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Weekly Worker 578 Thursday May 28 2005
Crisis looming for Brussels bureaucracy
With a French no looking ever more likely, the European
Unions constitutional treaty is in trouble. Peter Manson looks at
Frances leftwing campaign for rejection and calls for the phrase
a social Europe to be given revolutionary democratic content
The result of the May 29 French referendum on the European Union constitution
has for some time been too close to call. This is despite the huge sums
(estimated at around €420 million) spent in one form or another by
the French government on trying to win a yes. A copy of the
full constitution has been delivered to all homes - together with a helpful
explanatory leaflet which points out all the good things the
constitution contains.
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| Non campaigners: Olivier Besancenot (LCR), Claire
Villiers, José Bové, Jean-Luc Mélanchon (PS)
and Marie-George Buffet (PCF) |
In addition all the main establishment newspapers are in favour of ratification
and last week a survey found that 63% of time devoted to the referendum
on state television had been aimed at winning a yes vote.
Yet still, as we go to press, the no campaign is in front.
This has caused French politicians and EU bureaucrats to go into panic
mode. Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, said
that a no would trigger a crisis of confidence, which would
be very bad news for the economy. Prime minister Jean-Pierre
Raffarin, for his part, warned of dire consequences if France rejected
the constitution: If there were a political crisis in Europe, we
would have to endure long, long months of economic crisis.
Other European figures mixed such warnings with flattering appeals to
Frances sense of leadership: voters should not forget Frances
rightful role to be in the lead and not trail behind, in the
words of Luxembourgs prime minister, Jean-Claude Juncker, who currently
holds the EU presidency. Within France big names such as singers Françoise
Hardy and Johnny Hallyday and actor Gérard Depardieu have been
wheeled out over the last few days in a desperate attempt to bolster the
yes.
Why has there been such opposition in a country whose inhabitants have
traditionally regarded themselves as European as well as French? Well,
it has certainly been, by and large, of a completely different type from
the kind of blatantly chauvinistic Euroscepticism so prevalent in Britain.
Apart from the extreme right, not least Jean-Marie Le Pens Front
National, opposition to the constitution has not usually been accompanied
by hostility to the EU itself or to closer European cooperation.
Some commentators have pointed out that the unpopularity of Jacques Chiracs
government has been a factor - unemployment stands at 10.2% and inflation
has meant price rises running way ahead of wages for most workers. It
is certainly true that the referendum is seen as an opportunity to give
Chirac a bloody nose. This was demonstrated on May 16, when millions of
workers ignored the governments day of solidarity with
the elderly. They were supposed to forego their Whitsun bank holiday so
that the extra €2 billion in taxation raised could be diverted to
the vulnerable and needy.
However, it is not some apolitical antipathy to Chirac and the establishment
that is at the heart of the sentiment for rejection. This is most definitely
a left-led campaign based on a more positive feeling for a different kind
of Europe, however vaguely expressed, than the simple cobbling together
of existing treaties, overwritten with neoliberalism, that the constitution
represents. The Parti Communiste Français sums up this mood with
its slogan for another, social and democratic, Europe.
The main no campaign is that of the left - an alliance of
the PCF and Socialist Party dissidents, together with the left pressure
group Attac, the Fourth Internationals Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
and a range of smaller leftwing groups. Also prominent are a variety of
leftwing celebrities, including José Bové.
The SP rejectionists are supposed to be bound by party discipline, imposed
following a 60-40 internal vote committing the organisation to the yes
camp, but this has not stopped figures such as former prime minister Laurent
Fabius accepting invitations to give his view at public meetings. Fabius
said: It is important that the no vote is from the left
- a socialist no, a socially conscious no.
What the French left objects to is not closer European integration itself,
but one which enshrines professor Milton Friedmans free-market and
hard-money policies. Article III-69 of the constitution commits the EUs
economic policy to be conducted in accordance with the principle
of an open market economy with free competition.
There is nothing new in this clause - something similar appeared in the
Treaty of Rome - but the effect of the first chapter of part III, title
III, on the internal market, will be to oblige member-states to privatise
public services (those that are not already privatised, that is).
The PCF complains that the constitutional treaty encapsulates the general
social regression - high unemployment, loss of purchasing power,
lengthening of the working week, destruction of public services and privatisation
- all these policies, it says, are dictated, in the interest of big business,
by the directives put out by the institutions of the European
Union: it is as if Raffarins policies were from now on enshrined
in the constitution! (February 10 statement).
The statement does not dwell on the extent to which the PCF itself has
contributed to this general social regression through its
participation in the privatising, anti-working class pluralist left
administration which was booted out in 2002. Indeed PCF general secretary
Marie-George Buffet seems to regard the split between her organisation
and its former government partners as but a temporary rift: We will
take every initiative to bring the left back together, including those
who will have voted no, to debate what the left should do
if tomorrow it came back to power (Paris rally, April 14).
What indeed? And what also does the left propose in regard to the EU?
What would the PCFs version of a social Europe look
like? As you might expect, the party is rather short on hard details:
Across Europe, political, trade union, anti-globalisation, feminist,
anti-racist and pacifist forces are putting forward proposals to make
the European Union a Europe of work, of public services, of greater rights
for all citizens - a Europe of peace, solidarity, ecology and cooperation
(February 10 statement).
This list of platitudes, combined with the PCFs own record in government,
does not exactly inspire confidence - especially when the constitution
itself is full of its own fine-sounding phrases. For example, Article
I-2 says: The union is founded on the values of respect for human
dignity, liberty, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for
human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities.
These values are common to the member-states in a society in which pluralism,
non-discrimination, tolerance, justice, solidarity and equality between
women and men prevail.
It is clauses like these that yes proponents from across the
political spectrum are pushing hard. Clearly they can be given a left
or right gloss, according to who is putting them forward. In fact SP leftwing
yes campaigners insist that the constitutional treaty can
be used as a weapon to protect Europe against the excesses of the market
and rampant privatisation. For example, former SP minister Jack Lang claims:
To refuse this treaty would be to let France succumb to the destructive
wind of liberalism and savage capitalism.
Lang would have us believe that a social Europe is already
on offer - vote yes if you want it. Those on the right also
use the term social - but in the context of the EUs
market social economy.
Comments such as those of Lang bear testament to the strength of the no
campaign. Advocates of the treaty are forced to pretend that they are
the best defenders of social values against the encroachments of the unbridled
market and that acceptance of the constitution would be the best safeguard
against some unfettered Anglo-American version of capitalism.
It remains to be seen how many French voters will buy into this. After
all, you can quote against the likes of Lang the words of Philip Gordon,
a leading US policy intellectual based at the Brookings Institution in
Washington:
a French no
would be a significant
victory for the anti-American, anti-capitalist, anti-globalisation activists
who form a core part of the rejectionist camp (The Financial Times
May 17).
Demonstrating the accuracy of Gordons comments, the PCF warns grimly
that the constitution would ensure that the EUs defence policy was
tied to Nato and therefore the United States. A no
vote, by contrast, is an (anti-US) vote for Europe (February
10 statement).
But the PCF is at pains to rebuff Raffarins claims that a no
would do anything to damage the stability of capitalist France or capitalist
Europe: a rejection would not plunge Europe into chaos, asserts
the policy document. According to the PCF, there is no need to panic about
a no vote. It would simply say: This treaty is not good.
We need to work out another one.
To sum up the PCFs position, what its social Europe
amounts to is a slightly more leftwing version of the current situation
- no doubt it believed it was helping to build a social France
when its ministers loyally participated in Lionel Jospins 1997-2002
administration.
As I say, coming from the PCF, a no vote based on diehard
opposition to privatisation and a defence of public services is not entirely
persuasive. But what is lacking from the PCF completely are any constitutional
proposals that would give real meaning to its phrases about democracy.
The position of the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire is equally
inadaquate. The LCR correctly states that a yes victory would
give the green light to ruling classes and governments for new attacks
against the working class and the people.
A no, on the other hand, would provide an enormous moral
victory and might also produce great change in Europe. It might
allow the peoples of Europe to bring about a democratic and social
eruption, to put a stop to neoliberalism
, to open up a constituent
process for a new Europe in the service of the peoples and of the
workers. This would put on the agenda a plan of urgent social
and democratic measures to break with neoliberal capitalism (statement,
May 16).
The LCR puts forward some essential points that it proposes such a plan
would contain: an end to redundancies and the guarantee of stable
work; the harmonisation of social and democratic rights upwards
- building on the best that has been won in each country; the reversal
of all privatisations
and the relaunch of public services within
the framework of Europe; and a redistribution of wealth, attacking
the logic of capitalist profit to satisfy social needs (ibid).
All these demands are, of course, correct and supportable in themselves.
But what about demands that go beyond trade union and economic questions?
What would the LCR like to see a constituent process
for a new Europe come up with?
How about something along the lines of what we in the CPGB propose? -
Abolish the council of ministers and sack the unelected commissioners.
For a single-chamber, executive and legislative, continental congress
of the peoples of Europe, elected by universal suffrage and proportional
representation (J Conrad Remaking Europe London 2004, p105).
The LCR might also like to consider workers control over big
business and the overall direction of the economy and a popular,
democratic militia, equipped with the most advanced and destructive weaponry.
And, of course, right at the top of our agenda should be the question
of working class unity. We need EU-wide industrial unions
and a democratic and effective EU Trade Union Congress. Most
of all, necessity demands a single, centralised, revolutionary party:
ie, the Communist Party of the European Union (ibid).
However, compared to the ultra-economistic Lutte Ouvrière, the
LCR is a paragon of political virtue. LO seems to have reluctantly been
drawn into the no campaign against its better judgement -
and against some internal opposition. But it has declined to join up with
the PCF, LCR and Attac, preferring to launch its own, largely abstract,
propaganda tirades.
Certainly LO has noticed the neoliberal content of the treaty. But, at
the end of the day, what have capitalist constitutions got to do with
the working class? Now that they have asked us, we may as well say no
- that is the LO position.
Its 2002 presidential candidate and most well known spokesperson, Arlette
Laguiller, explains: Nobody should expect something from a no
victory that it cannot deliver. The anti-worker offensive waged by big
business across Europe, irrespective of the government, has nothing to
do with the constitution, nor with Brussels. It is not the European institutions
or even governments that direct the economy, but big business (Lutte
Ouvrière March 29).
How wrong can you be? LO is living in its own world of pure
capitalism, where bourgeois political leaders and their institutions have
mere bit parts - all the big decisions are taken in the boardroom and
stock exchange, not in the cabinet or European institutions.
Nor does it occur to comrade Laguiller that the referendum gives us the
opportunity to fight for what workers need in the here and now. Rather
she and her comrades insist that what matters are the real working
class questions of better wages, pensions, opposition to sackings,
etc, etc. The fight for a completely different order is somehow detached
from these daily trade union struggles and in fact belongs to the indeterminate
future: Europe itself is not in question. If one day a real Europe
came into existence, the disappearance of borders which divide the continent
would be a good thing (my emphasis Lutte Ouvrière
April 11).
Not surprisingly perhaps, in view of all this, an LO minority thinks the
leadership should, to be consistent, have simply ignored the referendum.
Convergences Révolutionnaires, which enjoys a weekly factional
column in Lutte Ouvrière, states that the poll is being used to
divert anti-capitalist struggles into an impasse. A reason quite
sufficient to denounce the whole operation rather than participating in
it, from near or far.
It concludes: The proximity of May 29 is certainly not keeping either
the French or European bosses awake at night. One cannot see why they
should feel threatened in their ability to sack workers or hold down wages
by a no victory (which would do no more than leave the situation
as it is) - a victory, what is more, that would be shared by the Front
National
, the PCF and the extreme left! (Lutte Ouvrière
April 15).
A no would leave the situation as it is! Just
listen to what the Euro bureaucrats and bourgeois politicians are saying.
Rejection by France (not to mention the Netherlands, which votes on June
1) would cause our rulers the greatest of difficulties. Eleven countries
have so far ratified the constitution, but, like all EU treaties, it requires
the agreement of every member-state. Negotiations following a no
would be neither simple nor straightforward.
A no would most certainly have repercussions for Britain too,
as many have pointed out, especially as the UK is taking over the EU presidency
on July 1. The ball would be back in Tony Blairs court. Should he
abandon or delay the proposed British referendum while some concession
(or bribe) is dreamt up to try and buy off the opposition in France and
elsewhere? In an attempt at bravado, the British government went ahead
with the publication of its EU Constitution Bill on May 24 as if indeed
the situation after the dreaded French no would
be as it is.
It is difficult to know which has the worse position - the Lutte Ouvrière
ultra-economists or the tiny minority of PCF extreme social chauvinists
around the journals Initiative Communiste, the monthly of the Communist
Renaissance Pole in France, and Intervention Communiste, the bimonthly
of the Union of Revolutionary Communists of France.
These comrades, who constitute the nostalgics in and around
the PCF, yearn for the good old, bad old days of patriotic communism and
Soviet prestige. Initiative Communiste calls for the bringing together
of the no in all its dimensions (patriotic and anti-imperialist,
working class and republican) to reject any European constitution.
It wants to give maximum strength to the no by uniting
the red flag with the tricolour in the tradition of the popular front,
the resistance and the great PCF of Thorez, Franchon and Duclos.
It concludes: Let us not be afraid of
breaking with the EU
that is humiliating our class and killing our country (April).
Intervention Communiste, for its part, likewise calls for the withdrawal
of France from the EU and Nato. It poses its own version of what
it calls an internationalist and anti-imperialist no
in opposition to that of the PCF leadership and its allies: Once
more capital is making use of new weapons: Euroconstructivism (PCF, Trotskyists),
which opposes this draft constitution, but calls for a social
Europe within the framework of the EU (December 2004-January 2005).
It is difficult to put into words how ridiculous these groups appear in
France. Yet on this side of the English Channel the notion of combining
opposition to the EU constitution with the upholding of British sovereignty
is hardly a rarity. Not only do the PCFs co-thinkers, the Morning
Stars Communist Party of Britain, demand withdrawal from the union
- so too do the LCRs Fourth International comrades of the International
Socialist Group (not to mention Arthur Scargills Socialist Labour
Party).
Other groups, such as the Socialist Workers Party and Socialist Party,
will steer clear of the CPBs left nationalism, but will oppose the
constitution from a purely defensive, economistic perspective. It is well
known that the SWPs Chris Nineham thinks the whole question is boring
- we should just say no and then forget about it.
There are, however, some in France who have something approaching a good
position on the question of Europe. A number of small groups, including
the Club Liaisons Socialisme Révolution Démocratie and Le
Militant, have come together to give a rather better content to the phrase,
a social Europe. Their short statement declares in part:
Democracy demands a true constitution that does not codify in advance
the policies to be followed and rests on popular sovereignty. It is for
the European people to decide. It is for them to impose their will! Our
perspective is for unity in action and common discussion so that a no
victory opens up the road to the fall of Chirac, to the development of
strikes, to the achievement, through the overthrow of the present regime,
of popular sovereignty (La Lettre de Liaisons May 16).
We fight for democracy at every level: European, national, regional and
local, and for a constitution which at each of these levels subordinates
the bureaucracy to the elected representatives and the elected representatives
to their electors. This is the reverse, the negation, of the constitutional
treaty, the EU constitution.
Revolutionary socialists and communists across Europe must unite in a
common struggle against this treaty. We demand not another intergovernmental
conference, not another convention of the sort which drew
up the treaty: we demand a directly elected constituent assembly for Europe,
in which we can fight for the sort of constitution we need.
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