

So, Cameron's shift from “hug a hoody”, to gaol a looter shows a willingness to speak in terms of social conscience, whilst being prepared to resort to repressive state measures. The latter was no doubt founded not just upon an attempt to crush such action, but also a populist appeal to those reactionary elements across society that form the electoral base of the Tories. Yet, the currently dominant section of the Tories represent the biggest looters, the Money Capitalists, whose actions have thrown millions into severe debt, and came close to collapsing the global financial system. They are the same Money Capitalists, who are still paying themselves millions of pounds in salaries and bonuses and dividends. The same political stance can be seen in the Tories position on Immigration, which is designed to appeal to those same reactionary elements. In doing so, it cuts some of the ground from beneath forces to their Right such as UKIP, and the BNP. They are policies that appeal to the “scum, offal refuse of all classes” as Marx describes the lumpen proletariat. Yet, daily, representatives of Capital declare how these policies are undermining its need to recruit suitable Labour Power.

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Campo, Foggy Osbourne & Cleggy |
“The parliamentary party was not only dissolved into its two great factions, each of these factions was not only split up within itself, but the party of Order in parliament had fallen out with the party of Order outside parliament. The spokesmen and scribes of the bourgeoisie, its platform and its press — in short, the ideologists of the bourgeoisie and the bourgeoisie itself, the representatives and the represented — faced one another in estrangement and no longer understood one another.” (ibid Chapter 6)
As yet, this conflict, within the ranks of Capital, has not broken out into open warfare, but proceeds along diplomatic channels. The austerity measures being pursued by Cameron – and by like minded right-wing populists elsewhere – are increasingly recognised as counter-productive to the interests of Big Industrial Capital. The US, which has used Keynesian intervention on a large scale for the last three years, has managed to grow its economy, and create jobs, despite the drag that European austerity and recession has exerted on it. The ideologists and managers of international Capitalism, in the IMF, in the OECD, in Standard & Poor's, and in national bodies such as the NIESR, all openly proclaim that austerity is killing the patient, but they will not openly attack any individual country's policy, or tell them to change course. In Britain, even the City, whose interests Cameron sought to defend, in his walk-out from the EU, told him that his actions, in isolating Britain, were counter-productive. Big business repeatedly warns that the Tories Immigration policies are damaging their interests, because they cannot recruit the labour-power they need. But, as yet, this is all low key. If the current measures continue, and threaten the interests of Big Capital it may not remain that way.
“Far more fateful and decisive was the breach of the commercial bourgeoisie with its politicians. It reproached them not as the Legitimists reproached theirs, with having abandoned their principles, but on the contrary, with clinging to principles that had become useless.” (ibid)

“The French bourgeoisie balked at the domination of the working proletariat; it has brought the lumpen proletariat to domination, with the Chief of the Society of December 10 at the head.”(Chapter 7)
Bonaparte represented the small holding peasants. Cameron represents their modern equivalent. He represents the small capitalists, the middle class, and backward sections of workers. It is their ideas that are reflected in the Tories policies, it is they who make up the bulk of the Tory Party members, and its electoral base. And, just as Bonaparte represented not the revolutionary elements within the peasantry, but the reactionary elements, it is not the Guardian reading petit-bourgeois that Cameron attracts, but the reactionary Mail and Express reading middle class.
“The bourgeoisie, in truth, is bound to fear the stupidity of the masses so long as they remain conservative, and the insight of the masses as soon as they become revolutionary.” (ibid)
Of course, a major reason for the stupidity of the masses, is the failure of Big Capital to carry through its own revolution to a conclusion. Big Capital has means of disseminating its ideas through its own house journals, such as the FT, The Economist and their equivalents. It is able to develop its ideas through its Universities. But, at the same time, the very functioning of Capitalism, and the search for profit, means that, alongside this, exists the gutter press, which garners readers by appealing to the basest instincts. Not only do these vile organs promote the most crass individualism, but they promote all of those ideas that are the very antipathy of the ideas of “Egalite, Fraternite, and Liberte”, that were the slogans under which the bourgeois revolution was fought. Instead, they promote bigotry, racism, sexism, homophobia and all the other shit of ages that the bourgeois revolution should have swept away forever.
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