Owen Jones once more makes constructive
use of the platform he has as a columnist http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/british-politics-is-in-urgent-need-of-a-new-force--a-ukip-of-the-left-to-counter-the-crisis-of-capitalism-8459099.html”to
call for “a movement uniting all those desperate for a coherent
alternative to the tragedy of austerity”
and, in so
doing, throws down a challenge to all those of us who believe that we
are trying to build such a movement. Owen poses the “mystery” of
why there is not already an effective network of opponents of
austerity.
It's the mystery of the movement which did not bark (yet).
I can’t claim to be able to solve
this “mystery” completely but I think I can see some part of the
answer. Let’s start with an honest assessment of where we are. The
history of the first half of this Parliament is a sad history of the
failure of the opponents of a weak Government with no mandate. We
have failed to prevent tuition fees or to defend our National Health
Service. We have failed to mobilise the potential strength of
organised labour, other than for momentary demonstrations of that
strength. We have even failed to win the Parliamentary opposition to
anything more than the slightest leftward shift from the poisonous
legacy of New Labour to the meaningless “One Nation Labour”.
What we are witnessing as trade
unionists is the consequence of a generation of social and political
change since the defeat of the miners. Our trade unions, objectively
weaker than in the 1980s, are subjectively weaker still because of an
ingrained acquiescence on the part of the union bureaucracy to the
legal shackles imposed by Thatcher and Major and retained by Blair
and Brown – and a self-denying ordinance from on high which
prevents us from using our potential influence over “our” Party.
We have, for example, hundreds of Councillors who are members of the
“big three” trade unions, not all of whom merely for show, yet we
have miserably failed to influence these Councillors to resist
vicious cuts. Our trade unions have been bereft of a political
strategy for all of the decade that I have served on UNISON’s
National Executive.
At the same time very many of the
committed socialists who could be mobilised to try to transform our
movement are enmeshed in organisations which are plainly incapable of
effective political action in the twenty first century. If forced to
choose between those who consider themselves revolutionaries and
those who lead our movement I would always choose those who want to
change the world rather than live comfortably within it, but comrades
seeking to change our world from within political parties or groups
which aspire to be Bolsheviks a century ago are walled off from
achieving their own objectives. Whether this self-imposed irrelevance
derives from purposeless “party building” or futile electoral
adventures, it serves to insulate some of our best trade union
activists from the influence our class needs them to have within our
ranks.
Beyond the ranks of the organised
labour movement there are millions who are angry and can be mobilised
(or, which is more to the point, will mobilise themselves) from time
to time. Away from the timidity of our movement’s leadership and
the rigidity of their critics within our movement, groups such as UK
Uncut, Disabled People Against Cuts and the student movement have all
shown the militancy and radicalism for which socialists hope from the
workers’ movement. However, without a means of focusing organised
political pressure on the Government (by posing an alternative) their
exemplary resistance is inevitably reactive and therefore limited.
For all that pessimism of the intellect
is called for, our optimism of the will should be sustained not only
by these spontaneous struggles which are emerging around us, but also
by the success with which trade unionists are resisting and limiting
the damage being done to our members where we organise effectively
and show courage and determination. The challenge before us is
somehow to focus struggle through the labour movement in order to
articulate a viable political alternative to austerity.
This is, in many ways, the task for
which the Labour Representation
Committee (LRC) was refounded some years ago. However, as
utterly unconvincing as the mission to create a “new workers party”
so obviously is, the persuasiveness of those of us who believe that
we can “reclaim” the Labour Party is plainly equally in question.
The movement we have to build must be
much bigger and broader than those around the LRC at present – and
it may find new answers to the challenges it faces which we cannot
anticipate. I cannot, however, see that there is a better place to
start building the movement for which Owen rightly calls than by
putting the challenge of doing so plainly before the LRC.
The LRC Members of Parliament, and
those trade union leaders associated with the LRC, could become the
focus for drawing together the opponents of austerity, within and
without the Labour Party, within and without other political
organisations and within and without the organised labour movement.
As difficult as this may seem, I can’t see who else is better
placed (or perhaps “less worse placed”) to do this.
We won’t build a movement overnight,
but we could begin to organise some activity which tries to build
upon the grassroots resistance to austerity and give it some
meaningful political direction. Please let's not ever call it a "UKIP of the left" though!
3 comments:
self-imposed irrelevance derives from purposeless “party building” or futile electoral adventures, it serves to insulate some of our best trade union activists from the influence our class needs them to have within our ranks.
dont agree with this at all some of the best most militant trade unionists are not in the labour party and are members of socialist parties. Just dismissing them because they are not labour is foolish. If teh LRC is our best hope when they cant even get all of their councillors to sign up to the councillors against the cuts campaign says a lot about its inability to organise anything beyond a leftie meeting by themselves. The new workers party campaign will find a echo when labour continue to carry out tory light austerity. Parties dont just fall from the sky they require building. TUSC and the RMT and other key trade unionists are laying the future foundations for when labour betray and workers look for a home as they are sure to do.
But Labour did betray, on a massive scale, and there was no break to the left. What conclusion should we draw from this?
Dear Jon, we very much enjoyed this post and wondered if we could re-post it on our site - www.guerillapolicy.org - a blogging hub for frontline practitioners in public services and generally people who know what they've talking about. Do let us know if this would be okay - either here or by emailing info@guerillapolicy.org
Thanks in advance for your consideration.
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