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Weekly Worker 594 Thursday September 29 2005
Duke of York syndrome
Where do we go beyond the heights of the latest demonstration - apart
from marching back down again? Emily Bransom reports from last week's
anti-war demonstration
Waiting in a nearly deserted Hyde Park at midday on Saturday September
24, there was the usual sense of anticipation before a big demonstration.
Not knowing how many people would arrive, it was only possible to judge
where the march was heading by watching the police helicopters above hovering
slowly closer.
As usual, estimates of numbers varied hugely, with organisers claiming
that 100,000 demonstrators took to the streets. The BBC, by contrast,
quoted the police figure of “up to 10,000”. I would have thought between
20,000 and 30,000 was nearer the mark. Certainly it did not come close
to previous marches in terms of either size or atmosphere. When two million
people demonstrated in February 2003, it was impossible not to really
feel a part of something with massive potential, something that was splitting
the British establishment down the middle and visibly shaking the Blair
government to its rotten foundations. In comparison, Saturday’s protest
was rather flat.
The crowd filtered into the park at around 2pm and gathered around the
stage to listen to an afternoon of speakers, poets and musicians voicing
their opposition to the US-UK occupation of Iraq. On the one hand, it
is, of course, pleasing to see such a variety of individuals speaking
out against the warmongers. Yet the usual line-up of lefts, christians
and muslims, amongst others, merely served to highlight the lack of any
clear political focus.
Enthusiasm was high to begin with. Tony Benn was greeted, predictably,
with loud cheers, as was John Pilger, whilst warm applause welcomed family
members of soldiers killed in Iraq. The occasion was less celebrity-orientated
than other demonstrations - Ms Dynamite was nowhere to be seen - and Respect
had more than its share of speakers: John Rees, Lindsey German and Yvonne
Ridley (Respect supporters also had a reasonably strong presence on the
march, with many sporting T-shirts bearing its logo).
Yet, as the afternoon progressed, the speeches did not - it began to
sound as though some on the platform were sharing cue cards. Congratulating
so many people for turning out, patting themselves on the back for making
an impact that Blair could not possibly ignore, delighting over Oona King’s
defeat in the general election. By mid-afternoon many in the crowd had
begun to head home.
Not even the ‘Marxist’ leaders of the Socialist Workers Party, comrades
Rees (speaking officially for Respect) and German (for the Stop the War
Coalition, the march’s main organisers) attempted to map out any strategy
for the anti-war movement. Comrade Rees ended his speech with the exhortation
to “keep fighting, keep marching”, while comrade German could only urge
people to join their local STWC, come to the annual conference at the
end of the year and start preparing for yet another national demonstration
next March (the speaker from the Muslim Association of Britain reminded
us that this was the 21st to have been jointly organised by the STWC,
MAB and the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament!). Talk about the grand old
Duke of York.
Surely it must eventually dawn on the comrades that making a twice-yearly
appearance in central London is not exactly forcing Blair to change course.
Yes, yes - war is unjust, the occupation is brutal and unpopular - but
what can we do about it? No wonder we are gathering every six months in
smaller and smaller numbers.
We need clear and updated slogans. We must demand ‘Troops out now’.
Not ‘Bring the troops home’ soon or whenever is convenient for Bush and
Blair. Above all we desperately a strategy. The anti-war movement must
become a movement against the existing constitution and the existing system.
Otherwise it is doomed to eventual dissipation and finally demoralisation.
But SWP leaders reject anything that smacks of principle and political
differentiation. The be-all and end-all of their political approach is
broadness for the sake of broadness. A recipe for fudge and defeat. Certainly
in the name of keeping the movement ‘broad’, they do not even deign to
present what they claim to be their own politics - that of working class
socialism. Only the workers’ movement, armed with a democratic anti-imperialist
programme, can halt Blair and Bush - numbers alone (even if they were
not falling) cannot hope to do so.
None of the speakers were willing to face up to the fact that simply
saying ‘Bring the troops home’ lacks social purchase. Nor is it enough
to simply defend the muslim ‘community’ and existing civil liberties.
We must challenge the political system and champion the fight for extreme
democracy in Britain. We need a democratic republic in place of the constitutional
monarchy system. There also needs to be a sharp anti-capitalist edge.
We fight not only against this or that war but against the imperialist
system that engenders war. A speech which attempted to tackle such questions
would have marked a step forward. Instead what we got almost without exception
was the SWP’s lame ‘see you next time’ approach.
Despite the criticisms contained in this article, however, occasions
such as last Saturday are clearly positive and politically significant.
The fact that marches are being organised and still rallying many thousands
provides a solid basis upon which to build.
On the same day up to 150,000 gathered in Washington, the largest anti-war
demonstration in America since the invasion of Iraq. This is particularly
encouraging. Slogans similar to those of British protestors were combined
with demands to “make levees, not war”. Resentment was fuelled towards
the unlimited billions of dollars being spent on the occupation rather
than on aid to the southern states devastated by hurricanes Katrina and
Rita.
But the question on both sides of the Atlantic remains: where do we go
beyond the heights of the latest demonstration - apart from marching back
down again?
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