The Tories believed
they were going to lose the last election. They were not alone.
Despite all the spin, in many ways they did lose. The Liberal-Tory
government from 2010 to 2015 had a majority of around 80, but that
majority has now fallen to just 12. They only need to lose six seats
before they are in a minority, and already the narrowness of the
majority has caused them to drop the flagship of their manifesto,
scrapping the Human Rights Act. In order to scrape together even the
votes they did get at the election, the Tories were forced to open
Pandora's Box.
Inside the box, they
found a range of parcels labelled Greed, Envy, Fear and so on, and
inside these parcels they found policies for tax cuts, for benefit
cuts, for attacks on trades unions and human rights, and on
immigration controls, withdrawal from Europe and national division.
The passions let loose from the box threaten chaos, and strife, but
one parcel remained in the box that the Tories did not take out, and
which has been left for Labour. It is a parcel labelled Hope.
In fact, the policies
of Hope that can be picked up by Labour, themselves in many ways are
made possible by the policies that the Tories have themselves
announced. For example, the Tories have now committed the country to
an EU referendum. Labour is right – and the media simply look
carping to be suggesting that Labour has made a U-Turn on the issue –
to say that now it is to happen, they will not waste time opposing
it, but will concentrate on making the case for staying in Europe.
They should do so, but they should make a clear distinction between a
socialist case for Europe, and the kind of reforms that we seek, in
the interests of all Europe's workers, and the narrow national
interests of British capital that the Tories seek to promote. Rather
than the dismal backward looking, and defensive case that the Tories
seek to promote, based on greed, fear and envy, Labour should promote
a positive case for taking Europe forward, based on Hope, and a
confidence in the ability of workers across the continent to create a
better future for themselves together.
But, the biggest gift
the Tories have given is in relation to their policy on the Right to
Buy. The Tories announced in the election campaign that they would
extend the Right to Buy from Council Houses to the private property
of the Housing Associations. In other words, they would tell private
owners of property that they must sell it to other stakeholders –
their tenants. For more than a century, Liberals and Tories have
raised the spectre against socialism, that it would confiscate
private property. It was a powerful ideological threat in their
hands. Now the Tories have thrown it away, by themselves announcing
that private property is no longer sacrosanct in their eyes, and is
open for confiscation.
Its now quite clear
that if the Tories support the confiscation of the private property
of the Housing Associations, forcing them to sell at huge discounts
to tenants, then this same right must also be extended to all private
tenants, or else the fundamental requirement of natural justice is
infringed that all should be treated equally. There are far more
tenants of individual private landlords than there are tenants of
Housing Associations, and in general, the former are in a better
position to be able to buy their properties than the latter, whilst
in general facing higher rents, and, therefore, a greater need to
own.
Labour had proposed
introducing rent caps to address this problem, but its now clear that
the solution that has to be promoted, is the extension of the Right
To Buy to all private tenants, at the same 70% discounts that the
Tories have introduced for Housing Association property. Labour
should commit itself to supporting Tenants and Residents Associations
along with the Co-operative Housing Federation to a campaign for the
Right to Buy to be extended to all private tenants, and they should
work towards such a right to buy for private tenants to be organised
by the TRA's and Co-operative Housing Federation, which could provide
tenants with access to all the legal and financial support they
require.
The basis upon which
the Tories have argued for the Right to Buy being extended to Housing
Association property makes this immediately possible. The Tories
have ignored the fact that these properties are owned by private
organisations rather than the state, and said that the goal of
individuals owning the property they live in overrides it. That
must then apply equally to tenants living in other privately rented
property, who must be given the same right. Labour does not have to just promise such a right from a future Labour government; it should begin
immediately to actively campaign for such a right now, and should
commit itself to amending the Tories Right to Buy proposals, to
provide all private tenants with the same right.
But, the Tories
argument does not just apply to the home you live in. Their desire
for people to own the home they live in, and to be able to buy it on
the cheap should also apply to the business you work in. Labour, in
its commitment to promote the aspiration of workers that the
Blairites have been so keen to base themselves upon, must apply that aspiration to
your place of work, at least as much as your place of abode. After
all, without a secure job, over which you feel you have some control
of your future, it is difficult to feel that you have the required
security of income to even consider the risk of home ownership.
Labour should use the
Tories own arguments in this respect to argue for a Workers Right to
Buy the companies they work in, and to do so with the same kind of
discounts that the Tories are proposing for the Right to Buy Housing
Association properties. After all, just as tenants have paid rents
to landlords for many years, thereby compensating them for their
costs, so workers have produced profits in the companies they work
for, for decades, that have been appropriated by the company owners,
which have more than compensated them for any capital they advanced
to start those companies.
Labour should promote
the idea of legislation for a Workers Right to Buy their company.
This would mean that workers in every company would have a right to
ballot, as to whether they wished to buy it. If sufficient workers
in the company were able to raise the funds required to buy, they
should then have a legal right to do so, whether the current owners
wished to sell or not. As with the Right to Buy houses, workers
should be able to buy these companies at a significant discount.
Labour should suggest that workers could buy these companies at a 70%
discount to their current asset value.
This would avoid the
problem experienced with nationalisation, and with the Lassallean
forms of state aided co-operatives, because it would require first
and foremost that the workers in the firm wanted to take it over, and
were prepared to run it themselves. But, it has the advantage over
current co-operative arrangements in that often workers only get to
take over businesses that are already bust, and usually then lack the
capital required to run them efficiently. This way, workers would
have an incentive to vote to take over the most efficient, most
profitable companies first, and by obtaining them under a Right to
Buy discount, would thereby provide themselves with a greater level
of capital with which to run the business.
Of course, these
limitation only apply so long as a Tory government is in office. The
choice of a 70% discount for the right to buy houses or businesses,
is a purely arbitrary figure chosen by the Tories. Labour should
commit itself to going way beyond those limitations, in order to
enable ordinary working people to fulfil their aspirations. Labour
should commit itself to introducing a Right to Buy for private
tenants to buy their homes, and for workers to buy their businesses
with a 99% discount. That would enable them to fulfil their
aspirations to have secure employment over which they have control,
and security in their home.
But, the Tories have
introduced other measures that would facilitate workers in achieving
this right to buy. They introduced the right of workers to cash in
their pension funds, rather than have to take an annuity. This right
should also be extended to the state pension.
The current state
pension is £6000 p.a. If we take a current interest rate of 2%,
that means the capitalised value of this pension is £300,000. In
other words, this is the notional capital sum that the state must
hold in your pension pot, so as to be able to pay a pension of
£6,000, i.e. 2% interest on £300,000 is £6,000. Put another way,
if the average worker is employed for 50 years, for each year they
have contributed, their pension pot will have increased by £6,000.
If workers had a right to cash in their state pension pot, therefore,
they should have the right to £6,000 for each year they have
contributed.
For many workers that
would amount to a considerable sum, which could then be used as the
capital required to buy their companies, especially at a 99% discount
to current asset values. That would be even more possible if workers
had the right to control the £800 billion of funds in their company
pension funds.
The Tories in search of
policies to cadge quick electoral support, have opened a Pandora's
Box, that provides Labour and Socialists with the means to argue for a real transfer
of wealth and power in favour of working people. The Tories, of
course, have no such intention, but that is no reason for workers to
limit themselves to the Tories narrow aspirations.
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