a form
when they stop or question someone - and by June 6, matrons would once
again have been responsible for the cleaning of hospitals, thank heavens.
If that was not enough for you, after December 1 school headteachers would
have had the final say on pupil expulsions, and come April 2006 we would
have seen a discount of £500 for pensioners off their council tax
bills, 24-hour border surveillance covering 35 ports of entry, and stamp
duty abolished on houses up to £250,000.
The Tories crowning achievement, presumably, would have occurred on December
31 of that year, with the introduction of a new border control police
force to tackle illegal immigration. Then again, perhaps the priority
list detailed above at least partly helps to explain why Michael Howard
will not be the next prime minister.
In fact, the remarkable thing about this general election was the degree
of political commonality between the mainstream parties. In terms of essential
political-social policy and programme it was nigh on impossible to put
an ID card between Labour and the Tories. Or, as one commentator put it
- approvingly, it should be noted - we have synergy between
the main parties.
Take the water cooler issue of the Iraq war. Michael Howards
position is that he would have invaded Iraq regardless of the legal niceties
- its just that, unlike Tony Blair, he would not have lied to his
cabinet colleagues or parliament, and the British public, about his real
intentions (ie, regime change).
What about the Liberal Democrats? The Guardian may tell us that the
Liberal Democrats opposed the Iraq war, as this newspaper also did
(May 3), but in reality they supported the war - our brave boys
and girls - once it actually started. If anything, the Lib Dems
take on this issue is even more distasteful than the line peddled by either
Labour or the Tories, as it stinks of self-righteous hypocrisy. To state
the obvious once more, the Liberal Democrats were and are a pro-war party.
Inevitably, the very lack of real difference between the main parties
generated a highly personalised, and bitter, campaign - in a frantic Dutch
auction to sell their political wares. In the 1997 general election the
Tories put out their ludicrous - and spectacularly misjudged - demon
eyes poster, which had the immortal tag-line, New Labour,
new danger.
Naturally, Labour responded in 2005 with its own version of the deadly
threat - with the demonic entity this time being, of course, Michael Howard.
Under the central slogan, Forward, not back, Labour attempted
to ratchet up the anxiety levels, with lurid scare stories about the Tories
supposed plan to savage public spending by £35 billion or more.
In reality, this claim by Labour was just disingenuous hogwash - and they
knew it, of course. The Tories, like Labour, were for increased public
spending - but they happened to have proposed a smaller rise. Not that
either party would be likely to stick very closely to their projections
in any case. But Labour played the politics of fear card for
all its worth in the hope that that enough people would fall for its sound
and fury.
Labours tactics were conveniently replicated by Unison, which spent
£540,000 from its general political fund on posters which asked,
How will spending £35 billion less on public services improve
them? These barely subliminal vote Labour posters were
displayed in all the marginal seats, but of course will not feature in
Labours official election spending accounts, since they will be
deemed as an intervention by a third party.
Unison general secretary Dave Prentis claimed that it was not a question
of backing one political party as opposed to another: the Tories were
threatening to abolish the best value system, the governmental
criteria for deciding contracts inside local government departments -
hence it was a matter that affected all union members and could therefore
be classified as a general union campaign issue, not a partisan, party
political one.
Not that any of this prevented Prentis from evoking the catastrophic consequences
that would follow if Tony Blair failed to become prime minister again:
If the Tories had their way, we would be back to the dark old days
where cost was the only criteria and cheapest was always best. We ended
up with MRSA in our hospitals, school kids eating unhealthy dinners simply
because they were cheap and rubbish left on our streets because private
companies didnt employ enough people to do the job. Just when we
are turning the corner on MRSA, the Tories want to unleash it back into
our hospitals. So, according to Unison propaganda, If you
want MRSA, vote Tory.
Another significant - and extremely ugly - feature of the general election
campaign, and the build-up to it, was the prominence of the debate around
immigration and asylum-seekers. For months the rightwing and tabloid press
whipped up vile populist prejudices against bogus asylum-seekers,
illegal immigrants, and so on. Michael Howard, of course, was particularly
shameless in shaping and following popular opinion, Churchillian-like
to bring our borders back under control and get tough with
the illegals and chancers who are abusing
the system. Here is the real message of that other, unpleasant, Tory election
catch-phrase, Are you thinking what were thinking?
This is precisely the point where the left should directly challenge this
disturbing growth in xenophobic immigrant/asylum-seeker-bashing and unequivocally
call for open borders. Tragically, and disastrously, we have seen virtually
the opposite of what is needed - while the Socialist Workers Party kept
quiet, George Galloway argued in an article in the Morning Star for a
points system that most members of the United Kingdom Independence
Party or Veritas could heartily concur with. The SWP-Respect party
scabbed on what should be basic, non-negotiable, internationalist principle.
What general conclusions can communists come to regarding the 2005 general
election? Firstly, that Tony Blair has continued to enjoy good fortune
as far as the economy is concerned. Unemployment has dropped steadily,
income from taxation has risen along with growth, and Gordon Brown has
been able to increase spending on health and education.
Secondly, the Tories remain in disarray - Michael Howard has fared no
better than the hapless Iain Duncan-Smith or the buffoonish William Hague.
Since the demise of Thatcher not only have they lacked anything even remotely
approaching a big idea, but they are riven - no matter how
hard Tory HQ might try to conceal it - with deep and fundamental divisions,
which, it seems, can only be resolved, barring a miracle, at the expense
of the Tories electability. Howards Liar, liar - Tonys
pants are on fire strategy - if you can grace it with such a description
- was self-evidently no substitute.
So, the Tories cannot, in their present state, fulfil their traditional
role as the natural party of the ruling class. Equally as true, Labour
may not be trusted by the majority of the electorate, but, when it comes
to a choice between Blairs party and the Tories, there is no contest.
Sufficient voters, while disappointed and more than a little disillusioned
and even embittered with Labours record - especially over Iraq,
of course - continue to prefer Labour. The memory of Tory cuts and corruption,
even after all these years, is still too fresh.
Of course very, very few still believe that Labour will serve the interests
of the working class. That was already the case way back in 1997, when
the most workers hoped for was that Labour would be (a bit) better than
the Tories. There was certainly no fructification of hope,
as some on the far left foolishly said - nor were there great expectations
and a subsequent crisis of expectations as a result of Blair
failing to deliver. Then, as now, he deliberately declined
to make socialistic promises or pledges.
No liar when it comes to that, if nothing else.
Eddie Ford
Print this page
|