“Rise,
like lions after slumber
In
unvanquishable number!
Shake
your chains to earth like dew
Which
in sleep had fallen on you:
Ye
are many—they are few!"
(Shelley)
A
lifetime ago, in 1945, a General Election, much like this one,
returned a Labour Government that created the NHS, started building
millions of homes, including millions of council houses, nationalised
the coal, steel, rail, gas, electricity and transport industries,
despite the fact that, at the time, Britain's public sector debt to
GDP ratio stood at 200%, or around three times what it is today. No
one gave Labour a chance to win that election. The media took it for
granted that Churchill's Tory Team would win. No one believed that a
little, balding man with a funny moustache, leading a Labour Party
that comprised Marxists and left-wing socialists, who called for
outlandish things, such as an end to Britain's colonial empire, in
India and elsewhere, had a chance of winning. If today's
Blair-rights had been about, and their spin doctors, they would have
claimed that such an extreme, left-wing party, and vision, could not
possibly expect to win, by fighting on ground outside the political
centre. But, win they did, with a huge majority.
No
one thinks that Jeremy Corbyn is going to win with a huge majority,
like that won by Clement Attlee, in 1945. But, then Attlee had not
faced a PLP that continually sought to undermine him, in the way that
Jeremy Corbyn has. There were some Labour MP's who believed that
Attlee's programme was too left-wing, but by and large, those MP's
were solidly behind a set of policies that were far more radical than
those, which Corbyn is proposing, and from which the Blair-rights
demur.
In
1945, the kinds of progressive social-democratic ideas that Attlee
proposed were completely at odds with the conservative
social-democratic policies that had gone before. At the start of the
century, a number of progressive social-democratic policies were
introduced, such as old age pensions, and a minimum wage. It was the
Tory Chancellor of the time, Neville Chamberlain, who first drew up
the set of ideas for a welfare state, that was actually codified by
the Liberal, Beveridge, and implemented after 1945, by the Labour
Government. But, when in the 1920's, Europe was hit by the onset of
one of the regular periods of economic stagnation that characterises
the long wave cycle, progress towards that welfare state, and the
implementation of progressive social-democratic measures came to an
abrupt halt.
Even
by the 1920's, the majority of real capital in Europe was socialised capital, in the form of joint stock companies, and the majority of
privately owned capital was fictitious capital, in the form of shares
and bonds, along with the continued existence of large scale landed
property. The basic ideas of how a progressive social-democracy
should respond to the conditions of such stagnation, had been set out
by John Maynard Keynes. But, the only places those policies were
actually adopted were in Norway, by a leftish social-democratic
government, in Nazi Germany, and after 1933, by Roosevelt in the US.
In
a similar way to what happened with the financial crisis of 2008,
when real capital was destroyed in order to keep fictitious capital
asset prices inflated, in the 1920's and 1930's, although asset
prices did crash, the state rather than following the advice of
Keynes, made matters worse, by implementing policies of austerity,
and attempted to force wages even lower, which led for example, to
the attempts to decimate miners wages, which led to the 1926 General
Strike. As Labour Prime Minister, Ramsey McDonald, proposed cutting
the dole payments for the growing number of unemployed, it split the
Labour Party, with the party itself regrouping around its new leader
George Lansbury, whilst McDonald, rather like the Gang of Four in
1983, splitting so as to join up with Tories to form a National
Government that inflicted the austerity on the desperate workers. It
was under these conditions, just like those we face now, where for
more than thirty years, we have been told that only conservative
social-democratic policies, the politics of the centre ground, are
viable, that the idea of an Attlee Labour Government seemed a
ludicrous suggestion.
But,
Attlee's victory showed the idea was not ludicrous after all. And
after the victory, everyone became wise after the event, and
concluded that it was after all more or less inevitable, because
outside the small circles of the elite, it was obvious that a massive
sea-change had taken place. The working-class had suffered four
years of terrible slaughter in World War I; they had then suffered
another 10 years of struggle to defend wages, followed by economic
stagnation and rising unemployment during the 1920's, and into the
1930's. By the mid 1930's, that had begun to lift, at least in parts
of the country such as the Midlands and the South-East, where new
industries were developing. But, even before that had chance to take
hold, they were then subjected to another six years of slaughter and deprivation during World War II. Was it any surprise that the
working-class had had enough?
And
today, we face similar conditions. In the 1970's, workers faced
increasing attacks on their wages, as the long wave cycle again
entered its crisis phase. It led to a decade of struggle to defend
what had previously been won. By the late 1970's, even the
conservative social-democratic leaders of the Labour Party, had lost
faith in their ideology, and like McDonald, began to look to impose
austerity as their way out. By taking on the working-class, in order
to push through this austerity, and wage restraint, the Callaghan
government led Labour into confrontation with some of the worst paid,
but most vital workers in the country, which led to the Winter of
Discontent, as workers, fed up with years of wage restraint, imposed by
the Social Contract, whilst inflation continued to rise, refused to
lie down. That division, and the breaking of the bargain with the
working-class that social-democracy depends upon, caused workers to
themselves respond by walking away from that bargain. If Labour
would not support workers in times of crisis, why should the workers
support Labour at the polls.
At
the same time, those sections of the population that saw workers
militancy as a threat, were all too glad to go out and vote for
Thatcher, and her reactionary agenda. But, Thatcher's agenda itself
was not a panacea for capital. Far from it, by imposing austerity,
at a time of economic crisis, she simply caused unemployment to soar,
and economic growth to tank, whilst the under utilisation of
resources caused unit costs to rise, and to cover the squeezed
profits, the government continued to print money, which pushed up
inflation to as high as 29%. Unlike many of the Tories who write
about the 1980's, as a time of prosperity, but who never lived
through it, as someone who did live through it, I can attest that it
was by no means a time of prosperity, as unemployment continued to
soar to around 6 million, although after numerous changes to the
method of counting the figures, the official unemployment number only
rose to over 3 million.
Thatcher
herself was being challenged by conservative social-democrats in her
own party, as the economy tanked, and tens of thousands took to the
streets week after week to protest, and Michael Foot's Labour party
rose to over 50% in the opinion polls. It was only the treachery of
the SDP, and the Falklands War, that saved Thatcher. But, that is
one of those quirks of history. Having been saved by the right-wing
of the Labour Party, Thatcher's position was then consolidated. Foot
stood down as Labour Leader, and Neil Kinnock set about undermining
the party from within. He gutted the party of many of its most
determined activists, he undermined the struggles of Labour Councils
against Thatcher's austerity cuts, and removal of local democracy, he
undermined the miners in the great strike of 1984-5, and despite
shifting the party ever rightward, still failed to win the elections
in 1987 and 1992. Eventually, he did the decent thing and went.
But, the damage to the Labour Party had already been done.
The
party now stood on that same political ground that McDonald had stood
in the 1930's, indistinguishable from the conservative
social-democrats of the Liberal Party, and the Left of the Tory
Party. The basic ideological underpinning of social-democracy of the
alliance between the day to day managers of socialised capital, and
the working-class had been ditched, along with the economic strategy
of Keynes, and the role of the social-democratic state. Kinnock and
Smith set the stage for the rational culmination of that drift with
the assumption of power of Blair and Brown, and their acolytes.
For
more than thirty years, workers have faced hardship and struggle, and
austerity, whether they had a Labour Government or a Tory government.
Now faced with the prospect of another decade of austerity under the
Tories, made even more austere as a result of Brexit, is it any
wonder that workers, as in 1945, have said “enough is enough”?
That is especially the case with all those young workers, who have
seen their futures cast aside by all those old Tories, who have
imposed that Brexit upon them. That is why the polls are wrong,
because they fail to pick up the anger of all those young people who
feel betrayed. The Tories, the Labour Right, and most of the
pollsters believe that those young people will stay away from the
polling stations. The enthusiasm that Jeremy Corbyn has generated,
within the party and outside it, will prove them wrong.
Even
arch Blair-right, John McTiernan, in a documentary made for
Newsnight, by Stephen Bush, on Corbyn, had to now admit that what
Corbyn now represents, and what is clear from this election campaign,
is not just the end of Blairism, but also the end of Thatcherism.
So wide, and so deep has the phenomenon become, he said, that it
could not now be ignored.
And
that is right. Changes in the realm of ideas do not immediately
reflect the changes in the underlying economic and social relations,
but they do eventually catch up. For thirty years, the dominant
ideas of conservative social-democracy, were based upon individuals
getting rich, and the rest being propped up by welfare. But, the
riches often did not come actually from creating lots more new value.
As Marx points out, as against Ricardo, its quite possible for total
profits (net revenue) to rise, whilst the total new value (gross
revenue) falls. All that is required is for the wage share to fall
relative to the profit share.
In
fact, from the late 1980's, its not that the gross revenue did not
rise, it did, but the share within it of net revenue rose faster.
And, as these profits rose, and yet, a large portion of them were not
reinvested, a growing proportion went to speculate in financial
assets and property, pushing up their prices to astronomical levels.
And it was this speculation, the winning in the financial casino, that
was seen as the real means of becoming rich. Its not surprising that
Blair saw an important means of raising money being to introduce the
National Lottery, that they sought to build mega casinos across the
country, and that increasing numbers of people saw the way to get on
being to win the lottery, to become a TV celebrity, a sports
celebrity, or to win big pay outs from compensation claims and so on.
The
way the Lottery works is that every week, tens of millions of people,
many who cannot afford the money, lose several pounds betting they
might hit it big. That brings in tens of millions of pounds to the
lottery company, a fraction of which is then paid out as a Jackpot to
one lucky winner, who pockets several million pounds. But, it is
symptomatic of the system, which this conservative ideology
represents. We are asked to place our futures in the hands of a
gamble. Take what people are told about getting on at work. Keep
your head down, study and so on, and then you can move up the career
ladder, and you too can become a Chief Executive. But, of course its
all tosh! If thousands of people enter the bottom of this career
ladder, no matter how hard they work, study and so on, they cannot
all become the Chief Executive. There is only one position, and in
order for one person to get the benefits of it, all the rest have to
fail to get it. What is more, the game is rigged in favour of a
select few who already have the connections amongst the elite.
But,
things are worse than that. The chances of winning a lottery jackpot
are one in several billion. If you win a multi-week roll-over jackpot,
you might win £100 million. Wouldn't that be great? But, the fact
is that the richest people in Britain have such a lottery jackpot
prize given to them every year. The richest person in Britain has a
wealth of around £18 billion. If they just got the equivalent of 1%
interest on that, they would have an income each year of around £180
million. And, in fact, their income will be much greater than that,
because their wealth is invested in bonds and company shares, which
will give them not 1% per year, but more like 3-5%, or an income of
around £540 – 900 million per year. And they get this, not
because they have done any work, not because they have actually
invested money in some productive activity, but just because they own
these shares, and bonds, or thousands of acres of land.
That
is the way the system is rigged in favour of the tiny, ultra rich few,
who extract wealth from the system, and against the many whose role
is seen as being simply to schlep away each day on zero hours
contracts, on minimum wages, creating all of the wealth, that this
tiny few enjoy. Is it any wonder that workers are eventually, once
more, as they did in 1945, saying enough is enough, and that they
have had enough of Tory lies and deception. No its not, its only a
wonder that they have put up with it for this long! Tomorrow, we
have a chance to change all of that. In 1945, it was my father, and
his generation coming out of the armed forces that brought about that
change. Tomorrow it will be my sons' generation that can play a
large role, in once more setting a course for hope. All of our
generations should help them bring it about.
Arise
ye starvlings from your slumbers.
Arise
ye prisoners of want.
For
reason in revolt now thunders,
And
at last ends the age of cant.
So, comrades come rally,
and the last fight let us face.
The Internationale unites the human race.
(The
Internationale)
Vote
Labour. Kick The Tories Out.
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