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Weekly Worker 576 Thursday May 12 2005
An
infantile disorder
Graham Bash gives a Labour left view on the outcome of the general election
The left, in my opinion, could not have done much better in this election,
given the unfavourable conditions. My main fear was that a reduced majority
for Labour could have meant an increased vote for the Tories, who ran
the most rightwing, racist campaign for a considerable period. But the
election turned out to be, above all, a disaster for the Tories. Their
vote increased by 0.6%, compared to their all-time low at the 2001 election.
The reduced room for manoeuvre for the New Labour leadership is very
much to be welcomed. I take the view that now is the time for the Labour
Party to seize the moment and to start a process not only of ridding themselves
of Blair, but also of ridding themselves of Blairism.
There is an argument which says we should concentrate on policies alone
and that the leadership of the party is irrelevant. I do not agree.
Of course policies are central, but the best way to finish off New Labour
is to seize the opportunity now and do everything we can to undermine
the position of Blair. Or else we will find that Blairism will be able
to renew itself in office under a new leader such as Brown: more Labour-friendly
in form, but fundamentally no different in practice. There could be a
situation developing similarly to that of the early 90s, when Thatcherism
renewed itself under the leadership of John Major.
Unfortunately, there is no credible left leader at the moment. This underlines
the weakness of the Labour left and indeed the labour movement. However,
the more the party and the movement attack Blair now, the more we will
be able to at least limit the room for manoeuvre for his successor. That
is as much as we can do, given the balance of forces in the movement and
the nature of the parliamentary party. It would be a considerable achievement
if we could impose such a limit, if we could use the reduced majority
to control the excesses of the government and, for example, prevent the
introduction of ID cards and all the other flagship policies of New Labour.
As to the self-limiting argument that the Labour left should now reduce
its level of critical agitation out of fear that we could let in the Tories
at the next election, I think we can turn this argument on its head. Frank
Dobson got it right when he warned that without a change of leadership
Labour could lose enormous support at the local elections in May 2006.
There is now an electoral as well as a political need to change the leadership
as a matter of urgency, which is a very good argument for the Labour left.
A lot now depends on whether significant sections of the Parliamentary
Labour Party keep their nerve and start to call for Blairs resignation.
The initial signs are not encouraging, but the issue will not go away.
Blair, of course, is not for turning and anybody who believes
that he is, is quite frankly a fool. The question is: what is the left
going to do about it? Fight on policy, fight to remove him or fight on
both? I think the two are very much linked. The more we fight to remove
him, the stronger we will be on policy. The essential thing is to ensure
that the next government is accountable to a greater extent, so that it
is no longer able to wage the kind of attacks on the working class at
home and abroad we have seen. That is the aim and it really is up to our
parliamentary representatives - supported and pressurised by whatever
movement there is from below - to achieve this.
An infantile disorder
I needed all my customary iron discipline and self-restraint not to use
the whole of my column to abuse the Weekly Worker and its idiotic leftism
and irrelevance during the general election.
I take my share of responsibility. When you professed to take the Labour
Party - and in particular the Labour left - seriously, I naively took
you at your word. When I received the April 28 edition of the Weekly Worker,
I thought it might be Mark Fischer winding me up with a spoof copy. But
it really was the case that you only supported four Labour candidates
in the general election, excluding Jeremy Corbyn (who is a leading representative
in the Stop the War Coalition and supports its programme), Diane Abbott,
Bob Marshall-Andrews or John Cryer - with the latter two standing in marginal
seats.
And the reason? Either (1) the Labour anti-war candidates had not bothered
to reply to the Weekly Worker or (2) had not passed your revolutionary
test for immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq. Look at John Cryer,
for example. He called for a timetable for withdrawal - and soon. Yet
still you did not support him. Were it not for the fact that none of your
leading comrades actually did anything in the elections, this could have
mattered and anti-war comrades could have lost their seats (as John Cryer
actually did, by 480 votes). Fortunately, few listened to your advice
to support irrelevant sects such as the Workers Revolutionary Party, the
Socialist Labour Party or even my old sparring partner, Tony Greenstein,
rather than engage critically with the Labour left.
Comrades would do well to read Lenins attack on revolutionary phrasemongers
in his Leftwing communism, or to recall his famous speech when he repeatedly
attacked the Hungarian communist and ultra-left leader, Bela Kun, as an
imbecile. I dread to think what Lenin would have said of Bela Kuns
successors today.
Galloways success
Not surprisingly, the Labour left is divided when it comes to assessing
George Galloways victory in Bethnal Green and Bow. There are a considerable
number of people on the left in the party who feel very hostile towards
George for all sorts of reasons: be it his alleged support for Saddam
Hussein, his failure to support the Campaign Group in its principled opposition
to New Labour, etc. However, there is another section - of which I am
part - that can see the immense benefits of Georges victory against
Oona King, in what was the nearest we got to a referendum on the war.
Pressure from Galloway seems to have pushed Oona King somewhat to the
left: for example, when she pledged her support for the continued existence
of the local fire station - an issue she totally ignored previously. But
I very much doubt if this success can be extended beyond this and a few
other localities. Let us be blunt about it: Georges campaign was
strong, because he was able to appeal - absolutely legitimately - to a
primarily muslim base of support. If you look at Respects vote,
it was very good in Bethnal Green, East and West Ham and one Birmingham
seat - and irrelevant anywhere else. Surely, it is rather unlikely that
a national challenge to New Labour could be launched from such a localised
basis. Such a tactic could only work if local success was used as a springboard
for the formation of a national, alternative labour-movement party, but
I do not think that Respect has either the base or the political notion
to do so.
One criticism I will not accept is the charge that, had Galloway really
been so concerned about the war, then he should have stood against Blair
in Sedgefield or against Jack Straw in Blackburn. In my opinion, if George
was determined to stand, he was absolutely right to do so in an area where
he had a chance of winning. It is not for me as a Labour Party member
to advocate anyone voting against an official Labour candidate, but I
know for a fact that there were a number of people inside the Labour Party
(including Bethnal Green and Bow), who are very pleased with the result.
I think it is almost out of the question to imagine him coming back into
the Labour Party soon. There would have to be a fundamental sea change.
Not only in the Parliamentary Labour Party, but also in George Galloway
himself. There is also no reason why he would want to be back in the party.
He is now a member of parliament without having to give much accountability
to anybody. He is very much a free agent and I can see very few advantages
for him even attempting to get back into the party - which would not touch
him with a barge pole anyway.
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