|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Medicine
& Health : Food
Safety Issues
In row over genetically modified food
Blair defends billionaire cabinet member
By Richard Tyler
24 February 1999
Labour's close ties to big business are central to the ongoing
row over genetically modified food. The storm that unfolded last
week focussed on the role of Lord Sainsbury, Minister for Science.
His personal wealth is estimated at £3.3 billion, largely
from the supermarket chain of the same name. Labour Research,
an independent research group, claims that Lord Sainsbury earned
more than £36 million in dividends from his shares in 1998,
more than seven times that of his closest rival.
Lord Sainsbury sits on the Cabinet committee on biotechnology
and is responsible for the budget of the Biotechnological and
Biological Science Research Council. He has long-established links
to two biotech companies: Innotech and Diatech. He made a significant
investment in the US biotech firm Paradigm Genetics just weeks
before taking up ministerial office. Innotech Investments Ltd,
a firm funded by Lord Sainsbury, along with two other major investors,
put a total of £8 million into Paradigm.
Innotech controls Norfolk-based Elite Seeds and Floranova,
a seed and plant distribution company. Both are developing genetically
modified plants. Gatsby, a charity established by Lord Sainsbury,
has put over £2 million a year into establishing the Sainsbury
Laboratory in Norwich, where research into genetically modified
crops is carried out. The laboratory also receives more than £800,000
a year in funding from the Biotechnological and Biological Science
Research Council, for which Lord Sainsbury is responsible as Minister.
Just days before taking up his ministerial post, Lord Sainsbury
lent £2 million to Diatech, which own patents on key gene
technologies, to help them buy an exclusive office property in
Westminster, close to Parliament.
On his appointment Lord Sainsbury placed his huge financial
means and share holdings into a "blind trust", which
is supposed to preclude any charge of conflict of interest. Although
technically he no longer exerts day-to-day control over these
assets, they remain his property and he receives all the benefits
and profits they accrue.
The supermarket tycoon has given Labour more than £3
million since 1994, helping to pay off their £1 million
overdraft incurred after the 1997 election campaign.
New Labour came to power promising to be "squeaky clean",
against a background of various corruption scandals that had wracked
the previous Conservative administration. Since then it has been
hit by successive scandals, such as that involving a £1
million donation by Formula 1 racing chief Bernie Ecclestone prior
to legislation being drawn up exempting the sport from a ban on
tobacco advertising.
Two ministers have already been forced to resign for financial
arrangements that reflected badly on the government. The Paymaster
General, Geoffrey Robinson, stepped down after he was revealed
as the generous benefactor for several other Cabinet Ministers
to whom he had either loaned money or provided funds for their
offices while in opposition. Blair's closest confidante, Peter
Mandelson, was forced to resign from the Department of Trade over
his £400,000 low-interest loan from Robinson.
This has only strengthened Blair's determination to defend
Sainsbury's position in government. A column in Saturday's Telegraph
penned by Blair categorically states, "There is no conflict
of interest in David Sainsbury's position: he has nothing to do
with the licensing of GM foods."
Blair's list of reasons for ignoring the public outcry over
genetically modified food reveals the authoritarian character
of his administration: "The first is the importance of the
Government not yielding to an orchestrated barrage on an issue
of long-term importance.... The second is that we should resist
the tyranny of pressure groups."
The issue of "long-term importance" is the multimillion
pound investments by the biotech industry in Britain, encouraged
by up to £15 million in government handouts. The "tyranny
of pressure groups" are the worries which are expressed by
tens of thousands of consumers who do not wish to eat GM food,
given the conflicting scientific evidence.
A poll of Telegraph readers returned 74.3 percent who
thought genetically modified food should be banned. The BBC News
Online web site reported it had "received a flood of emails
from worried users--many calling for improved food labelling.
Others simply wanted an all-out ban on GM foods". Over 80
percent of those who have responded to the site say they would
give GM food a "wide berth". The Independent on Sunday
found that 68 percent of those questioned in their survey were
fearful of eating GM foods, with over 75 percent favouring a ban
until more research proved them safe.
In the face of such widespread concerns, it is significant
that Blair was not alone in rushing to the Lord's defence. After
spearheading the attacks on Sainsbury for most of last week, the
Guardian abruptly changed tack. An op-ed piece on February
18 by senior political columnist Hugo Young is revealing, both
for its abject defence of the right of such exorbitantly wealthy
individuals as Lord Sainsbury to sit in government, and for its
high-handed dismissal of the genuine concerns of ordinary people.
It pinpoints a growing fear among the political elite that wide
layers of society view both the government and big business with
increasing mistrust.
Unable to overlook the fact that just such a series of scandals
involving wealthy Cabinet members has affected the public perception
of Labour, Young writes, "The financial nexus is supposed
to be all-polluting and uniquely compromising. This is a given
of every British discussion of how ministers should be expected
to behave, and it is a plausible assumption."
Plausible, but wrong according to Young, who makes an unabashed
defence of the democratic merits of wealth and privilege. "It
cannot be conclusive," he writes. "A poor man might
be vulnerable. With personal assets of reputedly £3,300
million Sainsbury is the richest person in the country. Money
must long ago have ceased to be the prime, or indeed any, concern
of such a Croesus. In a rational world, this would undermine the
simplistic assumption made by the multitude that wants
to drive him out of government because of conflict of interest"
[emphasis added].
Young's criticism of the media over its handling of the Sainsbury
affair is again directed against allowing any expression of popular
sentiment to pollute the reified world of official politics. "The
public--this mysterious entity, summoned at the whim of the media
that can just about genetically manipulate its every reaction--don't
see it that way. Sainsbury may be clean, but it doesn't look good.
However useful he may actually be, out he must go, to propitiate
the gods of populism, infused by simple-minded prejudice though
they may be."
It is this mutual defence of privilege and wealth and hostility
to the social interests of ordinary working people that has brought
the government and its occasional liberal critics together once
more.
See Also:
International scientists raise concerns
over genetically modified food
British Labour government rushes to defend biotech industry
[17 February 1999]
BSE / CJD
& Food Safety Issues
[WSWS Full Coverage]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |