Sea of sleaze rises around Blair

    What we think

    Sea of sleaze rises around Blair

    DESPITE HIS bravura performance at the G8, Tony Blair may not be able
    to deliver his promise to see all the other leaders at next year’s
    summit. Even Vladimir Putin, leader of a country mired in corruption,
    was able to joke at Blair’s expense, suggesting Britain was more
    undemocratic and crooked than Russia.

    The tide of sleaze lapping round Blair’s feet moved up to his knees
    last week after the arrest of Lord Levy. How long will it be before
    he’s up to his neck and drowned by the waves of corruption engulfing
    his government?

    The sleaze of the Tory government in the 1990s did for Major and his
    government even though neither his most senior ministers or Major
    himself appeared to be personally involved. Nevertheless, the perception
    of the Tories as the sleazy party ensured they have remained out of
    power for over a decade.

    How much more then will the sleaze slopping around New Labour damage
    that party? When combined with Blair’s personal unpopularity and the
    continuing crisis in Iraq and the Middle East and the government’s ever
    increasing domestic problems, the pressure is building on Blair to go
    now.

    Blair protests that they have brought in more transparent rules on
    party funding. But they avoid the obvious point that the British system
    of party funding based on being in hock to big business, linked to
    powers of patronage and appointments to the unelected House of Lords,
    will always end up enmeshed in corrupt practices.

    All governments have to one degree or another suffered from such
    scandals. Voters often retort that ‘all politicians are at it’.

    But the Blair government’s infatuation and subservience to big
    business interests is plumbing new depths in party political

    ‘corruption’.

    This recent scandal comes on top of the many scandals that have
    engulfed Labour almost from day one in office – the Ecclestone affair,
    Mandelson, Blunkett and Tessa Jowell to name a few – almost all down to
    Labour being a party for big business, financed by big business.

    Further the Labour Party is saddled with £27 million of debts from
    its election campaigns and pressure to repay the loans from those who
    were promised peerages. They could be forced to sell off the party
    headquarters and lay off staff. Additionally, senior Labour figures seem
    set to agree the Tory idea of a £50,000 cap on donations – effectively
    meaning they would sever their links with the unions – and attempting to
    bring in state funding of political parties. Though whether any of the
    established parties could bring in state funding given the suspicion and
    cynicism of all the establishment parties remains doubtful.

    Disorderly transition

    THE CRISIS of the Blair regime most immediately threatens to wreck an

    ‘orderly transition’ to Brown becoming prime minister. But Levy’s
    arrest and subsequent reaction suggest that a wing of the ruling class
    now see Blair as a liability and think he should go.

    Should Lord Levy’s arrest lead to further arrests and Blair being
    questioned under caution then it is difficult to see how much longer
    Blair could remain in office without further fatally damaging the Labour
    Party.

    The Labour Left’s challenge to Blair, however, is pitifully weak
    (see below) and even if they were successful in forcing Blair to go what
    alternative awaits? A Brown government lining up even more vicious
    attacks on the public sector and working class.

    A real campaign to reclaim the Labour Party, if it is to have any
    chance at all of convincing working-class voters that the party had
    changed its big business spots, would need to see the adoption of a
    radical socialist programme, linked to a purging of the Blairites and
    modernisers from the Labour Party. Although we think that the prospect
    of this succeeding is becoming ever more remote.

    Those attending the Labour Representation Conference this weekend and
    all those who seriously want to offer an alternative for working-class
    people need to realise that recent corruption scandals represent another
    qualitative step in the destruction by the Blairites of the Labour
    Party. Instead of hoping they can reclaim the dead shell of a
    discredited party they should instead concentrate their efforts on
    beginning the process of building a new mass workers’ party.