The Eastleigh By-Election
has changed absolutely nothing. Despite winning, the Liberals are
still heading for extinction. UKIP, despite coming second, are still
a bunch of loons, fruitcakes and closet racists. The Tories who came
third are still racked by their historical contradictions that lead
them logically to a split. Labour who came fourth, in a seat they
probably never should win, still look likely to win the next election
with an outright majority.
The Liberals, after a series
of truly disastrous poll showings over the last year, were
undoubtedly going to make their win in Eastleigh into more than it
was. In fact, had they lost Eastleigh, which is one of their
strongest seats, and where they control most of the local council
seats, then it would confirm that at the next election they would be
wiped off the map. Yet, despite winning, that is the true story of
this election. The Liberals won, only because a large swathe of Tory
votes went to UKIP. According to the polling done for the Tories,
80% of the UKIP vote at the by-election, would return to the Tories
in a General Election. That would see them home with a comfortable
majority in the seat.
Nor for the same reason, can
UKIP take much comfort from the result. However, much they play down
the suggestion, UKIP's vote was in Eastleigh, and is everywhere else,
largely a protest vote. Yes, its a protest vote of a particular
section of the population, those who are pre-occupied with
immigration, and a Little Englander mentality, but a protest vote
nevertheless. In a way its a mirror image of the same kind of
protest vote that sees other maverick candidates, like George
Galloway, elected in by-elections. It is a symptom of the generally
abysmal level of political knowledge and culture of the British
electorate, and one of the in built weaknesses of a bourgeois
democracy, that relies on such general ignorance and passivity. It
means that voters unhappy with the status quo, instead of themselves
becoming active to change things, simply express their frustration by
voting for some alternative, without really knowing that much, or
caring that much about what they stand for, or what the implications
of what they are proposing might be. Its a version of “my enemy's
enemy is my friend”.
Remember, Cleggmania at the
last General Election? That was a perfect example, of just how
ignorant and unsophisticated the British electorate are. But, its
also a reason why principled politicians should not see it as their
role to simply reflect or respond to the wishes of that electorate.
Of course, the politicians we have are not principled, and they will
follow popular prejudices, to the extent they think it will get them
elected, because they are career politicians. They are people who
have gone into politics as a career choice, not to actually change
the world according to some deeply held principles and convictions,
but simply in order to line their own pockets. That is more the case
today, in Britain, than it has been for a long time, and is one
reason voters do become so frustrated, and express it in by-elections
by voting for mavericks.
But, its also why at General
Elections, when the mind is more closely focussed on the real issues,
these mavericks tend to be annihilated. In By-elections, the hobby
horses of the electorate tend to take a more prominent role, and in
the lower turnouts associated with them, those who feel most strongly
turn out and vote, and the rest stay at home. In places like
Eastleigh, which is the epitome of an upper middle class,
constituency the kind of place that makes up the backbone of the Tory
Party, its no wonder that Immigration and Europe is a hobby horse
that took a centre stage in the election. Concerns over Immigration
are always most loudly voiced in those places, like Eastleigh, where
there are the fewest actual Immigrants! I doubt, Eastleigh has seen
any significant influx of immigrants, other than the occasional
Consultant, or other extremely well paid professionals. The concern
over Immigration is simply the typical middle class fear over the
“others”, a fear that someone might be getting something for
nothing, and a fear that you do not really have that stronger hold
over what you have yourself. The same is true of UKIP's other hobby
horse over Europe, it plays to exactly that reactionary section of
opinion, that has not got over the fact that Britannia no longer
rules the waves, and has not come to terms with the fact that Britain
is really just a second rate power, rapidly declining from there, and
which will decline even faster the more it cuts itself off from
Europe. Yet, the reality is that poll after poll shows that overall
concern over Immigration comes quite low down in voters priorities
below unemployment, state of the economy, the NHS and so on. The
same is true about Europe. So parties whose sole appeal is on those
things will always fail at General Elections.
But, outside those two hobby
horses, what does UKIP have to offer? Absolutely nothing. It has no
long-term strategy, because it doesn't need one to pick up protest
votes. But, it does not have one, because if it did, the
contradictions within it, would begin to tear it apart. Those
contradictions arise from the fact that it is just a protest party
that has been built up by recruiting mavericks and discontents from
elsewhere. Anyone, who knows many of the UKIP local council
candidates that have any kind of political history knows that to be
the case. Its also why, some of these candidates on a frequent basis
come out with the most outlandish comments that even the leadership
of the party have to dissociate themselves with. Given the effective
demise of the BNP, who only a couple of years ago were proclaiming
the same kind of breakthrough, and on pretty much the same political
ground, that UKIP now claim, its likely that many of its disaffected
members will have found their way into the Party, which will heighten
the contradictions within even more.
You only have to look at
some of the former leading lights within the Party to see what rotten
foundations it has been built upon. It is a party created from the
top down, by mavericks with a TV presence. Farage, typifies that.
In the last year, its been almost impossible to turn on the TV
without his face popping up in some shape or form. And, of course,
the TV will give him such air time, because that is also the nature
of the media in the modern world. It is all about the quick sound
bite, superficiality, fast solutions and immediate gratification to
go along with a society built on easy credit, consumerism,
celebrity, and superficiality.
Another symbol of that was
the fact that occupying a prominent position, and pushing his face
forward, in the UKIP Eastleigh celebrations was none other than Neil
Hamilton. That is someone who was thrown out of Parliament over the
cash for questions scandal, and who with his wife has spent most of
his time since then occupied in cash for ritual humiliation, on any
TV show that would have them.
Yet, the support for UKIP
does also illustrate the problem for the Tories, which I identified
some time ago. The Tories began life as a party of the old Landlord
Class in opposition to the Liberals as party of the industrial
capitalists. When Labour supplanted the Liberals as the Party of the
workers and industrial bourgeoisie, the Tories filled the gap
becoming the party of both the Landed Aristocracy, the Banking
Aristocracy, and the reactionary, nationalist elements of Capital,
and of the middle class. But, as a party of Government, it is still
constrained by the need to meet the interests of the dominant section
of Capital, the Big multinational, industrial capital, whose
interests are at odds with the latter.
The modern form of bourgeois
democracy, that arose at the end of the 19th century, when
Capital felt secure enough to give the vote to workers, who had been
incorporated into the State, is Social Democracy. It is a system
under which workers are allowed to vote, so long as they vote for
parties that do not seriously threaten the status quo; under which
they are provided with a measure of Social Security via Welfare
States, which are designed both to dissuade them from voting for
parties that threaten the status quo, out of fear, and at the same
time provide Capital with its necessary supply of labour-power, at
the cheapest cost; and allow workers to negotiate over the size of
that Welfare State just as they negotiate over their wages only in so
far as it does not threaten the ability of Capital to accumulate, and
that the workers have no control over it.
As Marx described it,
“The peculiar character of social-democracy is epitomized in the fact that democratic-republican institutions are demanded as a means, not of doing away with two extremes, capital and wage labour, but of weakening their antagonism and transforming it into harmony.”
In the 20th Century, it has been those principles that have governed the policies of all the major bourgeois parties in all the developed Capitalist States, where this model has been universally adopted. It is made possible because of what is in effect an historic compromise between Big Capital and workers, a modus vivendi that is possible only so long as capitalism can ensure workers with steadily rising living standards. It is in effect an implementation at the level of the State of the principles of Fordism. Just as Fordism was able to offer such steadily rising living standards, and yet at the same time see rising profits, as productivity rose faster than wages, so the Long Wave Boom, and adoption of Fordist principles across all developed economies was able to see workers wages rise, and see the size of the Welfare State grow along with it.
“The peculiar character of social-democracy is epitomized in the fact that democratic-republican institutions are demanded as a means, not of doing away with two extremes, capital and wage labour, but of weakening their antagonism and transforming it into harmony.”
In the 20th Century, it has been those principles that have governed the policies of all the major bourgeois parties in all the developed Capitalist States, where this model has been universally adopted. It is made possible because of what is in effect an historic compromise between Big Capital and workers, a modus vivendi that is possible only so long as capitalism can ensure workers with steadily rising living standards. It is in effect an implementation at the level of the State of the principles of Fordism. Just as Fordism was able to offer such steadily rising living standards, and yet at the same time see rising profits, as productivity rose faster than wages, so the Long Wave Boom, and adoption of Fordist principles across all developed economies was able to see workers wages rise, and see the size of the Welfare State grow along with it.
That meant that the
contradiction at the heart of the Tory Party was muted. In the
post-war period, the Tories were able to be just as much advocates of
the NHS and Welfare State as Labour. It was only when the post-war
boom came to an end, and the solutions of Fordism, as much as the
solutions of Keynesianism, no longer seemed to work, so that the
capitalists side of the deal were met, that it started to unravel.
The struggle within the Tory Party at the time between the
Thatcherites, and the so called Wets, was the manifestation of that
struggle. In the end, it was resolved, as it was in the US, by what
is likely to be a one-time solution. That is that stagnant or
falling wages were offset, by encouraging an explosion of debt to
finance continued, and even expanded consumer spending. It also
funded continued state spending to prevent the destruction of welfare
states too, but in reality it is the private debt that is far
greater, and far more of a problem.
Its within that context that
Cameron's Government came to power. As I wrote in my series
History Repeating As Farce
what Cameron has done is to try to respond to the economic situation
by applying the same methods that Thatcher applied in the 1980's, but
under completely different conditions. In the 1980's Thatcher was
able to bludgeon down wages, because during the period of the Long
Wave Boom, they had risen above their average level. But, in the
last 30 years they have been falling or stagnant because of the
effects of the Long Wave downturn. Thatcher was able to encourage
the low-wage-high debt economy in the 1980's, because private debt
was relatively low, workers owned assets built up during the Boom
they could borrow against, house and share prices were relatively
low, and so could be inflated in a bubble economy, providing a basis
for further borrowing.
But, the only one of those
things that applies today is that some workers still own some assets
such as their homes and their pension pots. The other side to that
is that the value of those things is grossly inflated, and likely to
come crashing down, and that until they do, the vast majority of
workers will not be able to buy a house, or move to a better house,
or be able to rent at a reasonable level, and their pension
contributions will go nowhere. The further problem faced is that
workers in Britain that have avoided some of the difficult issues as
a result of this debt binge, now find themselves having to compete
against workers in China, India and elsewhere.
In conditions of a new
global, Long Wave Boom, that started in 1999, the solutions once more
are clearly those most appropriate to Social Democracy. That has
been clear in the US, which as the most developed industrial economy
is also the most developed form of Social Democracy. There, the
Democrats, which represent modernity, and the historic compromise
between Big Capital and the workers have pursued a policy of fiscal
expansion that has seen the economy recover from the Financial
Meltdown of 2008, and begin to grow. It thereby provides the
breathing space for the economy to begin to restructure so as to be
able to meet the challenges of a global economy where new powers like
China have a comparative advantage in large areas of traditional
industrial production.
But, the Tories could not
offer such solutions, because to do so would have meant losing the
support of their core membership and voter base. Cameron had to
adopt his policies of austerity in order to have a chance of winning
the core Tory votes, amongst the small capitalists, the frightened
middle classes, and reactionary workers. Having done so, he and
Osborne are now held hostage to those policies even when they are
clearly failing, and he is being urged by the representatives of Big
industrial capital to change course. Worse, still he is being urged
at the same time to go even further in the policy of austerity by the
Right-wing of his party, who clearly want to push an open break with
the Liberals. In the meantime, that core membership represented by
groups like Conservative Grass Roots, are latching on to the other
more modernist policies pursued by Cameron, on things like Gay
Marriage, Environmentalism and so on, as another stick with which to
beat him.
As in the US, it is coming
down almost to a division between modernism and anti-modernism. In
the US, the Republicans, who represent the same segment of
reactionary opinion that the Tories do in Britain are having to go
through precisely this kind of struggle, because the reality is that
the electoral base for those kinds of anti-modern views is
fortunately shrinking. The logical path for the Tories is also for a
split between its modernist, social democratic wing, and its
anti-modernist reactionary wing. The latter has a natural home with
the supporters of UKIP, and the BNP, the former with the majority of
the Liberals and the Labour Party, creating a modernist Social
Democratic Party like the US Democrats, which openly represents the
interests of Big Capital, but relies on the votes and activism of
workers and the Trades Unions. History of course unfolds by far more
complex methods than what is rational in the realm of ideas.
What is clear is that
despite what they say the Tories are making a lurch to the Right in
response to the threat from UKIP. It is no coincidence that it has
been announced that they plan to withdraw from the European Court of
Human Rights, that they intend to restrict immigrants rights to use
the NHS and so on. Yet, all of these measures are the measures of a
Tory Party leadership running scared and in disarray. Prior to
Eastleigh, the Tories announced they would hold an EU “In or Out”
referendum, in order to try to shoot UKIP's fox. They put up a
right-wing candidate in the election, they even used UKIP colours on
one of their leaflets. But, all it did was to give UKIP greater
credibility, and win them more votes!
Anyone who has studied
history would not be surprised by that. In the late 1920's and early
30's, the German Communist Party responded to the Nationalism of the
Nazis, by adopting Nationalistic positions itself. All it did was to
make nationalism more acceptable, and thereby win more votes for the
Nazis! But, this kind of giving ground to try to hold on to support
has an older, and no less successful, record than that.
In
History Repeating As Farce part 5
I detailed Marx's analysis of the way this kind of steady
accommodation to the Right, led in France to the coup of Louis
Bonaparte, resting upon the support of precisely those class elements
that today provide support for UKIP, and the Tory Right. Suggestions
of a palace coup against Cameron within the Tory Party are already
being heard, with David Davies as a possible stalking horse. In the
above, I suggested that the real challenge could come, however, from
Boris Johnson, who occupies far better the kind of position as a
charismatic leader that Farage currently enjoys. The fact, that the
Tories are openly saying that they intend to walk away from
institutions that represent modernity, and basic elements of a
civilised society such as the Court of European Rights should be a
warning from history, that this is a party rapidly heading towards
authoritarianism.
In the case of Louis
Bonaparte, as with his German counterpart Bismark, the authoritarian
regime that was established came at a time of a developing capitalist
economy, indeed their regimes were a means of modernising, and
establishing such a capitalist economy at a forced pace. But, that
is not true today of Britain. As Trotsky said there are essentially
two types of Bonapartism there are those which represent conditions
of rise such as those of Bismark, and of Stalin, where the new ruling
class is too weak to rule in its own name, which, however,
reactionary in their methods are historically progressive because
they are based on transforming the social relations, and there are
those like that of Hitler, which represent the conditions of decay,
and exist to only try to protect the interests of the old ruling
class.
But, the problem for the
Tories is that their policies are not protecting the interests of the
dominant section of the old ruling class. They are defending only
the interests of the most numerous part of that class, along with its
attendant layers within the middle classes. As in the US, that
section of society is not large enough to win elections consistently,
and its size is shrinking.
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