Last night's
“Question Time” format of Leader's debates was the least
acceptable version of all those used by the broadcasters. It was
neither an actual Leaders' Debate nor even the usual Question Time
format of a panel discussion and response to audience questions.
More than all the others it reflected the extent to which the
broadcasters had simply given in to the Tories demands, and Cameron's
fear of actually debating with Ed Miliband. Moreover, the actual
structuring of the event was rigged to favour the Liberal-Tories.
Despite all that, it was another win for Ed Miliband.
At the
start, David Dimbleby pointed out that the audience had been
specifically constructed of 25% Tories, 25% Liberals, 25% Labour and
25% undecided. In other words, the supporters of the Liberal-Tory
government, that has cratered the economy, over the last five years,
that has attacked workers' living standards, cut public services and
undermined the social structure, were given 50% of the audience to
start with, as against 25% for Labour, a 2:1 advantage for the
Liberal-Tories.
That
reflects the media bias over the last five years too. Although we
have had a single Liberal-Tory government over all that period, when
it comes to media representation, the Liberals and Tories have been
treated as though they were still two separate parties, and each was
given the right to a representative to speak on behalf of the
Liberal-Tory government, as against just one for Labour. To do that
now seems even more ludicrous, when its clear that at the election,
the Liberals are going to get wiped out, and already have as low a
showing in the opinion polls as the Greens, and only about half the
support even of UKIP!
Moreover,
its even more ludicrous, because its obvious from the comments
from Clegg that they are fighting the election on the clear basis of
a continuation of that Liberal-Tory government after the election.
Cameron has to maintain the fiction that the Tories are trying to win
a majority, by repeating the mantra that they only need to win an
extra 23 seats. But, in reality, he knows that the Tories will win
fewer seats than they already have, not more, and any seats they do
win will be at the expense of the Liberal wing of the Liberal-Tory
party, not of Labour.
Clegg does
not even have the luxury of Cameron in pretending that he might win
an outright majority. If the fantasy of Cameron is that the Tories
might win a majority, the fantasy of Clegg is that the Liberals will
not be entirely wiped out. The best Clegg can do is to plead with us
that our only hope of stable government is to vote Liberal and deny
anyone else a majority! But, in reality, its clear that what
Clegg is really saying is vote Liberal so that some of us can remain
in a Liberal-Tory government, and keep our ministerial limos.
Clegg's
latest argument is a clear manifestation of that. He's ruled out any
kind of deal with Labour, even if the SNP were to just vote for
Labour measures put to Parliament. He argues that the Liberals would
first have to approach Cameron if the Tories had the most seats, even
if they could not muster a majority. But, that is nonsense. The
Liberals have long argued in favour of electoral reform, and the idea
of coalition governments based upon it, so as to better reflect the
views of the electorate. He argues that this would make Britain more
like the rest of Europe, where such coalitions are commonplace.
But, nowhere
in Europe are those coalitions constructed on the basis that Clegg
demands. In Germany, for example, the Free Democrats and other right
of centre small parties do not enter coalition with the CDU/CSU on
the basis that the latter is the largest party, but because they
share a similar ideological outlook! In fact, if a coalition
government is intended to be a better reflection of the votes of the
electorate that is the only basis on which it can be justified.
One Liberal
voter in the audience, last night made the point that Clegg had made
a conscious decision in 2010 to enter into the coalition with the
Tories, rather than with Labour. As he pointed out Clegg can hardly
now distance himself from the fact that the Liberal-Tory government
has caused more than a million people to rely on food banks, that
public services have been cut, that living standards have been
slashed, that VAT was raised, that Tuition Fees were trebled and so
on, because all of those things are a direct result of Clegg putting
a Tory government in power rather than a Labour government. In fact,
as the contributor pointed out many of those who voted Liberal would
far more have preferred that they do a deal with Labour than the
Tories, which is why so many former Liberal voters, and indeed
Liberal party members have deserted them.
So, if the
point of coalitions is to better reflect the political leanings of
the electorate, how on earth could Clegg justify his alliance over
the last five years with one of the most right-wing ideologically
driven Tory parties seen for some time. Indeed, how can he justify
his obvious intention to resume that alliance after the election, if
the Liberals have any seats left to ally with anyone?
Clegg was laughed out of court by the audience, when he claimed that in 2010, Britain was in the same position as Greece. In fact, even during the coalition negotiations, the Liberals were maintaining the position they held during the 2010 election that introducing austerity, until the recovery that was then happening had taken hold, would be a mistake.
The real
strategy of the Liberal-Tories has been given away by the Tories own
house journal – The Sun. The Sun is as close as you can get to the
official propaganda sheet of the Tory party. It has mirrored the
Tories actual electoral strategy. In England and Wales, the Sun has
not surprisingly come out in support of the Tories. In Scotland, the
Sun has come out in favour of the Tartan Tories of the SNP. At one
time, the Tories used to have a majority of seats in Scotland. That
ended a long time ago, but the votes that formerly went to the
Scottish Tories simply went across to the SNP. That is the bedrock
of the SNP's support, whatever the demagogic rhetoric of the SNP
leaders, the ideology that underlies it is conservative nationalism.
The Tories
have been encouraging a vote for the SNP in Scotland, therefore,
because it bolsters that underlying conservative ideology, whilst
taking votes away from Labour. Were it not for the fact that the
Tartan Tories of the SNP look set to pick up a lot of votes, Labour,
in the whole of Britain, would already be set to win a clear majority. In
fact, the lesson for the people of Scotland is vote for the Tartan
Tories of the SNP, get a Union Jack draped Tory Government in
Westminster. The Sun's support for the Tories in England, and the
Tartan Tories of the SNP in Scotland, is a clear statement of that
reality.
Miliband was
right to say that he would rather remain out of office than to have
to do a deal with the Tartan Tories. After all, we have seen how
reliable they are in the past. Just as it was the Clegg's
Liberal-Tories that put Cameron into government in 2010, and helped
him carry through his ideological agenda, so in 1979, it was the SNP
that put Maggie Thatcher into government, and thereby unleashed 18
years of Tory attacks on workers across Britain. Far better for
Labour to govern as a Minority government, and dare the Liberals and
SNP to put Boris Johnson into government, or for Labour to adopt a
position of extreme opposition, to oppose line by line every measure
adopted by a Liberal-Tory/UKIP/DUP/SNP lash up.
Miliband
more clearly than he had done before also rejected the idea that
Labour had overspent in the previous period, bringing howls of
outrage from the Liberal-Tories, who have made that lie the centre
piece of their justification for existence, and sole explanation for
the ideologically driven policies they have adopted over the last
five years. In what was clearly a choreographed manoeuvre, a Tory
supporting small business woman in the audience referred to Liam
Byrne's humorous note left to his successor, joking that there was no
money left.
She
complained that Ed Balls had pointed out that the note was a joke,
and said that anyone making such a joke in private business would
have been sacked. Really???? I've worked in private business, and
also been self-employed, and its my experience that the people who
work there are not as devoid of a sense of humour as this woman was
suggesting at all. Such kinds of humour occur all the time, and, in
fact, if you were to look at the e-mail conversations of people in
the City you would find numerous examples of such humour, including
from those very people in the financial sector who actually were
responsible for the financial crash, and the fact that the last
Labour government had to bail out those banks!
In fact,
Miliband should have been even more clear that Labour had not
overspent. As I've set out elsewhere. The average deficit to GDP
under the last Labour Government, for the period 1997-2007, was half
what it had been under the Thatcher-Major governments of 1979-1997.
Even taking into consideration the period up to 2010, when Labour had
to bail-out the banks that had failed due to the massive financial
bubbles encouraged under Thatcher and Major in the 1980's and 90's,
the average deficit to GDP ratio was significantly less than it had
been under Thatcher and Major. It was also lower than it has been
under the Liberal-Tories since 2010.
In fact,
Labour ran a budget surplus for four years at the start of the
century! The only reason the deficit shot up, was because of the
financial crisis. In my opinion, Labour should not have bailed out
the banks, but should have let them go bust, and then allowed their
workers to take them over for free, so as to run them as worker owned
co-operatives. That would have avoided having to borrow to bail them
out. But, of course, the Liberal-Tories would have howled with
anguish had that happened, because it would have meant that all their
friends in the financial aristocracy would have had their fictitious
wealth wiped out over night. They would far rather have a Labour
government bail out the banks, and for workers then to have to pay
for it.
The
Liberal-Tories are now proposing yet again to sell off shares in
those banks to the rich, after workers have rescued them, which is
what has happened with every nationalisation in the past. If Labour
wants to really bring about a shift in wealth and power, and the
“predistribution” that goes with it, they should legislate to
give workers democratic control over their pension funds, and they
should transfer at no cost, all the shares that the government owns
into a worker owned and controlled pension fund. In fact, it would
be useful if they were then to legislate to transfer the hypothecated
value of the National Insurance Fund into such a Pension Fund too, so
that workers could utilise it to take over most of the rest of
British businesses, and start to run them for their interests rather
than the interests of a tiny number of multi billionaires.
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