The
Liberals, as they watch their political life flash before their eyes,
have become ever more desperate. Like a drowning man going down for
the third time, they grab and snatch at every straw, in a frantic
hope of finding some justification for clinging to existence. Even
in their Cornish bunker, the opinion polls show them, in a number of
the seats they hold, dropping to fourth place! Yet, their
spokespeople continue to delude themselves that the polls are wrong.
They may be, but only in suggesting that the Liberals will get more
seats than they will end up with. In the meantime, Nick Clegg throws
out one desperate justification after another as to why people, who
don't actually support the Liberals, should vote for them anyway, and
why, contrary to all concepts of democracy, a Liberal Party with just
a handful of seats, and which has been sizeably rejected by the
voters, should still get Ministerial jobs!
Clegg first
came up with the idea that people should vote Liberal to prevent a
Tory Government that was too right-wing, or a Labour government that
was too left-wing, coming to power. If you want a moderate
government, Clegg argued, you have to vote Liberal. The lunacy of
that argument was obvious. We have just had five years of the most
ideological, right wing government for many years – and the
Liberals not only brought it about, by siding with the Tories rather
than Labour, in 2010, but for the last five years, the Liberals have
been loyal, active members of that right-wing government. In fact,
the Orange Book Liberals like David Laws, and his successor Danny
Alexander, have been marked by being more Tory than the Tories!
The Liberals
were quick to abandon their opposition to Tuition Fees, as well as to
impose other attacks on workers, by pushing through a 10% rise in
VAT, for example, along with the Bedroom Tax, and swingeing cuts in
services. But, Clegg's argument that if you wanted to oppose a
right-wing Tory government, you should vote Liberal is defective for
another reason. Given the reality of the British electoral system, a
vote for the Liberals is largely a wasted vote. Anyone who actually
wanted to prevent a Tory government, therefore, should logically vote
Labour, not Liberal!
But, Clegg's
argument is ridiculous for a more obvious reason. It assumes that Ed
Miliband and Labour represent some kind of extreme left-wing party,
which quite clearly they do not. Labour today maybe slightly to the
left of Blair and Brown, but it could hardly be described as being
even as left-wing as Harold Wilson's government's of the 1960's and
70's, let alone the Labour Government of 1945. All that Clegg has
emphasised, by claiming that a vote for the Liberals is needed to put
a right-wing influence on such a Labour government, is just how far
to the Right the Liberals have been dragged as a result of their
effective merger with the Tories over the last five years.
Perhaps
recognising that this justification for a Liberal vote was rather
ludicrous, Clegg has now come up with an equally ludicrous plea as to
why we should vote Liberal. Vote Liberal, he says now, to ensure a
stable government, and avoid the need for a second election! How
ridiculous is that? If you really want a stable government, the
answer most certainly is not to vote Liberal, Green, SNP, Plaid, or
for any of the other irrelevant sects. The key to a stable
government is for either Tories or Labour to win an outright
majority, not for votes to be fragmented amongst a range of parties
with no chance of forming a government, and no legitimate right,
being such a tiny minority, to even have representation in the
government.
Yet, its
precisely on that basis that Clegg now wants to cadge votes from
wherever he can get them, in the hope of clinging to the Ministerial
limo. The Liberals, however many seats they end up getting,
currently have support from only around 5-8% of the population, or
about half the support for UKIP. Using the argument the Liberals
have previously used to justify coalition governments based upon
electoral support and proportional representation, they have no
legitimate claim to be part of any government, and certainly much
less than any involvement that would be due to UKIP.
What Clegg
is really pleading for is enough votes to prevent Labour getting an
outright majority so that he can resume his government with Cameron.
A couple of days ago, I wrote that the Liberals would probably have
to oppose an EU referendum, which would cause an inevitable fracture
of the Tory benches. But, it now seems that Clegg realises that
Liberal support has been so decimated that he will have no bargaining
power with his Tory allies. Even the raison d'etre of the liberals
as a pro-European party, now seems to be up for grabs by Clegg, as
they try to cling to ministerial office.
In fact, you
would think that it was Labour that represented the real threat,
rather than the Tories, because currently we have an alliance of all
other parties against them. The Liberals have clearly phrased their
red lines to rule out a deal with Labour, should Labour be stupid
enough to offer them one; the Tories oppose Labour at all costs, even
preferring a win for the SNP, and a fracturing of the state, than a
Labour victory; the SNP ludicrously claim they want a Labour victory
in England and Wales, but call on voters there to vote for anyone
other than Labour, whilst in Scotland, where the SNP is in power they
chant “Red Tories Out”, and launch physical attacks on
Labour supporters. No wonder the Tartan Tories of the SNP have the
fulsome backing of Rupert Murdoch's Sun!
The Liberals political cretinism is demonstrated by the other
arguments they have raised to justify a renewal of their increasing
merger with the Tories. Clegg argues without any constitutional
justification that the Liberals would have to speak first to the
largest party. That is because he expects the Tories to be in that
position, and wants to create the conditions of a new Liberal-Tory
government, seizing office. But, the argument in principle is
ludicrous. It is at odds with the way all coalitions are formed in
Europe, i.e. on the basis of shared ideology.
For example, suppose UKIP were to be the largest party after the
election. Is Clegg really telling us that the Liberals would give
Farage first dibs at creating a government, and that the Liberals
would seek to facilitate them?
But, this
kind of deal making on an unprincipled basis is taken to even more
extremes by the SNP, which illustrates clearly the reactionary nature
and consequences of nationalism. The SNP do not want to be formally
part of the government in Westminster, they say, but they do want to
have a say in the government, based on no other grounds than
nationalism. They say that on the basis of SNP MP's being elected,
they should have a right to a say in Westminster, but SNP MP's have
no more right to a say in Westminster than any other MP, from any
other part of Britain, or from any other party.
If 59 Labour
MP's were elected in Scotland, there is no reason why a majority Tory
Government would give those Labour MP's a seat around the table at
Westminster, than if 59 Tory MP's were elected in Scotland, a
majority Labour government would give them a seat around the table
either. In fact, it would be interesting to see how the SNP, and
particularly their kitsch left entourage, would respond to such a
situation. In the 1950's, the Tories had more than 50% of the vote
in Scotland, through the 1960's, they still had more than 40%, in
fact, its these Tories that defected to the SNP. So, if that was the
situation now, would the SNP and their kitsch left supporters demand
that a Labour government include these Scottish Tory MP's in a
government, or that they consult with them, and include them, just
because they are Scots, and irrespective of the fact that they are
Tories?
But, that is
precisely the logic that results from nationalism. It subordinates
all class antagonisms to a single national antagonism. And, the SNP
position, like that of the Liberals, is really just a desperate plea
to be included, despite the fact that they have no real mandate to be
included, and no bargaining power to demand to be included. It is in
fact, the impotence of the SNP that leads to their vitriol against
Labour, even more than their opposition to the Tories.
In reality,
what the SNP are doing is calling upon the Scottish people, workers
and bosses, to forget about their class interests and join together
simply as Scots to oppose the people of the rest of Britain. Given
that the majority of Scots, like the majority of people in the rest
of Britain, are workers, what they are really doing is calling upon
Scottish workers to abandon their two century long alliance with
other British workers in favour of an alliance with Scottish
capitalists, and the kitsch left hangers on of the SNP are aiding and
abetting them.
On the one
hand, the SNP, and if they are successful in winning a majority for
their position, the Scottish people, are declaring political war
against the people of the rest of Britain. At the same time, they
are demanding that the people they have declared war against, give
them a seat in government, or some other privileged position, to have
a bigger say than others, or than their support deserves. Generally
speaking, people do not invite their enemies into their decision
making bodies, especially given the reality that war is the
continuation of politics by other means.
The vitriol
with which the SNP have attacked Labour in Scotland, and the attempt
to prevent democratic debate, shows just where that trend of
nationalism leads in breeding reaction, and division amongst the
working-class. Its clear where the dangerous trajectory of such an
approach leads, and a look across the Irish Sea, demonstrates it
clearly. How long before a small minority of Scottish nationalists
having been unable to win a majority for their position by the force
of argument turn instead to the argument of force.
Anyone who
doubts what happens when a small minority, unable to get its way by
reason and argument, turns to simply control the streets by force,
has only to look at what has happened in the last three years in
Libya.
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