I’ll stick to my pledge not
to spend too much time commenting on an election campaign in which it is more
important to get on with campaigning.
However, there are some
things worth a word or two (just as there are some
things about which it is best to keep one’s counsel for a few weeks yet).
I was very happy to be out
campaigning again yesterday and today for Labour’s candidate in Brighton
Pavilion, Solomon Curtis.
I was also very happy to
join Solomon yesterday at a meeting of Brighton
and Hove Stands Up to Racism.
There can be no doubt that
it is as important now as it has ever been to take a stand against racism. The
brutally racist “leave” campaign in last year’s referendum, and its tragic
outcome, have legitimated prejudice and accelerated
its expression on the streets, in our workplaces and generally throughout
society.
We need to build the
greatest unity against racism in our society – and that does mean building
unity with those (such as the Socialist
Workers Party who are a significant force behind “Stand Up to Racism”) who were horrendously
wrong last year about the EU Referendum (and had previously failed
terribly to deal with allegations of gross sexual harassment in their own
ranks).
We live at a time when we
rightly celebrate the defeat
of a fascist candidate for President of France, but have to reflect upon
the fact that they gained the support of a greater proportion of French voters
than Adolf
Hitler’s Nazis gained in Germany less than a year before their seizure of
power.
We live in a country which
last year took a
vital decision on the back of a viciously racist
anti-migrant campaign. That decision has led to our main party of
the centre-right capitulating
to the politics of those of its right-wing
opponents who led the campaign which led to that terrible decision.
We live in a time and a
place in which we cannot afford disunity on the left. That message is as
important to those who
protested against yesterday’s meeting as it is to those within our own Labour Party
who cannot quite handle the democratic choices already made by our own members.
Under the leadership of the
socialist, Jeremy Corbyn, our
Party is set to do better than it has in the recent past and better than other
social democratic parties in Europe. We are fighting for a Labour victory and
the way in which the polls have moved towards us since the publication of the
manifestos shows that this is a fight worth waging (and that we could win).
I very much hope that we
will achieve such a victory in the coming weeks – but should that not be the
case then the hundreds of thousands who have joined the Party, inspired by our
socialist leadership, need to learn the determination which we socialists who
have been Party members for many decades have been forced to learn. No one –
and I mean no one – should contemplate resigning from any Labour Party position
regardless of the results in this election.
For now though all we must
do is make and win the arguments for a Labour vote in every constituency.
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