For the umpteenth time I’m hearing the
same, tired old cliches pouring forth from the annual Labour Party
conference, replete with the odd ‘we got it wrong but now we’re going to
get it right’. The economy that is.
Allegedly attacking the institutions that the Labour government
wholeheartedly embraced–principally the financial sector and their “fast
buck” culture–Ed Miliband, leader of the Labour Party, which even more
than Thatcher created the conditions for today’s economic meltdown, now
expects us to forget thirteen years of neoliberal, imperial rule under
the ‘party of labour’ with exhortations by the party faithful to return
to ‘our roots’.
I might add that Ed Miliband’s call to tax the bankers and accusing
them of being ‘predatory’, the tag ‘Red Ed’ that appeared at last year’s
Labour Party conference has resurfaced at this year’s conference, a
farce heaped on farce. (see my ‘‘
Not Red Ed’ – reinventing Labour, again and again… ‘)
The BBC was quick to point out the error of ‘Not Red Ed’s’ ways:
“Ed Miliband has denied that
his Labour conference speech – in which he attacked “predatory” firms
and a “fast-buck” culture – was “anti-business”.” — ‘Labour conference: Miliband denies being anti-business‘, BBC News Website, 28 September 2011.
After a raft of people attacking ‘Red Ed’ for, amongst other things, “kicking business in the teeth” we get definitely ‘Not Red Ed’s’ groveling retraction for daring to accuse Big Business of being predatory!
“In a round of interviews on
Wednesday morning, Mr Miliband said Labour would not lurch to the left
and would be “firmly in the middle ground” – but argued that the middle
ground was changing.
“He said it was not a left-wing
idea that there should be responsibility at the top of society, and
pointed out that he had also pledged to reward good behaviour in the
welfare system, by suggesting those who contribute to their communities
should get preferential treatment with social housing.
“Speaking to the BBC Mr
Miliband said he had been talking about “good business practices” and
“bad business practices” in his reference to “predators” interested only
in the “fast buck”.” — (ibid)
So, if only we’d had ‘good business practices’ (like laws?) we
wouldn’t be in deep doo-doo now? Problem sorted, sort of… but it
illustrates just how events are determined and controlled by the
corporate/state media’s stranglehold on what it laughingly calls ‘news’.
Note too, the derisory reference the BBC dropped in the piece about
“not lurching to the left”, a clear warning to ‘Not Red Ed’ to remember
which class put him where he is now. That which the ruling class
‘giveth’ it can also taketh away as the rest of us are learning to our
literal cost.
With a never-ending stream of speakers talking of ‘reinstating
Labour’s values’, a call to some kind of return to what? According to
‘Not Red Ed’:
“Unless we reform our economy,
unless we find ways of tackling these issues – and this has been a
problem for the Labour Party for decades – unless we get that political
economy right, we are not going to get the change we want to see.” — (ibid)
Note that there are no actual plans for ‘getting the economy right’
merely empty platitudes, not about how Labour would specifically attack
the crisis of capital but that it would do ‘something’, though what is
not revealed.
What is clear from the travesty called the Labour Party is that
whilst it may be bankrolled by organized labour, it long ago gave up
representing them (if it ever really did).
Yet sections on the Left seem still to be calling for ‘returning the
Labour Party to its core values’ (whatever they may be). Is such an
enterprise possible and if so, what would be the outcome in the current
situation?
In an attempt to answer this, it’s worthwhile reminding ourselves
that virtually since its inception the Labour Party’s ‘core values’ have
been Imperialist. Successive Labour governments have wholeheartedly
embraced the UK’s imperial colonial ‘enterprises’ overseas whilst it
allegedly defended the rights of workers at home, initially using the
name of socialism in order to sell itself (a word it finally abandoned
when in order to retake power, it dropped any pretence of being a party
of socialism, as if it ever was).
In the context of the current situation, the Labour Party, reinvented
again, or not, is structurally incapable of returning to anything
except its own miserable, traitorous past. It represents no one except
itself as an integral part of the political class, united in their
defence of Imperialism and their own preservation as part of the UK’s
political elite.
‘Not Red Ed’s’ speech at the conference is a wonder to behold. It’s
as if the thirteen years of Labour rule never existed! But the Labour
Party’s fundamentally reactionary policies are revealed by the following
extracts where ‘Not Red Ed’ applauds Thatcher for unleashing capital’s
attack on working people:
“Some of what Margaret Thatcher
did – such as council house sales, punitive tax rates and ending the
union closed shop and strikes without ballots – had been “right”.
“And New Labour also achieved
much, he argued, but “we did not do enough to change the values of our
economy,” said the Labour leader.
“And the result was a society
in which vested interests such as the energy companies and banks
prospered and the wrong people – such as Royal Bank of Scotland boss Sir
Fred Goodwin – got the most rewards, argued Mr Miliband.” — ‘Labour conference: Miliband vows ‘new bargain’ for UK‘, BBC News Website, 28 September 2011
What does he mean when he talks of “changing the values of our
economy”? What values is he talking about changing? More to the point,
what economy? What does any of it mean? It’s empty, meaningless rhetoric
that tells us nothing about the nature of the crisis. Instead ‘Not Red
Ed’ blames it on the greed of individuals, thus by implication, it’s not
the way our economy is (dis)organized but the failings of individuals
that are the cause of the crisis.
So, according to university graduate ‘Not Red Ed’ Miliband (son of
well known leftie Ralph Miliband) thinks the “wrong people” benefited
from thirteen years of Labour rule. So who are the right people? Surely
not us, we who have been stripped not only of our rights under the guise
of the ‘war on terror’ but also had our collective wealth stolen from
us by the corporations the political class represents.
So Miliband is saying that some corporations don’t have the right
values. Okay, what values should they have instead? After all, isn’t the
objective to get the highest return on investment for the shareholders?
That’s what makes capitalism tick. But of course corporations are
rarely owned by individuals these days. The major investors/shareholders
are other corporations such as pension funds and banks. So to
talk even of one corporation having the ‘wrong values’ inevitably
questions the values (such as they are) of all corporations.
It’s called Capitalism. It purports to run under an operating system
called the free market. Investment flows to where there is profit to be
had. And note, that corporations, including banks are making huge
profits even as the country is meant to be broke. It’s lots of small- to
medium-sized businesses that are going broke, not the corporations.
So even ‘Not Red Ed’s’ throwaway line opens up a can of worms for
capitalists; no wonder the ex-CBI boss Lord Jones said the speech was a
“kick in the teeth” for capitalists.
For as long as the ‘socialist’ Labour Party refuses to acknowledge
that the central obstacle to resolving the crisis remains capitalism
itself, talking of a change in values of the banks and energy companies
is totally pointless. ‘Not Red Ed’s’ rejection of a turn to the left,
seals not his fate, but ours. Unless there is a radical rejection of
capitalist ‘values’ I fear we are doomed. And it’s not as if we don’t
have viable, sustainable economic alternatives to capitalism (once we’ve
broken up the big corporations and nationalized the banks, the two main
obstacles, plus of course the entrenched political class, probably the
UK’s most intractable menace).
We have had sixty-six years of tweedle-dee, tweedle-dum politics,
masquerading as democracy. Every five years we kick out one ‘party’ and
replace it (or not) with the other one. Each government either does it
its way or, if we exert enough pressure, we can make small changes to
the system, that may or may not become permanent features of society, eg
the National Health Service. In truth of course it has never really
been ours to own and cherish as a valued member of our society (like it
is in Cuba for example).
Instead, free healthcare for all has become a political football, to
be kicked back and forth between successive governments, depending on
which way the wind is blowing. Yes, the Labour government pumped
billions of funny money into the NHS, much of it going to corporations
and ‘consultants’, all part of ‘Not Red Ed’s’ “culture of greed”.
Basically Labour’s version of neoliberalism was gangster capitalism
abroad and larceny and fraud at home. Life was great, don’t think about
tomorrow. Don’t think about what havoc you are wreaking on our culture
and economy. Now here’s a fundamental capitalist value: not thinking
beyond today. And believe me, this is an intrinsic and inescapable
feature of capitalism, borne out most dramatically by the events now
playing themselves out. To change it you’ll have to get rid of
capitalism.
Assuming society survives pretty much intact by the time of the next
election, are we as a people to put ourselves through yet another replay
of the same? Surely enough is enough of this bullshit of governments
paying off banks with our money and resources, when none of it is necessary, if we take the brave step of challenging the pirates and demanding, as a people, that we take over the banks. They did it in Iceland
for example. Treat it like the NHS, as a public service, here to supply
the necessary wherewithal for development and holidays on the Costa
Brava. That’s what it’s all about. It’s not about lining the pockets of a
few thousand fat cats and pumping up pension funds. Screw the
shareholders, they’re not people, they’re corporations that screw us
every day. We have done it before so we can do it again.