Theresa May
says there is no such thing as Mayism. Given the total vacuousness
of her Tory Manifesto, and the fact that none of the vague
aspirations it contains have even been costed, nor any attempt given
to show how they would be paid for, I am led to agree. But, the
political approach of May can be given a name. I call it
Mayism-Leninism. In reality it is a pale version of National Bolshevism, which itself is derived from Strasserism.
Marxism-Leninism,
in contrast to Mayism-Leninism is the combination of the Marxist
method of scientific analysis of history and social phenomenon with
the Leninist conception of the party, as a disciplined organisation
based upon democratic centralism, as a means of applying that
scientific analysis in practice. Marxism-Leninism is then
distinguished from Mayism-Leninism precisely by the fact that its foundation is the scientific analysis of society, as the basis for
action. Mayism, by contrast is purely a subjectivist, populist trend
that makes it up as it goes along.
Marxism-Leninism
disintegrated, because under Stalin, the Marxist scientific analysis
was abandoned, similarly for a subjectivist approach, that simply
made it up as it went along, leading to violent swings from
opportunism to ultra-leftism. And in order to be able to make these
wild swings without having to provide theoretical justification for
them, the democratic element of the democratic-centralism was
abandoned, so that it became simply bureaucratic centralism, that
responded to any criticism or opposition with ruthless brutality.
All opponents were labelled wreckers or saboteurs, just as the Tory
gutter press today labels anyone who stands in the way of Theresa May
and her hard Brexit agenda.
There is
indeed no such thing as Mayism. It is characterised precisely by its
emptiness. It cannot even be described as shallow, because even
something shallow has substance to it. There is no substance to
Theresa May's agenda. The agenda itself is continually being made up
as they go along. In the budget just a couple of months ago, they
came unstuck with the proposal to increase National Insurance
contributions, because it conflicted with the Manifesto Commitment
set by Cameron in 2015, not to increase VAT, Income Tax or National
Insurance. They had to abandon the National Insurance hike. The
response has been to call this election, and thereby to ditch all of
those plans and commitments that the 2015 Manifesto placed upon.
What are those commitments replaced with? Nothing, emptiness, that
enables May to make it up as she goes along.
A strong and stable leader |
In reality,
such stumbling along with no road map as to where you are going is
the very opposite of being a strong and stable leader. It implies
the same kind of chaos that the USSR descended into under Stalin.
The actual chaos, the stumbling along from one crisis to another is
then made up for by the imposition of increasing levels of
authoritarianism. The strong and stable leader, whether it is
Stalin, Mussolini, Hitler, Duterte, Erdogan or whoever is not strong
because they have their finger on the pulse, and know exactly where
they are going, but because of the opposite. They are strong and
stable in opposition to the rest of society, not on the back of the
support of that society. They are strong and stable against the rest
of society only on the basis of the kind of authoritarian regime they
impose to keep themselves in place, despite the catastrophic nature
of the policies they implement.
Oswald Moseley. Another Strong and Stable Leader |
It is no
accident that the Mayist-Leninists of the Tory Party have been
emphasising this aspect of strong and stable leadership, as well as
their sharp swerve to the far-right nationalism that previously was
occupied by UKIP and the BNP. It has been seen many times before.
Cromwell insisted that only his strong and stable leadership under
the leadership of the New Model Army could save the country.
Mussolini said that Italy could only be saved and the trains made to
run on time, under his strong and stable leadership and the
discipline that his blackshirts were able to impose. Moseley offered
a similar vision to Britain, and the Daily Mail, who today back the
Mayist-Leninist agenda, were of course ardent supporters, in the
1930's of Moseley, Mussolini and Hitler, and the strong and stable
leadership they offered.
The fact
that Mayism-Leninism comprises elements that confuse many of the
subjectivist political pundits in the media is again not surprising.
It has been seen before, and it is symptomatic of the phenomena.
Mayism-Leninism is, in fact, a mild form (for now) of National
Bolshevism, which itself derives from Strasserism.
A Strong and stable Leader. He promised state intervention to make the trains run on time |
In all of
the recent furore over Ken Livingston and anti-Semitism, it is
forgotten that the true nature of Nazism, as with the fascism of
Mussolini, and of the Phalangists of Franco etc. was a right-wing
regime designed to protect the existing ruling class from the
possibility of its overthrow by a rising working-class, as the system
went into a crisis that required serious measures to correct. The
first victims of Mussolini and of Hitler were the communists,
socialists and trades unionists. Utilisation of nationalist and
xenophobic ideas fitted the ideology of these parties, but they were
largely designed to create the kind of populist appeal that could
mobilise behind them all of the plebeian layers of society, who felt
left behind and abandoned, and whose atomised condition left them
separated from the masses of the organised working-class.
In fact,
Mussolini had a great deal of financing from Jewish bankers, who like
Ettore Ovazza, were also prominent members of the party. It was only
from around 1938, as Mussolini became increasingly dependent on
Hitler that laws against Jews in Italy began to be introduced.
Meanwhile, connections between both Italy and Germany and Zionist
groups such as the Stern Gang continued. Mussolini in particular
believed that by supporting Zionist organisations he could gain an
advantage in the Middle East, against Britain. The Stern Gang itself
adopted the ideology of National Bolshevism, which derived from
Strasserism, declaring,
“that it would establish a Jewish state based upon "nationalist and totalitarian principles"”
General Sherman. Proponent of Total War. A Strong and stable leader who cleared away Native Americans from their lands to let the railway through. |
He is the totemic strong and stable leader! |
And, the state ownership and state intervention was a central aspect of the economic policies of both Mussolini and Hitler, and pretty much every other dictator of that ilk. The difference with Strasser was only that he took the anti-capitalist rhetoric of Hitler literally. May is following in those footsteps, and for her, and for now, the anti-capitalist rhetoric takes the form of attacking the large corporations, because what she seeks to achieve is the maintenance of her support amongst all of those small capitalists that comprise the core of the membership and electoral base of the Tories.
In essence, what Mussolini and the Nazis reflected was the fact that capitalism faced a contradiction.
It is that the economy is characterised not by those small capitals, although numerically they overwhelmingly prevail (there are around 5 million small capitalist businesses in Britain even today, though they typically go bust within five years) but by large scale socialised capital. This socialised capital does require greater regulation and planning of the economy, and it really also thereby needs to operate on a larger scale than the national economy. Even the huge US economy, with its vast market, and extensive geographical spread is led to create larger economic zones, for example, via NAFTA, and China is doing the same. In the absence of a socialist or internationally based social-democracy to bring about such conditions, history moves forward by other means. The US did it via a Civil War, Europe tried during several wars in the 19th century, and two major wars in the twentieth century to bring it about, before it resolved to do it peacefully via the establishment of the EU.
In Italy in the 1920's, in Spain and Germany in the 1930's, the ruling class feared that the means by which the regulation and planning of the economy would be achieved was by the working-class, under the influence of multi-million strong Communist and Socialist Parties, going beyond the normal bounds of social-democracy. It slapped down the working-class, but the only means of achieving the kind of reorganisation of the economy required, was by handing over the political regime, and control of the state to the fascists. It did not do so lightly, and the experience is likely to make them even more reluctant to use that option in future.
Far more effective for them was the achievement of those aims by Roosevelt with the New Deal, and the implementation of these measures of international social-democracy after the war, under the guidance of the Keynesians, with the introduction of the IMF, World Bank, and so on.
The Mayist-Leninists know that exit from the EU is not at all going to be like the story they have told themselves and the public until now. Its clear that the EU are going to give May nothing, and can give May nothing. Its clear that May has positioned herself for the hardest of hard Brexits, and the negotiating stance is now designed to ensure the rapid collapse of any talks with the EU. They know that outside the EU, with no deal, the UK economy is headed sharply downhill. The start of stagflation is already more than clear, with the RPI, which is a better measure than CPI, already standing at 3.5%, and with wages once more stagnant.
An international of strong and stable nationalist authoritarians |
No comments:
Post a Comment