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Weekly Worker 609 Thursday January 26 2006
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Authoritarian agenda
Big boost
Our
January fund received a big boost following the screening of the
film G8 - can you hear us? on January 22. Comrade TB, a long-time
associate of the CPGB, came up with a magnificent gift of £180.
Brilliant!
Last week has also seen three more standing order pledges - a new
one from comrade MKS (£5 per month) plus two increases - an extra
£10 per quarter from PL and an additional £5 per quarter from IT.
Thanks to all three. They are small amounts, but each one helps
to make the finances of this paper just that little bit more secure.
The extra regular monthly income pledged now comes to £130 a month
since we started our special appeal at the beginning of January.
Thanks also this week to comrades KP, GB and FK, who each donated
£10, plus CS, who contributed £15 via our online PayPal facility.
She was one of 14,098 who read the Weekly Worker on our website
over the last seven days.
The good news is we have already reached our newly increased monthly
target of £600 with five days still to go. We have £630. Thanks
to all.
Robbie Rix
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Anne Mc Shane comments on Tony Blairs latest anti-social crackdown
Blair’s latest authoritarian moves to clamp down still further on ‘anti-social’
behaviour should not come as any surprise. Since his entry into Downing
Street in 1997, he has led a major assault on our freedoms. His government
has created almost a thousand new criminal offences and increased police
powers dramatically. The dictatorial state casts a shadow over our lives
in a way that is unprecedented.
Incredibly Blair slams his own highly expanded and powerful criminal
justice system as “utterly useless” in containing disorder. As if the
state was not overbearing enough, he claims more legislation is needed.
Essentially he is determined to continue the reversal of the burden of
proof for those facing criminal charges. Instead of the historical safeguard
that the accused is innocent until proven guilty, now the onus in many
minor offences is on the defendant to prove their innocence. But although
he boasts of the impact of this approach - with 6,497 anti-social behaviour
orders (asbos), 800 dispersal orders and 170,000 penalty notices already
in force - it is only a beginning. He is determined “to restore respect
to the communities of Britain”(www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page88
98.asp).
More police powers are needed to fulfil his ambition - with summary judgement
being doled out on the streets. He argues: “We are fighting 21st century
crime with 19th century methods” and “the real choice, the choice on the
street, is not between a criminal law process that protects the accused
and one that doesn’t; it is between a criminal law process that puts protection
of the accused in all circumstances above and before that of protecting
the public” (ibid).
Already police issue a large number of penalty notices on the street,
with no proof or legal advice for the person at the receiving end. They
must be contested within three weeks (through a complex and inaccessible
procedure) or else the recipient will be faced with a criminal conviction.
The Human Rights Act, under which Britain reluctantly signed up to the
Geneva Convention, is meaningless when it comes to the criminal justice
system. Article 6 states: “Everyone charged with a criminal offence shall
be presumed innocent until proved guilty according to law.” Obviously
not the case in Blair’s Britain.
Even The Economist professes concern at the “generous funding
and influence over lawmaking in recent years” granted to the police by
Blair. Apparently even some police are uncomfortable with the degree of
power they now possess (December
14 2005). Notwithstanding any objections, however, Blair now wants
to extend these powers to stop spitting in the street and other “disrespectful
behaviour”. In particular ‘problem parents’ are to be tackled even more
forcefully than before.
Not controlling their offspring can lose them their homes, their benefits
and result in care proceedings. Apparently they deserve not our sympathy,
but our wrath. Dragged before magistrates, they can face fines or even
custody and be ordered to attend compulsory parenting training. That and
be placed in a national network of ‘sin-bins’ - dumping ground estates
and hostels for ‘problem families’.
Blair is to democracy what Thatcher was to trade unionism. He has been
determined from the outset to increase police power and interference in
our lives. The most impoverished and alienated stand accused as the malevolent
force undermining society. The fractured nature of life in inner cities
is blamed on the poor bastards who have to live there.
It is worthwhile taking a brief look at the use of asbos over the last
year or so. Besides stopping the right of assembly for young people, they
have been used to clear inner-city areas of prostitutes, beggars, drug
addicts, alcoholics and the mentally ill. Statewatch reports that Manchester
city council has taken soup kitchens to court to prevent them operating
on the street. They are causing a nuisance since they attract scruffy,
homeless people hoping to get something to eat (www.statewatch.org).
Camden spearheaded the imposition of asbos in 1998 and currently has
five times more than any other council - used particularly to keep undesirables
away from the Kings Cross area. The redevelopment resulting from the extension
of Euro-star means that homeless people are moved on - mainly to Westminster,
which has objected and ratcheted up the use of asbos on its own patch
in response. The homeless and vulnerable are continuously pushed from
pillar to post, as each local authority attempts to remove this ‘eyesore’
from its streets.
Interestingly, the government provides funding in proportion to the number
of asbos imposed - Camden has done very well and others hope to follow.
Prison is the usual consequence of any breach, and sentences of more than
a year have been imposed for straying into the wrong street.
There is no doubt that the numbers of people sleeping and begging in
the streets has increased massively in the last 20 years. And it is equally
clear that this problem has been created by government policies. The Tory
government cynically legislated for ‘care in the community’ in 1989 and
closed most existing psychiatric hospitals. Tens of thousands of mentally
ill people were dumped onto the streets. This was accompanied by a number
of cuts in housing provision and the whittling away of the duty of local
authorities to provide accommodation. Unsurprisingly this trend has continued
under the present administration. Now if you are evicted from your property
you are quite likely to be assessed as ‘intentionally homeless’, therefore
attracting no assistance.
Cuts in benefits, closure of local authority homes, the voucher system
for asylum-seekers - the list of attacks on the welfare state is apparently
endless. The government now plans to reduce the number claiming disability
benefits by granting bonuses to GPs for refusing to issue sickness
certificates. All of these measures help create an environment of social
dislocation. Working class solidarity and ability to resist is extraordinarily
low. The state has succeeded in snatching back the gains won by our class
when it was relatively strong and united. Now it attempts to police the
consequences from above. Blair makes it clear that democracy is not an
issue for him - but social control is.
Thatcher’s defeat of the miners’ Great Strike was a strategic blow against
our working class. It heralded many more attacks on the trade union movement,
bringing with them disempowerment and limiting our ability to resist attack.
The welfare state had been created to buy off the militancy produced by
World War II. The movement at that time was defiant - and included demobbed
soldiers trained in the use of arms. Unfortunately its leadership in the
Communist Party was programmatically unable to carry the struggle further
than the acceptance of sops. Nevertheless the existence of a strongly
organised working class was a pivotal factor right up to 1984-85.
The liquidation of the Communist Party and the brave but defeated struggle
of 1984-85 marked an important turning point. Today despite militant noises
from some union leaders we are witnessing widespread sell-outs, including
over pensions. However, even in this period of low combativity the mobilisation
against the Iraq war gave an indication of the potential strength of our
class.
We on the left need to address this problem not just by campaigning around
individual issues. The answer is political. Not only the smashing of the
anti-trade union laws and the defeat of the government’s attacks on democracy.
We need to create a Communist Party armed with Marxism, not reformism.
Blair claims that his father, who came from a working class family in
Glasgow, would have been horrified at today’s ‘yob culture’ and the lack
of respect shown. He omits to mention, of course, the reasons for the
alienation of many. What are the prospects for a young person growing
up on a sink estate? Police intimidation, poverty, unemployment or dead-end
jobs are hardly conducive to ‘respect’ - either for yourself or fellow
members of working class communities. But in fact Blair wants young people
to be compliant drones.
These issues will be at the forefront of the forthcoming local election
campaign. We need to oppose the criminalisation of young people, as well
as of all those at the sharp end of attacks on democracy. We need to encourage
tenants committees to deal with anti-social problems on their own estates,
not rely on the police or the council - there have been several examples
of campaigns against asbos and heavy police presence in areas of
London, including Hackney. However, they are isolated and limited. What
is necessary is for working class people to begin to take these questions
into their own hands.
But what will Respect do? At its November 2005 annual conference there
was a big argument over a motion which contained a clause calling for
the raising of the age of criminal responsibility from 10 to 16. This
would in fact simply bring it into line with much of the rest of Europe.
No speakers in the debate supported asbos, but I spoke to a number of
delegates who did. According to them, something had to be done about anti-social
behaviour. Because Respect refuses to take on the question of the state,
it cannot offer any serious answers.
Stupidly, we have been ridiculed by some on the left because we raise
the need for working class self-defence. The solution to the problems
of policing lies in the hands of our own class, not in dependence on the
state. We want tenants and residents committees to organise themselves
democratically to protect their community and act against unruly elements
themselves. The answer has to come from below.
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