Handheld users: view this page better on http://m.socialistparty.org.uk

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/articles/7411

Posted on 9 June 2009 at 0:00 GMT

New Labour meltdown

Step up the fight for a workers' party

The outcome of the county council elections, followed by the 'meltdown' in the European elections, was a devastating defeat for New Labour and the Gordon Brown dominated government. The scale of New Labour's collapse is indicated by its share of the popular vote of under 16%, the lowest since 1910 when it scored 7.6%!

Peter Taaffe, Socialist Party general secretary

Brown's government, and with it New Labour, is in terminal decline. There is not an atom of real politics in the vicious and brutal clash between Brown and his opponents. It is a naked attempt by Brown to hold on and a naked lust for power by a motley array of his opponents, odious careerists, most of them from a Blairite background.

Stephen Byers, acolyte of Tony Blair, declared that the parliamentary Labour Party must decide whether "Gordon Brown is a winner or a loser". Moreover, he says, for Labour MPs, the present crisis is a 'P45 moment' (the P45 is a tax form that is effectively seen as redundancy notice). Two million unemployed workers have already received their P45 and another million or million and a half wait in line for the same fate. It is not this that concerns Byers but whether Brown can 'win' for the MPs - not the working class - or whether these MPs themselves will be made 'redundant' in a general election.

However, what concerns the Socialist Party and working-class people in Britain is how best to defend the interests, wages and conditions of the mass of the working class. New Labour has demonstrated again and again - underlined once more in these elections - that it cannot fulfil this task.

The Tories, so confident of winning a general election, already openly 'confess' that they will launch an attack on the living standards of the working class when they come to power. George Osborne, prospective Tory Chancellor of the Exchequer, boasted to 'business leaders': "After three months in power we will be the most unpopular government since the war".

Brown is incapable of stopping this nightmarish prospect. He is so weak in the aftermath of these elections that he is unable to select his own cabinet, with ministers, in effect, 'reshuffling themselves'. Alan Johnson, the 'prince over the water', has been imprisoned in the cabinet. If Brown goes on to face a catastrophic general election as the leader, it is because Labour MPs have no real alternative and have resigned themselves to electoral wipe-out.

What happens to a motley crew of New Labour careerists is secondary to working-class people. What concerns them is the attacks which have been carried out, and the more horrendous ones that are coming from the capitalist parties. A fighting leadership in the unions and a new mass political party, with a bold leadership, is needed.

European election

In the European election New Labour was beaten into third place nationally by the UK Independence Party (Ukip - 'the BNP in blazers'). In Scotland the Scottish National Party, for the first time in a UK-wide election, outscored New Labour. In the formerly Labour bastion of Wales, Labour was beaten into second place by the Tories for the first time since 1918. Labour was relegated to fifth place in the South-East and South West of England by the Greens, and came sixth in Cornwall, behind the Cornish nationalists!

The increase for Ukip - pushing Labour into third position nationally - and, particularly, the two seats won by the odious British National Party's Nick Griffin and his partner in crime, Andrew Brons, was a sickening spectacle to those workers and young people who viewed it on television at the time and afterwards.

But, contrary to the impression that could be given, these results were not a resounding victory for the 'right'. Support for Ukip, but particularly the BNP, arose from the collapse, in the main, of the New Labour vote. As the BBC news website comments: "They actually got fewer votes in the North-West and Yorkshire and the Humber this time than in 2004." The same applies to the Tories who, in effect, flatlined with their vote no higher than in 2004 and well down on the 36% William Hague scored in 1999.

The Greens scored a big increase in votes but with no increase in their MEPs because of the biased electoral system in Britain which is unfair to small parties. If the vote for the BNP represents a protest to the 'right', the Greens, in the main, are a 'left' protest vote and, paradoxically, are an indication of the potential for a new mass workers' party. However, the Greens have not yet been fully tested out in action, apart from in some councils where they have been found wanting. In Ireland, they have been decimated - payment by voters for sharing power in the right-wing dominated Fianna Fáil government. Fianna Fáil received its lowest vote since the state was founded.

These elections reveal both the fragmentation and confusion in the outlook of millions of workers repulsed by the 'mainstream' pro-capitalist parties, and who are casting around wildly for an alternative. Hence the vote for parties based on religion, and for an exclusively Tamil candidate in London, which represented an appeal to 'ethnicity'. If this became the trend, it would be grist to the mill of the far-right in trying to generate a 'white backlash', which was evident in Griffin's rant on BBC TV on the night of the count.

This feature - a scattered consciousness and, therefore, disjointed electoral protests - is evident also to some extent in the results of the EU elections in Europe. For instance, the 'Pirate Party' - so named because of the pirating of music on the internet - received 9% of the vote in Sweden! But the erratic voting patterns in Europe do not substantiate the arguments of commentators in Britain that the continent 'lurched to the right', that the 'centre-right' came out victorious in these elections. Most of the right-wing capitalist parties - Angela Merkel in Germany, Nicolas Sarkozy in France or even Silvio Berlusconi in Italy - merely held on to their previous voting percentages or 'flatlined', while the percentage of the vote to their opponents decreased.

In Germany, Merkel's Christian Democracy suffered a big drop in votes, but the Social Democrats - who share power with them - polled less. Without a clear, mass left alternative being offered, and despite the catastrophic economic situation which was a fundamental and determining element in the background of this election, many acquiesced to 'nanny', to right-wing governments and parties. Others, in sheer desperation, were seduced by the far-right, including by Ukip in Britain.

Dublin victory

But this did not happen in Ireland because, among other things, there was the splendid campaign of Joe Higgins, under the banner of the Irish Socialist Party, who received a magnificent 13% of first preference votes and was elected to the European parliament on an unambiguous socialist ticket. This was probably the best vote for a clear left-wing socialist candidate in Europe.

Other left parties gained. But Joe's Socialist Party victory was achieved on the basis of an exemplary fighting programme in the election, but also on the back of the tremendous record of fighting the anti-water privatisation campaign, against bin charges and Joe's subsequent jailing. Also there was his crucial involvement in the extra-parliamentary battles of the Irish working class, notably Gama and the Irish Ferries dispute.

Set against the organic corruption of the Irish political elite, Joe's honesty, his refusal to take more than the average wage of a worker, and clear radical and socialist policies stood out. No possibility here for the far-right to make gains. Nor in Germany, where the Left Party (Die Linke), despite its weaknesses in programme and structure, was an electoral obstacle on a national level stopping workers swinging to the far right in protest against the pro-capitalist parties. Unfortunately, no clear pole of attraction of this character exists in most of the countries in Europe.

No2EU

A heroic effort was made in this election by the No2EU-Yes to Democracy campaign. Unfortunately, the time between establishing the campaign and the election was too short to attract substantial sections of the trade unions and the labour movement to its banner. This meant that it could not stamp its political imprint on the consciousness of workers - who it was aimed at - thereby overcoming, partially at least, the confused political situation. Nevertheless, it was absolutely correct for the Socialist Party, the RMT and the Communist Party of Britain (CPB) to seize the opportunity to create a workers' bloc as a rallying point for all those repelled by New Labour and looking for a means of striking back against the British and European bosses. The programme was limited - determined by the very nature of a bloc - but its significance lay in the fact that it was the first challenge made by a national trade union, in collaboration with others on the left, to the Labour Party since its inception.

It would therefore seem natural that those on the left who had been struggling for an independent political force to the left of Labour would welcome and support this development. But, incredibly, some on the left opted for supporting New Labour or the Greens in some areas. Yet this election indicated clearly that it was the demonstrable feeling in solid working-class areas - pit villages in Yorkshire, as Griffin jeered on the television - which felt most let down by New Labour. Therefore, in desperation, some voted for the BNP. So some on the left, in a campaign 'to oppose the BNP', urge a vote for the very people who have created the conditions which have allowed these creatures to grow and prosper!

No2EU-Yes to Democracy was a credible working-class alternative to New Labour. A bigger vote would have been welcome. But the combined vote for No2EU and the Socialist Labour Party indicates the possibility of a united socialist campaign. No2EU's real importance, however, lay in the very fact that it stepped outside the framework of an atrophied Labour Party to offer an alternative. No new force can establish itself overnight. Why should working people, disappointed in previous support for 'new' organisations, immediately transfer their hopes to a new organisation, particularly given the virtual media black-out?

The charge that the Socialist Party lent itself to nationalist propaganda in this campaign is entirely false. Firstly, the programme is a basic class opposition to the EU and an appeal for "international workers' solidarity". Secondly, complementing the official campaign, the Socialist Party circulated socialist leaflets independently which put the case for class opposition to the BNP and the Lisbon treaty, and for an international socialist appeal for a united socialist states of Europe. Given the grave threat to the working class of Britain - symbolised in the attacks by the Lindsey oil refinery bosses, at Visteon and elsewhere - it was the bounden duty of socialists to try to create a fighting, working-class alternative, no matter how limited this was. Moreover, those efforts have to be stepped up to provide an alternative in the forthcoming general election, when the same variety of brands of capitalist 'soap powder' - parties that stand within the framework of capitalism - will be once more on offer.

Why not click here to join the Socialist Party, or click here to donate to the Socialist Party.






Join the Socialist Party Join us today!

Printable version Printable version

email to friend email to friend

Facebook   Twitter

Related links:

Labour:

triangleLondon - a tale of two cities

triangleSave the NHS!

triangleTower Hamlets: Save Rushmead one stop shop - fight all cuts

triangleAre the Greens a real alternative?

triangleWhat is the point of Labour MPs?

triangleTrade unionists and socialists prepare for May elections

Socialist:

triangleSalford Socialist Party: The Class, Party & Leadership (Trotsky)

triangleSalford Socialist Party: Communist Manifesto, part two

triangleSalford Socialist Party: Lenin's three sources of Marxism

triangleWirral & Chester Socialist Party: The problem with socialism is...

Election:

triangleEgypt - A year of revolution and counter-revolution

triangle"Putin is a thief", "Putin is a thief"

triangleSupport the anti-cuts election challenge

Socialist Party:

triangleSalford Socialist Party: How mental health suffers under capitalism

triangleManchester Socialist Party: TUSC and the local elections

triangleLlanelli and West Wales Socialist Party: USA: Is Obama a socialist?

BNP:

triangleDerby Socialist Party: Stephen Lawrence murder - How socialists and the community fought back against racism

triangleGreenwich Unite members oppose cuts, privatisation and racism

triangleStephen Lawrence murder - the untold story

Europe:

triangleEU summit - no capitalist solutions to the spiralling eurozone crisis

triangleA world in turmoil

triangleEurozone: Into the abyss?

No2EU:

triangleNo2EU Wessex Public Meeting

triangleHalifax No2EU meeting

triangleNO2EU Northampton public meeting:-

UKIP:

triangleKilroy's brief encounter (part four)

News and socialist analysis

News and socialist analysis

9/2/12

Pensions

NUT and PCS launch consultative surveys to build for ongoing pensions action

8/2/12

London

London - a tale of two cities

8/2/12

US

Them & Us

8/2/12

NHS

Save the NHS!

8/2/12

Welfare

Exploiting the unemployed to line the pockets of big business

8/2/12

Rail

Safe railways, not shopping malls

8/2/12

EMA

Students drop out of college without EMA

1/2/12

Bankers

Bankers bonus scandal - Fight this profit-mad system

1/2/12

Pensions

Pensions battle: Unions must campaign for coordinated strike action in March

1/2/12

Unison

Unison pensions cowardice

1/2/12

Pay

Them & Us

1/2/12

Labour

What is the point of Labour MPs?

1/2/12

Davos

Dead end in Davos

30/1/12

TUSC

Trade unionists and socialists prepare for May elections

25/1/12

Trade union

The trade unions and Labour

triangleMore News and socialist analysis articles...

 Latest Posts
N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo Paul Mattsson

triangle9 Feb NUT and PCS launch consultative surveys to build for ongoing pensions...

triangle9 Feb Jet tanker drivers force employers to negotiate

Hardest Hit Protest: Disabled people and their families protest in central London against government spending cuts, photo Paul Mattsson

triangle8 Feb London - a tale of two cities

triangle8 Feb Salford campaign saves day care centres

NHS demo London, May 2011 , photo Paul Mattsson

triangle8 Feb Save the NHS!

Picket line at Stagecoach,  Rotherham depot 8.2.12 , photo by Alistair Tice

triangle8 Feb Stagecoach South Yorkshire - management getting desperate

triangle7 Feb Tactics to stop racist EDL

More ...

 What's On

triangle11 Feb Socialist Party national youth meeting

triangle13 Feb Manchester Socialist Party: Lenin's State and Revolution

triangle13 Feb Leeds City & Bradford Socialist Party: The crisis of capitalism in the eurozone and Britain

triangle13 Feb Aylesbury Socialist Party: What is Marxism?

triangle13 Feb Birmingham Socialist Party: Socialism and religion

triangle14 Feb Derby Socialist Party: China - Will the economic boom continue?

triangle14 Feb Hatfield Socialist Party: Trade unionists and socialists standing against the cuts

triangle14 Feb Bristol Central Socialist Party: The 1917 February revolution in Russia

triangle14 Feb Hyde Park & Headingley Socialist Party: Perspectives for Britain

triangle15 Feb Wakefield & Pontefract Socialist Party: Fighting the cuts - What's socialism got to do with it?

More ...

Categories

1-9 

1-9 


Select articles from month:

February 2012

January 2012

December 2011

November 2011

October 2011

September 2011

August 2011

July 2011

June 2011

May 2011

April 2011

March 2011

February 2011

January 2011

December 2010

November 2010

October 2010

September 2010

August 2010

July 2010

June 2010

May 2010

April 2010

March 2010

February 2010

January 2010

December 2009

November 2009

October 2009

September 2009

August 2009

July 2009

June 2009

May 2009

April 2009

March 2009

February 2009

January 2009

December 2008

November 2008

October 2008

September 2008

August 2008

July 2008

June 2008

May 2008

April 2008

March 2008

February 2008

January 2008

December 2007

November 2007

October 2007

September 2007

August 2007

July 2007

June 2007

May 2007

April 2007

March 2007

February 2007

January 2007

December 2006

November 2006

October 2006

September 2006

August 2006

July 2006

June 2006

May 2006

April 2006

March 2006

February 2006

January 2006

December 2005

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

July 2005

June 2005

May 2005

April 2005

March 2005

February 2005

January 2005

December 2004

November 2004

October 2004

September 2004

August 2004

July 2004

June 2004

May 2004

April 2004

March 2004

February 2004

January 2004

December 2003

November 2003

October 2003

September 2003

August 2003

July 2003

December 2001

November 2001

October 2001

September 2001

August 2001

July 2001

June 2001

May 2001

April 2001

March 2001

February 2001

January 2001

December 2000

November 2000

October 2000

September 2000

August 2000

July 2000

June 2000

May 2000

April 2000

March 2000

February 2000

January 2000

December 1999