George Galloway, Tom Mann and the British May 2005 elections
ireland / britain |
the left |
opinion / analysis
Monday May 30, 2005 18:13 by Anarcho
Looking at the SWP analysis of election in the context of the history of reformism in Britain
It goes without saying that the SWP are cock-a-hoop over Galloway being elected to Parliament on the Respect ticket. That he did so only by being parachuted into an East London consistency with a large Muslim community is commented upon less. Sadly, Galloway's previous constituent's in Glasgow did not have the chance to pass judgement on their "representative" -- for the obvious reason that he would not have won there. As such, any claim that Respect has broken the mould of British left-wing politics are still moot in the extreme.
Repeating history, when not rewriting it
It goes without saying that the SWP are cock-a-hoop over Galloway
being elected to Parliament on the Respect ticket. That he did so
only by being parachuted into an East London consistency with a large
Muslim community is commented upon less. Sadly, Galloway's previous
constituent's in Glasgow did not have the chance to pass judgement on
their "representative" -- for the obvious reason that he would not
have won there. As such, any claim that Respect has broken the mould
of British left-wing politics are still moot in the extreme.
Thw SWP's analysis
SWP leader Alex Callinicos analysis of the general election
betrays the limitations of any victory celebrations. ("The general
election was a bitter blow for Blairism", Socialist Worker
1952, 21 May 2005). He correctly notes that "of themselves,
elections don't change anything" before paraphrasing Engels with
the comment that "they act as a barometer of the deeper social
forces at work." As such, "the British general election . . .
did mark a significant stage in the history of the politics in
Britain."
This was for two reasons. Firstly, it "demonstrated beyond any
doubt that we have moved into a multi-party system." Secondly, in
an attempt to build up Respect's less than glorious overall result,
he argues that "under previous Labour governments when supporters
became disillusioned they stayed at home or switched to the Tories.
But this time the Labour vote fragmented leftwards." He quotes
Ken Livingstone: "In the capital, for every vote Labour lost to
the Tory right, it lost almost five to its left -- Liberal Democrats,
Respect and the Greens."
Those who were under the impression that the SWP considered the
LibDems as a right-wing party are obviously mistaken. Can we expect a
call for "Vote LibDem without illusions" to be
appearing soon? Doubtful, although logically they should be
considering it -- Respect are not in a position to stand everywhere
yet. But a call to vote for the LibDems or Greens is not on the
cards, even if the latter are more progressive than Respect. Perhaps
it is a case of the LibDems being perceived as being more leftwing?
Given that our comrade argues that the "results also portend a
growing crisis of legitimacy for the British political system"
and that the "first past the post system always unfairly rewards
the largest parties, but the results become particularly arbitrary
when their share of the vote is relatively small" can we expect
the SWP to now come out, like the LibDems, in favour of Proportional
Representation?
Any analysis of election tendencies must take into account that
the result was skewed by the fact that the Tories were even more
pro-war than New Labour and Howard's campaign aimed to shore up their
core vote against UKIP and Veritas rather than appeal to the general
public. Blair asserting that he "got a mandate to govern this
country again... the people have made it very clear - they want to
carry on with Labour and not go back to the Tory years" was
hardly a ringing endorsement, but it does express a reality of the
election. It simply says that most people think the Tories would be
worse. As an example of a general drift to the "left" (however
defined), the result is too early to say. Needless to say, this
"fragmentation" to the left does not express an actual increase in
class militancy where it counts, in the form of direct action.
Alex goes on to argue that "from a longer term perspective, the
election marked a decisive step in the decline of the Labour Party as
the dominant force on the left of British politics. It confirmed what
has long been evident - that Blair is not the saviour but the
gravedigger of Labourism." Perhaps, but Blairism has secured
another four years of Labour rule and much of the opposition to
Labour focused around him as a person (thanks, in part, to the SWP
itself). If Labour got rid of Blair before the next election then the
decline of Labour may stagger out a few years more. Given how the SWP
have personified the issues onto Blair, a situation can easily arise
of Blairism without Blair and, particularly if the Tories are as
repulsive as last election, a continuation of office (economic woes
dependent).
Noting that Labour "won 55 percent of the seats in the house of
commons with the support of just 22 percent of the British
electorate" he notes that "this may have important political
consequences. It means that Blair's claims to have a democratic
mandate to force his policies through parliament ring very
hollow." Last election Blair received just 25% support (to put
these figures in context, this year's result was the lowest figure
Labour has received at any post-war election apart from 1983 when the
figure was 20.6%). How does a drop of 3% have "important political
consequences"? Blair never had a "democratic mandate" in
the first place. Indeed, no recent government has ever had more than
50% of the vote. That people consider our system as democratic is
precisely the kind of illusion which radicals standing in elections
has helped bolster. The real issue is that even the most
democratically elected government is still undemocratic as it gives
power to a few politicians (and necessarily a state bureaucracy)
rather than the people.
Rather than wonder how such discontent can be turned into real
people power, Alex (being a member of a political party which now
needs votes) ponders "the critical question," namely "which
political force will benefit from this vulnerability." Like
Blair, he raises the Tory bogey man saying that just because they
"failed this time . . . that doesn't mean they can be discounted
forever." But hope is at hand, "it doesn't have to be like
this. In May 2005, the pendulum failed to swing back to the Tories.
It swung left instead. This can happen again."
Sadly, he focuses on elections and parties rather than discussing
how to increase class autonomy or militancy. This is to be expected,
given the role of the party in Leninist theory and the natural role
of electioneering on placing the focus onto leaders and parties
rather than on working class people themselves. The Liberal
Democrats, he argues, "are unlikely to be the main beneficiary of
any such swing left" as the actions of the party leadership
"suggests that their next move will be rightwards in order to win
over Tory voters." Perhaps, but such is the logic of
electioneering. This "leaves Respect very well placed as the main
challenger to the left of Labour." He quotes the "leading
election expert John Curtice" as follows: "Apart from George
Galloway's success, candidates of the anti-war Respect party won 6.9
percent of the vote, easily the best performance by a far-left party
in British electoral history."
What is Respect?
Not that Respect is "far-left," of course. That is one of
its problems and a fatal flaw in the SWP's analysis. While Alex tries
to portray Respect's victory as a one for the revolution, the obvious
fact is that it was a victory (at best) for warmed over social
democracy. A clear socialist platform was explicitly eschewed by the
SWP leadership in order to gain as much support (i.e. votes) as
possible. As such, the vote for Respect was a victory for (at best)
old Labour values, not any new form of socialist movement. And as the
aim of electioneering is to bolster that vision, any victory for
Respect does not mean progress for genuine socialist ideas. Quite the
reverse, as they are (yet again) linked with reformist ideology and
centralised party leaderships acting for people.
Our comrade notes that people like Arthur Scargill, Tony Benn and
Ken Livingstone "were attacked when they were a threat" as
they expressed the power of the left. Of course, he places Galloway
in that company: "Galloway's victory in Bethnal Green & Bow
symbolises the power of the new left that came out of the anti-war
movement." No, Galloway's victory represents a specific set of
circumstances which will be hard pressed to repeat elsewhere. His
campaigners portrayed him as a defender of Muslims. He himself did
nothing to contradict this while arguing that the Labour Party left
him, not vice versa. In other words, he stood on an old-fashioned
Labour platform and values and, as such, while a break from the
Labour Party it is hardly a break with Labourism.
Moreover, the attempts to get the anti-war movement into the
ballot box is a sign not of its strength, but of its weakness. Like
marching from A to B, voting will not stop war. Only direct action
can. Consequently, rather than express the "power" of the
movement, Galloway's election shows its weakness. It is dependent on
others to act for it as it is in no position to act for itself.
Looking at the (non-Galloway) Respect result, the SWP has little
to be happy about. If we ignore those areas with a large Muslim
community, then Respect's performance is the usual 0-2%
"far-left" parties usually get. Of Respect's 26 candidates, 6
came at the bottom of the poll and another 9 came near the bottom
(with the usual less than 1 or 2 percentage, in the main). Four,
however, got between 5% and 10%, two more than 15%, two more than 20%
and Galloway on over 35%. The question is, of course, whether RESPECT
can gether votes outside of areas with large Muslim communities. On
these results, the answer may well be no even with these areas as a
base.
Callinicos implicitly acknowledges this issue by noting
"Respect has to broaden out geographically" and "beyond the
war to take up all the issues that affect working class people in
Britain." One area of expansion could be into Scotland. Currently
the SWP are part of the Scottish Socialist Party (SSP), whose vote
imploded. They got around 60% of the vote they got in 2001 (a drop of
1.2% from 3.1% to 1.9% of the vote). This is, in part, explained by
the SSP being wracked by internal problems and looking inwards for a
year. However, will the SWP hierarchy try to take advantage of this
and decide that it is time to launch Respect north of the border
based on their "success" down south? Perhaps -- they have nothing to
lose as the SWP faction in the SSP is hardly popular to begin with
and splitting the party will hardly loose them friends. The key issue
will be whether the SWP leadership can think Respect could survive in
Scotland without the SSP.
Callinicos states, somewhat incredulously, that "a left that
always loses can be patronised and dismissed. A left that wins is a
lot scarier." Which is, of course, how Kinnock's reforms and
Blairism were sold to the Labour Party membership. What was the point
in being right if the Tories won elections? Far better, surely, to
adjust your policies and win than to be on the margins? And so the
steady slog to the right, all in the name of winning. Can we expect a
similar process with the SWP and Respect?
Obviously, as the process has already started. Key socialist
principles have been case aside to secure that Respect can attract
support. Given that Respect does well in areas with large Muslim
communities and it explicitly sees itself as a popular front between
these and "the left", this means that its programme and policies are
tied to the Mosque hierarchies. Go too far to the left and support
could disappear. As such, can Respect withstand the contradictory
forces within it? What will the SWP hierarchy be prepared to
scarifice to ensure that it "wins"? If history is anything to go by,
quite a lot.
What about history?
Now the task of the SWP is to broaden Respect's scope and
"become fighters for social justice right across the board,
offering people hope in the fight for a better world." Given the
relative successes of the last election, the SWP's turn towards
building a reformist electoral front will continue. We have been here
before. One hundred years ago, the standard Marxist line was that
working class people should use "political action" to create
socialism. That specific tactic quickly proved Bakunin right. The
Marxist social democratic parties quickly became reformist and
bureaucratic, doing little more than mouth socialist rhetoric.
Eventually the rhetoric matched the reality but not before sidelining
the socialist movement away from constructive self-activity in the
workplace and community. Today, the SWP is repeating the process but
with one key difference: the electoral party it has founded makes no
attempt to proclaim itself revolutionary or even socialist.
As today, many genuine socialists saw through the farce which
electioneering had turned socialism into. These people turned towards
anarchist politics of direct action, solidarity and workplace and
community organisation. One such person was Tom Mann. Originally a
socialist, he embraced syndicalism and became it's most famous and
influential advocate in Britain. As such, while it may seem
incredulous that someone could discuss him and fail to mention his
syndicalist period, this is precisely what the SWP did (Keith Flett,
"An attempt to win the majority of workers," Socialist Worker
1952, 21 May 2005).
Discussing Mann in the context of his being president of the
Communist Party's "National Minority Movement" (NMM) from 1924
to 1929, they present a summary of his life. While noting his
membership of "Britain's first Marxist party, the Social
Democratic Federation (SDF)" and well as the being general
secretary of the Independent Labour Party, they fail to mention how
his experiences as a trade union activist and member of these parties
turned him into a syndicalist.
The paper does mention that "he spent the years from 1901-10
organising in New Zealand and Australia. Returning to Britain he took
a leading role in the huge wave of industrial agitation that swept
Britain in the period 1910-14." Yes, but as part of an
influential and growing syndicalist movement! And as a direct result
of those experiences, Mann turned away from political parties and
electioneering in favour of a direct action based syndicalism. It is
useful to quote his 1911 resignation letter from the Marxist Social
Democratic Party:
"I find myself not in agreement with the important
matter of Parliamentary action. My experiences have driven me more
and more into the non-Parliamentary position . . . After the most
careful reflection I am driven to the belief that the real reason why
the trade unionist movement of this country is in such a deplorable
state of inefficiency is to be found in fictitious importance which
the workers have been encouraged to attach to Parliamentary action .
. . I find nearly all the serious-minded young men in the labour and
socialist movement have their minds centred upon obtaining some
position in public life such as local, municipal or county
councillorship . . . or aspiring to become an MP . . . I am driven to
the belief that this is entirely wrong . . . that economic liberty
will never be realised by such means. So I declare in favour of
Direct Industrial Organisation, not as a means but as THE means
whereby the workers can ultimately overthrow the capitalist system
and become the actual controllers of their industrial and social
destiny."
A year later, he declared that "political action is of no use
whatsoever" and charged himself with foolishness in the past for
looking to parliament for labour's emancipation. So it can be safely
suggested that Mann would have been even less impressed with Respect
and Callinicos's stress on the need to "win" electoral battles.
As such, while the paper does note that Mann "was the most
respected trade union militant of the early 1920s" and even
mentions that his "record of almost unparalleled militancy and
activity" it simply ignores the actual ideas which produced this
respect and how he changed them as a result of his activity. Those
aspects of his life which fail to fit into the Leninist schema are
simply put down the memory hole.
This in spite of the actual success of syndicalist activitism in
producing near revolutionary strikes across the country. If the first
world war had not intervened, this chances are that a serious crisis
would have engulfed the country. Ironically for the SWP, the ruling
class quite rightly saw electioneering as a means of solving the
threat of direct action (Lloyd George knew the score, stating that
the parliamentary socialists were "the best policemen for the
Syndicalists"). At the very least, if syndicalist ideas had
remained influential after the war the 1926 General Strike would have
taken on a more radical flavour. Instead we had the CP calling for
"all power to the General Council"! As the syndicalists knew
from bitter experience, the problem with the trade unions were that
the bureaucrats already held far too much power over the union
membership rather than not enough.
The paper does quote from NMM movement's founding document,
indicating that it was part of Moscow's Red International of Labour
Unions (RILU). This "was a reminder that while the NMM was based
on the experience of activists like Mann, it was also part of a wider
trend based on the politics that came out of the 1917 Russian
Revolution." Which is true, in a way. The aim of the Bolshevik's
RILU was to foster Russian inspired tactics onto the world labour
movement. As such, the previous experiences of activists like Mann
were rejected in favour of the policies which had apparently
succeeded in Russia. Thus the syndicalist ideas which Mann, like
others, had developed from his own experiences of the class war in
developed capitalist nations were to be simply ignored in favour of
policies developed in a different social environment and skewed in
favour of the needs of Russian state capitalism and its ruling elite.
Sadly, Mann (like so many radicals) did so. As well as rejecting
his own theories in light of Leninist "success," he also refused to
defend the Russian socialists, syndicalists and anarchists along with
the ordinary workers and peasants who faced Bolshevik repression. He
refused to take his old comrade Emma Goldman's position of siding
with the working class against the boss class (regardless of the flag
it waved), preferring instead to bottle up his misgivings and keep
quiet about the repressive nature of Leninism. This loyalty to the
"revolution" (i.e. the Bolshevik party which monopolised and killed
the real revolution) saw the promise of socialism poisoned by its
association with first Leninist and then Stalinist tyranny.
The Miners Next Step
This revised version of history was not limited to Mann. They did
the same in the next issue (Keith Flett, "AJ Cook - militant miner
who led the workers' struggle", Socialist Worker 1953, 28
May 2005). Discussing AJ Cook, the well known miners' leader, the
paper notes that he "became familiar with the ideas of the Miners'
Unofficial Reform Committee Movement" which "produced a
pamphlet,
The
Miners' Next Step, in 1912 which argued that the left needed to
organise from below to gain control of the leadership of the
union."
This is the famous syndicalist document which argued
for self-managed unions, not for "control" over a hierarchical
leadership. Rather than ask for better leaders or just more
accountability, the pamphlet called for the workplace meeting to
become the real source of power in the union. The union was to be run
from the bottom-up, with the "leadership" turned into the
mandated delegates of the membership. Needless to say, such ideas are
anathema to Leninism which sees the need for strong leaders within a
clear hierarchical and centralised body to tell the unions what to
do. The pamphlet presented a libertarian vision of socialism at odds
with Leninist or Labourite reality (most obviously, workers' control
of industry rather than nationalisation).
The article states that the "growth of a militant current among
miners can be seen against the background of The Miners' Next Step,
the First World War and the Russian Revolution." Which
conveniently forgets to mention the syndicalist revolt and the
organised attempts by trade unionists to break away from the
electioneering of the official labour movement and the various
Marxist sects into a direct action based revolutionary union
movement. In so doing they turned to the ideas first applied by the
libertarian wing of the First International, around Bakunin, and
subsequently applied by anarchists in the French Labour movement in
the 1890s: revolutionary unionism.
The aim of this agitation was fundamentally different to that of
the "National Minority Movement" these articles are an
assessment of. Its aim was to bolster the Communist Party rather than
bolster workers' autonomy by creating a labour movement run by and
for its members (and any subsequent SWP front will do the same). The
article ponders whether "would he have done better if he[Cook] had
remained a member of the CP?" Hardly, given the negative impact
of Bolshevism in the world labour movement.
In Britain, this impact destroyed the syndicalist revolt and the
potential of creating a lasting libertarian influence in the labour
movement. Looking at the Russian Revolution through rose-tinted
glasses, they rushed head long to embrace a left which had won. As
the paper notes, "Cook, like the early CP leaders themselves, was
the product of the militant working class movement around the First
World War." The ideas that produced that militancy go
unmentioned, written out of history. Rather than build upon their own
experiences, these leaders rejected them and instead followed blindly
Lenin's experiences of working in a near-feudal, backward, absolutist
regime.
The question is, whether today's radicals will do the same. How
many times will the same path be treaded before people realise it
takes them away from their destination (socialism) rather than
towards it? Sadly, from the looks of it, some time to come.
Written for Anarkismo.net