Over the
last couple of weeks, the challenge of right-wing populist, Geert
Wilders, in the Netherlands, had started to wane, ahead of this
week's elections. The reality of Trump's election in the US, of
Brexit in Britain, has begun to sink in to people across the globe,
and begun to cause an oppositional reaction. As I have been arguing
for a long time now, the material basis for the political centre,
that existed for the last thirty years, has collapsed. It was, in any
case, built on a fantasy of paper wealth that was presumed to grow
each year like topsy, founded on nothing but the apparently magical
properties of compound interest. That fantasy cannot be
reconstructed, but nor can the economic policies that rested on it
provide any solution for current problems, and so the basis for the
political centre has collapsed with it. As the centre has collapsed,
and continued to decay, so on the one hand it breeds right-wing
populism on the one side, and left social-democracy on the other.
In the US,
that groundswell that initially grew as part of the Occupy Movement,
and that began to organise politically in support of Bernie Sanders,
is now having to organise and focus even more to oppose Trump and the
Republican administration. Across Europe, following Brexit, and the
challenges being put up by Le Pen, Wilders, Grillo and other
right-wing populists, a similar regroupment and reorganisation of
social forces on the left is occurring. It takes a multitude of
forms. In Britain, it is the Corbyn movement; in France it is the
election of Hamon.
In other
places it does not appear even as something particularly left. In
Germany it is the return of Martin Schulz, as the SPD appears likely to
overtake Merkel; in the Netherlands, the social-liberal, D66 are gaining ground on the basis of its pro-EU federalist
programme. That is rather like the rise of the Liberals in Britain a
few years ago, who were wrongly seen as being a progressive,
modernist alternative to the Blair-right Labour Party, a delusion
that has returned, in ghost form, in recent by-elections, as a response
to the collapse into nationalism over Brexit of Corbyn's Labour
Party.
No one
should expect that workers and activists will arrive at the correct
solutions immediately. As Engels once advised US socialists, mass
working-class movements only develop the correct programmes by
learning from their mistakes. Only when those old ideas that
provided the basis for the last 30 years, represented by parties like
the British Liberals, the Blair-rights, D66 and the other parties of
the political centre are seen to offer no solution, and when equally
the kind of national socialist politics represented by all those
still influenced by the legacy of Stalinism, are also exposed, will workers begin to
develop the kind of internationalist, social-democratic programme
required to deal with their current problems, on the way to
developing the socialist programme required to secure their futures.
The success
of D66 in the Netherlands shows another aspect of this. In the
1930's, Trotsky warned the German Stalinists about the danger of them
responding to the rise of the Nazis by adopting a nationalist stance
themselves. He was right. As the German Communist Party adopted a
wording very similar to the nationalistic language of the Nazis,
instead of undermining the Nazis support amongst sections of the
working-class, and those who felt “left behind”, it simply
legitimised the Nazis arguments, and given the choice between the
authentic nationalism of the Nazis and the adopted nationalism of the
Stalinists, all those Germans who felt “left behind”, and who
sought an easy scapegoat for their predicament, flocked to Hitler.
In Britain,
Labour under Blair rather than addressing the actual problems of
Scotland, which would have required adopting a more radical
social-democratic programme that challenged the power of the
money-lending capitalists, and would have undermined the asset price
bubbles that created the paper wealth upon which his policies were
based, instead appeased the rise of Scottish nationalism with
devolution. But, instead of undermining Scottish nationalism, it
necessarily fed it, and enabled it to grow, as the basic economic and
social problems of Scotland remained unsolved, and allowed the SNP to
simply argue, “we need even more power; we need to take back
control.”
And the same has been true in the EU. The problems faced by workers
across the EU, and most starkly seen in Greece, Spain, Italy,
Portugal, and Ireland were problems that flowed from the adoption of
those same centre-ground policies of the last thirty years, and the
blowing up of asset price bubbles. Instead of dealing with those
underlying economic problems, for example, by promoting real capital
accumulation in places like Greece, to deal with underlying
differences in labour productivity and competitiveness, conservative
EU politicians papered over the cracks with yet more credit, financed
by the blowing up of even bigger asset price bubbles. And when,
right-wing populist parties, like UKIP, began to garner support by
pointing to easy scapegoats for those problems, the centre-ground
politicians simply pandered to it, calling for greater controls over
migration, or less power for the EU, when, in fact, the opposite is
what was required.
And, sections of the left were simply confused. Organisations like
the SWP, jumped on the nationalist bandwagon. I was amused
yesterday, to see SWP members standing outside Parliament with
banners calling for support for EU citizens living in Britain, for
their right to stay and so on. But, the SWP, in the referendum, were
calling for Brexit, or as they ludicrously styled it, Lexit (Left
Exit), which was always going to create the kind of carnival of
reaction that has been seen since the referendum result, and was
always going to create divisions between workers, and undermine the
position of EU citizens living in Britain! The SWP lay down with
dogs and seems surprised that they have woken up with fleas.
And, as I wrote a few days ago the ideas that underlie this have not
themselves sprung from nowhere. The leading members of some of these
SWP (or spin-off) organisations can regularly be seen on the
Kremlin's international propaganda machine, RT, as can the
mouthpieces of the remnants of the old Stalinist parties and their
fellow travellers, like George Galloway. They sit cheek by jowl,
metaphorically, with programmes that give vent to all sorts of
right-wing politicians and ideologues like Max Keiser, who features
assorted right-wing mouthpieces from the US, and Europe.
This foul brew of nationalist ideas ties together these populists and
demagogues of both right and left. In the same way that the neo-cons
fed off an external threat of Islamist terrorism, and Political Islam
fed off the Islamophobia of the Neo-Cons, so the same thing is
happening here. At the point that Wilders support in recent polls
was waning, Erdogan has come to his support, by sending his Ministers
to speak in the Netherlands, days before the General Election.
Having used the failed coup in Turkey as the justification for
strengthening his authoritarian grip on the country, he now seeks to
tighten it even further.
By sending his Ministers to the Netherlands, to speak to the Turkish
diaspora there, about something nothing to do with the current
elections in the country, but to whip up nationalistic support
amongst emigre Turks, for his increasingly authoritarian regime, at a
time when he has been attacking governments across Europe, Erdogan
knew that he would provoke a backlash, and he did. At the same time,
Erdogan must have known that this would play into the hands of
Wilders, enabling him to breathe life into his flagging campaign in
the days before the election.
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