Back
in 2016 I wondered if we were living in “Weimar Little England”.
The current BBC series on the rise of the
Nazis (the timing of which must have upset some of the Brexiteers),
coinciding as it does with Johnson’s proposed prorogation of Parliament, brings
to mind the observation;
“the first time as tragedy, the second
time as farce.”
Our contemporary
crop of right-wing populists (Trump, Bolsonoro, Modi, Johnson etc.) do not (yet?)
appear quite the same as the outright fascists of the 1930s, but then those
same fascists did not at first appear as they are now seen.
Certainly, a
pernicious nationalism is rampant, whether it is expressed in the treatment of
children on the border of Trump’s USA, the claim that it is Brazil’s
right to burn the Amazon, the oppression
of Kashmir or the promotion of a “no deal” Brexit (and comparing our
country to others is a useful reminder of how small the UK is).
The right-wing
populists of the present are unlikely to evolve exactly as their predecessors
did a little less than a century ago – because they have arisen in different
global circumstances. In the 1930s elements of the European ruling class
flirted (and more than flirted) with fascism as a bulwark against a threat from
the left.
The fascists of
the 1930s were a brutal response to the threat of socialism. Today – sadly –
there is no grave threat to capitalism from the organised working class in its
heartlands, nor is there any external threat as was once posed by the Soviet
Union.
In the second
decade of the twenty first century it is simply the case that capital no longer
needs to fend off a threat from a combative working class with social welfare,
civil liberty and democratic rights.
However, that
does not mean that we can be reassured that our contemporary farce will be less
brutal and dangerous than the tragedy of the past. In the context of the
climate crisis, we are in a world where humanity could choose to respond with
international cooperation – but probably won’t.
Right wing
nationalism everywhere will instead identify “others” who should be excluded
from rights or from access to resources, whether these are Central American refugees
trying to cross the Rio Grande, indigenous people trying to defend the Amazon
or Muslim citizens in Kashmir (or elsewhere in India).
Here in “Weimar
Little England” this “othering” will rely in particular upon racism, extending
its victims to include (white) Europeans who might not previously have expected
to be on the receiving end of the bigotry which is barely beneath the surface
of English nationalism. There is no reason to suppose that right-wing populism
in this country will be gentler or more civilised than elsewhere in the world.
Boris Johnson
is aiming for a General Election in which he will seek to represent an idea of “the
people” which excludes those “others”. We need a different, inclusive, idea of “the
people” based upon the popular mobilisations which are taking place against the
prorogation of Parliament if we are to direct that mobilisation into support
for progressive socialist policies in that General Election.
We are not doomed
to repeat past tragedies as either tragedy or farce.
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