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Why the BNP gets support

Naomi Byron reviews Fair by Joy Wilkinson

"DODGEMS - WHO needs them when we can go round and round in circles by ourselves and get skint and whiplash in the process?"

Fair is a play exploring why the BNP is attracting support in small-town Lancashire, set in the middle of the battle between one group (mainly BNP supporters) who are campaigning for a "traditional" English fair to be held on St George's day and another group who are trying to organise a "multicultural" fair for the future on the first anniversary of the riots.

The two main characters, Railton the ex-fairground worker who has lived in the town all his life, and Melanie the daughter of the principal of the local college who is back, temporarily, to help organise the "fair for the future" start an unlikely love affair and it is their conversations, arguments and bickering which open up the issues at stake.

It is very entertaining to watch. Fair is very funny and well written, with a lot of good dialogue, and more politically acute in many ways than most media commentary on the issue.

It's very good, for example, at the way anger at the destruction of public services and the effects of globalisation can become mixed up in racist attitudes or resentments, and how this becomes a fertile base for groups like the BNP. Like Railton: "I'm not a racist. The problem isn't cohesive fucking blah blah blah. The problem's simple. We pay top dollar for the shittest health, housing, schools and you name it cos your government wants its global economy so we have to give up everything and whatever's left gets diverted to your diverse mates."

Railton also points out that while people like him are being blamed for the rise in votes for the BNP, it was "people in the big Tory houses where you live" that voted in a BNP councillor.

The play has some great spoofs on government consultation and the race relations industry, including "feedback sheets" distributed to the audience. It exposes the emptiness of much of the official "diversity" initiatives, and points out its failure to deal with the reasons why support for the far right is rising.

However, some things were disappointing. For example, Railton protests "I'm not a racist thug" when Melanie first attacks some of his political views. But - stereotypically - he turns out not just to be a racist thug, but one of the main orchestrators of the racist violence in the town.

Ultimately, despite the outside world intervening in various ingenious plot twists, much of the debate seemed to be taking place in a vacuum. There were various glimpses of an Asian community in the town and people mobilising against racism and the BNP, but none of these important things was ever really brought to life. Nor was it clear how Railton was able to call off the threat of a new riot all by himself.

Fair's major weakness in a political sense was its lack of solutions. Essentially the dispute between the two main characters was resolved by their feelings for each other.

This "resolution" consisted of Railton agreeing to support the "multicultural" fair for the future, i.e. succumbing to the "default" setting of we can't have the BNP therefore we have to support anything that opposes it and says it will bring the community together, no matter how unconvincing or how little it deals with the issues that provoked the problem in the first place.

However, it would hardly be fair to blame the playwright for what is missing. Joy Wilkinson has done a valuable service in bringing many of the issues out, particularly in such a human and approachable way.

The root cause of the weakness in the play is the lack of any genuine alternative in society to both the BNP and the establishment political parties that have let down the population so badly.

Anthony Shuster, who plays Railton, writes: "The problem, the mystery (to me) is why no-one else is addressing concerns about lack of welfare provision, job security, inequalities of wealth and opportunity - unfairness, in a nutshell - in the same direct manner as the BNP."

When Melanie says to Railton: "You'll have to start again - just pick a different party" he asks her which one, but there's no answer.

It is tragic that instead of the trade unions fighting to build a new political voice for working people, they are campaigning for voters to stop the BNP... by voting for the very political parties whose policies opened the door to Nick Griffin and Co.

But it's very good to see that someone has already put a link for the Campaign for a New Workers' Party on the website set up for the play: www.notfair.co.uk.




British trade union movement

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Home   |   The Socialist 15 - 21 June 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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In this issue


Socialist Party NHS campaign

NHS protesters on the march

NHS: Rebellion over hospital cuts


Socialist Party campaigns

Victory for 'save our school' campaign

Anger mounting at bungled police raid

Tax credit system: Millions driven into debt

Socialist question time

World Cup: Profits and prostitution


Socialist Party review

1926 general strike debate

Why the BNP gets support: Naomi Byron reviews Fair by Joy Wilkinson


International socialist news and analysis

Stop Bush & Blair's terror

International students' movements and working class struggles

Palestinian authority on the brink of civil war?


Socialist Party workplace news

PCS conference a distinctive voice in the British trade union movement

Will UNISON fight on pensions and NHS cuts?

Higher Education pay deal: Opportunities lost - further action can get more


 


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Committee for a Workers' InternationalThe Socialist Party is part of the Committee for a Workers‘ International (CWI) which fights for socialism world wide. www.socialistworld.net.


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Karl Marx Communist Manifesto by Marx and Engels

Communism, grotesque caricature: see Soviet Union. See also What About Russia?

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How a fightback can stop the cuts

How a fightback can stop the cuts

Online: Lessons from how Thatcher was defeated. This pamphlet outlines how we can stop the cuts


Women and the Struggle for Socialism

Women and the Struggle for Socialism

It doesn't have to be like this - What consequences will the economic crisis and its aftermath have for women?


The Case for Socialism

The Case for Socialism by Hannah Sell

Online: The case for socialism in a period when capitalism is in deep crisis. By Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary


The Masses Arise

The Masses Arise, by Peter Taaffe

The Masses Arise: The Great French Revolution 1789-1815 by Peter Taaffe. New edition out now.


Socialism in the 21st Century

Socialism in the 21st century by Hannah Sell

Online: An essential read for anti-capitalists, trade union activists and socialists.


Videos:


N30 - Millions strike

N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo  Socialist Party

N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo Socialist Party


Socialism 2011

Socialism 2011

Socialism 2011: Crucial preparation for the fightback


Jarrow marchers march into history

Jarrow Marchers 2011

Jarrow marchers march into history


NSSN lobby of TUC 2011

NSSN lobby of TUC 2011: Open the floodgates of mass action

Successful NSSN lobby called for a one day public sector strike


TUC demo 26 March 2011

Half a million march through central London against the ConDem cuts on TUC demonstration, photo Socialist Party

Half a million trade unionists marched against the ConDem cuts in central London


Day X student demo against fee rises

Ian Pattison addresses 9 December Day X student demo against fee rises

9th December 2010: what the students said


London firefighters second strike day

Fire Brigades Union (FBU) in Poplar, London, on strike

Firefighters speak, as all firestations picketed


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