David Blunkett’s second resignation confirms anarchist theory of politics
ireland / britain |
miscellaneous |
opinion / analysis
Friday November 04, 2005 19:31
by Anarcho

That David Blunkett went from socialist to neo-liberal should come as no surprise. What is surprising is that in this day and age so-called radicals are urging us to use the same means in the strange hope they will lead to different results.
The means shape the ends
David Blunkett has resigned, again. Sadly, like the last time, it was
not provoked by a sudden awareness of how terrible his authoritarian
neo-liberal policies were but due to personal indiscretion. So
launching a war of aggression based on lies and spin is not
considered worthy of resignation but financial ambiguities is. But
what can you expect from New Labour?
There is a lesson to be learned from Blunkett's rise and fall. It
is a striking confirmation of anarchist theory. Faced with arguments
that the labour movement should stand in elections and win political
power (a tactic labelled as "political action" by Marx), anarchists
reply in three ways. Firstly, we argue that winning elections would
replace socialism as the movement's goal and, consequently, socialist
principles will quickly be jettisoned. Secondly, it is doubtful any
genuinely socialist government would ever get elected as any
socialist politicians would become reformist. Thirdly, that that
capitalism will not allow itself be voted away. The state machine
would undermine any socialist government, as would economic pressure
from big business. If all else failed, a military coup would be
organised.
In other words, rather than change the system, the system would
change them. As Bakunin correctly predicted, when "the workers . .
. send common workers . . . to Legislative Assemblies . . . The
worker-deputies, transplanted into a bourgeois environment . . . will
in fact cease to be workers and, becoming Statesmen, they will become
bourgeois . . . For men do not make their situations; on the
contrary, men are made by them." In this, history has proven him,
not Marx, correct.
The descent of Marxist social-democracy into reformism and
opportunism confirmed our worse fears. The recent failures of Lula's
government in Brazil can be added to the list, as can the fate of
David Blunkett. For those with long memories, Blunkett came into
politics as a left-winger, a socialist. In the 1980s he attacked
Thatcherite policies as head of what he proudly called the "Socialist
Republic of South Yorkshire." By the 1990s, he was advocating them
and, after 1997, implementing them. Like so many in the New Labour
project, Blunkett started his career on the left only to reject his
principles in the pursuit of office.
This is quite a turn around, but one which should come as no
surprise to an anarchist. Of course, there are exceptions to this
rule. Some socialist politicians remain true to their ideals. That
these are rare can be quickly seen by the fact most people could name
them!
Given this long and sorry history of betrayal, any sensible person
may consider basing your political strategy on the handful of
exceptions to the rule rather than the rule itself would be silly.
This has not, of course, stopped Marxists from repeatedly pursuing
Marx's course. The SWP and its RESPECT front are just the latest in a
long line of such attempts. Unsurprisingly, the SWP has lurched to
the right and have consistently betrayed their own ideas within
RESPECT in order to gather votes.
Yet again, Marxists are proving anarchists to be correct. And what
of the anarchist claim that being in parliament will produce a
bourgeois mentality? SWP member, comedian and sometime
Independent columnist Mark Steel has a possible solution. In
"Socialist brought down by a champagne lifestyle" (The
Independent, 3/11/05), Steel presents an argument similar to
Bakunin's to account for Blunkett's evolution. For Steel, Blunkett
"has always been driven by his environment. As a young man, his
working class surroundings created a dynamic socialist, and now a
milieu of wealthy idiots has shaped an outlook to match."
However, there is a twist. It is not the environment of Parliament
and the cabinet (wealthy idiots, one and all) which caused this
change. No, rather it is attending the parties of the rich which was
his undoing, as they "have become Blunkett's circle." Nice to
know that the SWP have finally worked out the real cause of the rise
of reformism in parliamentary socialism -- going to the wrong social
occasions! Can we draw the conclusion that RESPECT's MPs will remain
radical because they will be required to nip down the pub once a
week?
Ultimately, though, the means shape the ends. If your means are
based on working in authoritarian and bourgeois institutions, can it
be any surprise that the ends are the same? That David Blunkett went
from socialist to neo-liberal should come as no surprise. What is
surprising is that in this day and age so-called radicals are urging
us to use the same means in the strange hope they will lead to
different results.
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Anarcho