Farage The Klown |
Yes, UKIP voters are also
clowns, though that is a bit unfair to clowns. Clowns are
characterised by their anarchic behaviour, by nihilism, by emotional
outbursts, and by antics that seem designed to cause self-harm. All
of that also characterises UKIP as a party, and those who vote for
it. At least, with actual clowns, though, it is only a performance,
and not a reflection of their own persona. The prat falls, that
appear designed to lead to self harm, are, in fact, well worked out
in advance, and carried out with great skill, so as to avoid harm.
The policies of UKIP, however, that would lead to self-harm, for
those who vote for them, are, in contrast, simply the result of
snatching for a populist response, that has been ill thought out,
either by those proposing it, or those voting for it.
Of course, there is another
side to clowns too. Clowns can often be viewed as sinister and
frightening. There is certainly something of that to the clowns of
UKIP. From the beginning, UKIP has been shaped as a pale, more
constitutionalist version of the BNP; extreme nationalism that, at
least verges on, if it does not stretch into, racism. Like all
mainstream politicians, who are themselves more concerned with
winning votes than standing up for principles, Cameron has rowed back
on his earlier statement, but he was right to have labelled UKIP a
bunch of “loonies, fruitcakes, and closet racists”. In fact,
many of its members, and probably many more of its voters, do not even
bother to hide their racism in the closet. Now that the BNP has
blown up, UKIP provides the next best thing for them, which is why a
number of ex BNP'ers have turned up as UKIP candidates. That
undoubtedly reflects a much larger number of fascists who have simply
joined UKIP, but without assuming such high profile positions. In
fact, it appears the BNP are even openly proclaiming such an entryist
tactic –
BNP To Enter UKIP.
These sinister clowns
supporting UKIP, are not like the bulk of its voters, who are just
the typical, really apolitical, flotsam and jetsam within the
electorate, who have absolutely no idea about politics, little regard
for facts and who simply vote for some maverick on the basis they may
scratch some bigoted itch they may have. They really are little
better than the people who vote for the Monster Raving Loonies. But,
the sinister clowns, the fascists, the people who make up the layer
that in Germany would have been the Junkers, and those who are using
UKIP as a means of exerting a rightward lever on the Tories, know
exactly what they are doing. In many ways, this is what makes UKIP
far more dangerous than the BNP. UKIP is far more likely to form the
basis of some kind of Party of Order, or Neo-Fascist Party than the
BNP ever was. That is not to say it will. For now, the bourgeoisie
does not need such a party, and it would be destructive of its
interests. In fact, UKIP and the pressure that it is exerting on the
Tories is very damaging to the interests of big, multinational
industrial capital, whose future has already been tied into the
development of an EU State, and of the further breaking down of the
limitations that national borders present to the accumulation of
capital. But, the reason the Tories already pursue the policies they
do, is because they are forced to win over the votes of that far more
numerous section of capital, the small capitalists, and their
attendant layers.
As I wrote some months ago.
What we are witnessing is in many ways similar to the events that led
up to the coup of Louis Bonaparte in France -
History Repeating As Farce
. There the right-wing and centrist parties, continually shifted
their ground to the right, and as they did so they found more ground
disappearing beneath their feet. In the end Louis Bonaparte was able
to claim all of their garb, and in that name seize power. Its no
coincidence that Farage has said he could do a deal with Boris
Johnson. What we are seeing is a very real contradiction of material
interests playing out within the political sphere.
As I've described in the
past, the true nature of a bourgeois social democracy is an historic
compromise between big capital, and the working class. It is a
compromise that developed in the 19th Century out of the
struggle of that big industrial capital against the landed
aristocracy. As Engels described, the former realised they could not
politically defeat the latter, and hold control of Parliament without
the support of the majority of workers. They learned to live with
Trades Unions, which they absorbed, and utilised as a safety valve on
workers discontent. As they found that far more surplus value could
be extracted via Relative Surplus Value (reducing the Value of Labour
Power by reducing the price of wage goods) rather than Absolute
Surplus Value (making the working day longer or more intensive) the
big capitalists found they could profitably engage in collective
bargaining with those unions for improvements in wages and
conditions, in return for increases in productivity that more than
paid for them. That was the basis of Fordism, and for the bosses
introducing the Welfare State.
But, there have always been
far more small businesses than there are big companies, even though
the latter employ the most workers, and contribute most to the
economy. All of the small capitalists that own these tens of
thousands of small businesses, their families, often the managers of
those businesses etc, as well as that same general social layer, of
middle class people with a similar world outlook, are the people who
make up the core of the Tory Party, and of its voters. Unlike Big
Capital, these small capitalist enterprises, do still rely on what
Engels' described as the “penny pinching measures” that Big
Capital had long since abandoned as counter productive. It is
precisely these small businesses that rely on the kind of anti-union
measures that the Tories promote, because they also rely on employing
cheap labour, providing poor working conditions, and so on in order
to stay in business.
But, those businesses, are
generally locally, at best nationally based, and their political
outlook is shaped by that. If they see the British State as a weight
on their back, even more will they see a European State as something
they can do without. This is the conflict of material interests
within Capital that leads to the political conflict within the Tory
Party, and has led to the development of UKIP. On the one hand, the
Liberal wing of the Liberal-Tory Government, finds common cause with
the Social-Democratic wing of the Tory Party; people like Ken Clarke.
This section of opinion represents the interests of Big Capital,
whereas UKIP and the right-wing of the Tory Party represents the
interests of small capital. In many ways, for a rational bourgeois
social-democratic polity, the Liberals and Tory Social Democrats
would fuse with Labour to form a party like the Democrats in the US.
There, big business makes no attempt to hide its involvement in the
party alongside the workers and their Trades Unions. For historical
reasons, the Labour Party in Britain has represented the interests of
big capital, but without the open support of and involvement of Big
Capital within it.
The more Big Capital pushes
for the implementation of its interests i.e. for the further
development of a single European market, and what has to go with that
– a single currency, a single fiscal system, and, therefore, a
single EU State, the more it will come up against the material
interests of small capital and its political representatives within
the Tory Party and UKIP. As in the 19th century, the only
way Big Capital can defeat its political opponents is by enlisting
the support of the working class. The more it does that, the more
the small capitalists, the frightened petit-bourgeois will fear for
their own continued existence, squeezed between an ever more dominant
big capital, and an ever more powerful working-class, able to resist
the attempts to extract increasing amounts of Absolute Surplus Value
from them. Its no wonder those sections of society are looking for a
Bonaparte, be it Boris or Nigel.
But, its also within that
context that the other UKIP clowns, the ones more likely to trip over
their feet, also play a dangerous role, and why UKIP is more
dangerous than the BNP. That is because, particularly given the low
level of political culture in Britain, there is a large reservoir of
ignorance from which such elements can be drawn. Before we let
anyone operate on us, they have to undergo years of education
followed by medical training. Even before we allow someone out on
the road with a car we insist that they undergo a period of
instruction, and have to pass an approved examination to demonstrate
their competence. Yet, we let anyone loose with a ballot paper, with
the only condition that they are more than 18 years old, and not in
gaol, or mentally incompetent! That despite the fact that armed with
such a ballot, they can put in place Governments that literally hold
the power of life and death over the rest of us; the power to
introduce the death penalty; to close hospitals; to send thousands to
die in wars and so on. If voters had to pass some kind of competency
test similar to that required before we allow people to drive a car,
then judged by the kind of comments you hear on the streets and in
the pubs, and on the TV, at least 25% of the electorate would be
disqualified. So, no, I have no qualms about saying that UKIP voters
are also clowns.
On the TV last week, we saw
examples, again, of just how ignorant the people are who are allowed
to vote, many of them then voting for UKIP. They are the people, who
even when he was standing in front of them didn't know who Ed
Miliband was; who thought that there was such a position as Prime
Minister of Crawley, not to mention all those whose comments about
why they were supporting UKIP were so inane, and mindless that you
couldn't even be bothered to remember what they had been. And, of
course, there were all the racists who said they were voting UKIP
because “I am not a racist, but....” followed by a load of
mindless racist crap about how the country was full up, how
immigrants were given cars for free when they entered the country,
and didn't even have to have a driving licence. Presumably they
needed the free car to get into town from the million pound homes
they had also been given to live in by Councils that cannot house
people in the direst conditions!!! Yes, of course, the Daily Mail
and other such fascist rags are responsible for pumping out these
nonsensical stories in the first place, and despite Leveson and all
the rest there will be no clamp down on such rubbish being printed,
but what does it say about the intelligence of a lot of British
people, and the willingness to be taken in and have their prejudices
fed, that they swallow this stuff up as though it were actually
true???
The frightening thing is
that in many ways that itself is a reflection of just how decayed
British society has become. I find myself increasingly amazed by the
amount of TV advertising that is at this kind of level promoting
endlessly various forms of gambling, from online poker, and casinos,
and so on that plays on people's weaknesses, alongside further
adverts encouraging them to pay for such activities, as well as
according to a “Which?” report today, their food, with money
borrowed from Pay Day Loan Sharks, at astronomical levels of
interest. The same willingness to swallow ridiculous stories about
immigrants, is in reality the same mindset that leads to a
willingness to believe that your problems might be solved by winning
a shed load of money by gambling, or that you can simply borrow money
at 4000% interest without landing yourself in serious problems. Its
a willingness that flows from a sense of hopelessness, and
demoralisation. The gutter press, as well as all those leaches that
exploit such people are to blame for promoting that, but the Labour
Movement itself bears part of the blame for the fact that it has
failed to provide any kind of real solution for these people's
problems. UKIP, as the Nazis did in Germany in the 1930's, have
stepped into the breach.
At least, they have stepped
into the breach on one side. What also is apparent to me looking
through the comments of some of the left sects, and of their
supporters in various Left forums, is that the low level of political
culture in Britain is not just something that affects the Right. In fact, its frequently difficult given the nature of the comments to differentiate between those of the trolls and those of simply ill-informed members of the sects. If
on the Right there is a willingness to adopt quick fix, ill-thought
out solutions, the same is true on the Left. It is what leads to
sections of that Left simply repeating old mantras without bothering
to do what Marx and Engels, and Lenin and Trotsky emphasised –
thinking for yourself. Its what leads sections of the Left to base
their politics not on thinking out what needs to be done to advance
the working-class, but is based simply on placing a negative sign
wherever their opponents place a plus. When the AWL described those
elements of the Left as “idiot-anti-imperialists”, who just threw
their weight behind this or that enemy of the workers, simply because
they professed themselves “anti-imperialist” - usually just
anti-American – they were right to do so, because in reality such
an approach is no different from those on the Right who simply leap
for a quick answer based on bigotry and prejudice, because its easier
than actually thinking things through rationally, and committing
yourself to the hard work that follows from the conclusion of that
process. Of course, the AWL in supporting the Islamists in Libya, and until recently, in Syria, were guilty of exactly the same thing! Perhaps its no coincidence then that sections of that Left,
when it comes to Europe find themselves on the same nationalistic
ground as UKIP. In Germany, in the 1930's, when the Nazis grew
stronger, there were many Stalinists who joined them. We should not
rule out the possibility here.
Last week on the BBC
“Question Time”, Victoria Coren said that simply referring to
UKIP as clowns was lazy. It does not deal with the political issues
themselves on which UKIP stand. That, of course, is absolutely
correct. It is, however, difficult to really deal with UKIP's
politics, because outside their calls to leave the EU, and opposition
to immigration, we do not know what they are! They have taken down
large parts of their programme ahead of last week's elections, on the
basis that they are “under review”. The real reason was,
however, that its programme itself is a hostage to fortune. The last
thing a populist party needs is some kind of programmatic commitment,
because it might be held to it, when it needs to ditch it to maintain
popularity! The last thing UKIP needs is a programme that others can
pull apart, and show the contradictions and inconsistencies within. Its commitment to developing such a programme was illustrated by the proposal that they should just buy some policies from a think tank! More fitting would be for them to get them from Pound Shop!!!
UKIP pulled down its
programme for the same reason it has said to its local Councillors
that they can essentially make up their own political positions –
something, of course the Liberals did for years. That is that like
any such Party, they really are a rag bag of clowns and misfits, and
any attempt to impose a programme on all of them would be as one of
their leaders put it, “like herding cats”. In reality, it would
break the party into smithereens. Anyone who knows the backgrounds
of many of its candidates knows they are former disgruntled Tories,
as well as ex Labour members who often were associated with its
Left-wing, but only on the same kind of basis as referred to above
i.e. as mavericks, as some kind of emotional response, rather than
any kind of thought out politics. Farage the Klown is symptomatic of
that kind of split personality. He parades around as Man of the
People, with his fag in his mouth, and pint of beer in his hand, and
yet he went to Dulwich Public School, and worked as a Commodity
Trader in the City, before embarking on his own lucrative political
career as an MEP.
But, Labour should begin to
develop a set of political answers to UKIP, and indeed to those same
policies advocated on the Tory Right. If Big Capital has any sense,
it will facilitate such a development, not just in Britain, but in
response to the same kind of right-wing populism that is paralysing
much of Europe via Austerian economic policies. On that workers do
have a shared interest with Big Capital, just as they did in fighting
alongside the industrial bourgeoisie in the 19th Century
against the forces of reaction. But, we should do so under our own
banner, and for our own interests.
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