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Tony Benn announces his retirement from Westminster
The end of Fabianism in Britain
By Julie Hyland and Chris Marsden
7 July 1999
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Tony Benn, the veteran Labour MP and former Cabinet Minister,
has announced he will not stand for parliament at the next election.
At 74 years of age, he is the longest-serving Labour MP in Britain
and the acknowledged leader of what little remains of the party's
left wing.
Explaining his decision, Benn listed the issues he had pledged
to fight for that now brought him into conflict with his party.
These included, maintaining the welfare state, supporting higher
income tax to fund public services, opposition to privatisation,
higher pensions, restoration of trade union rights, opposition
to nuclear weapons and preserving the authority of the United
Nations regarding a declaration of war.
It is difficult to get this across inside parliament
at the moment because politics is reported in such a shallow way,
Benn observed. The issues that face us are difficult, challenging
and interestingand the level of political discourse is shallow,
abusive and personal.
He told the BBC, "I am not retiring from politics, but
I believe the work that needs to be done now to rebuild the Labour
Party is best done from outside. If you are in parliament at the
moment you are asked to do a lot of things that run absolutely
contrary to the pledges I gave my constituents and to my own convictions.
All progress has always come from outside parliament," he
insisted.
Coming from someone with Benn's political history, these are
remarkable statements. His life has been bound up with the Labour
Party and parliament ever since his childhood. In a recent interview
with the Guardian he explained: I was born at 5 to
3 on Friday April 3, 1925 at number 40 Millbank, which is absolutely
on the site of the Millbank Tower (Labour
Party HQ). Next door lived the Webbs, who drafted Clause Four
[Labour's constitutional commitment to public ownership of the
means of production]. So on the very same site socialist aspirations
were both established and removed. The house was full of politics
and I met Ramsey MacDonald in 1930 [the first Labour Prime Minister]
when I was taken to the trooping of the colour.
Benn's reference to the Webbs is significant. Sidney and Beatrice
Webb were the founders of the Fabian Society, which Benn has been
associated with ever since joining the Labour Party in 1942. Emerging
in the mid-1880s, Fabianism has largely defined the political
physiognomy of the Labour Party. It advocated a type of evolutionary
collectivism carried out primarily by enlightened sections
of the bourgeoisie, in direct opposition to Marxist socialism
and the class struggle ideologies that dominated the European
workers' movement.
Speaking about British Fabianism, Leon Trotsky wrote: Throughout
the whole history of the British Labour movement there has been
pressure by the bourgeoisie upon the proletariat through the agency
of radicals, intellectuals, drawing-room and church socialists
and Owenites who reject the class struggle and advocate the principle
of social solidarity, preach collaboration with the bourgeoisie,
bridle, enfeeble and politically debase the proletariat.
[ Writings on Britain, Volume 2, New Park, London 1974,
p. 48]
Fabianism epitomised this phenomenon. It was, said Trotsky,
a concoction designed to weaken the class consciousness of the
working class, to act as a counter-pressure against the working
class from above, from the sphere of official British politics
with its national traditions of love of freedom', world
supremacy, cultural primogeniture, democracy and Protestant piety.
[Ibid., p. 49]
The Fabians argued against the pursuit of the class struggle,
preaching social solidarity between workers and employers,
whom, they said, could be convinced through the force of reason
alone. They drew inspiration from a classless view of British
history and its traditions of parliamentary democracy. This provided
an ideal intellectual vehicle for a sizeable labour aristocracy
in Britaina petty bourgeois social layer cultivated from
within the working class through Britain's exploitation of the
colonial peoples. Though the Fabian Society was small, its views
became common coin amongst trade union and Labour leaders anxious
to preserve their own privileged existencefor whom social
revolution was as much of a threat as it was for the bourgeoisie.
Ramsay MacDonald, for one, declared that he belonged to this
new school of British socialism: We have no
class consciousness... our opponents are the people with class
consciousness... But in place of class consciousness we want to
evoke the consciousness of social solidarity.
Benn's history is steeped in all these political traditions
that found their finished expression in Fabianism: parliamentarianism,
liberalism and religion. His father, Williamlater Viscount
Stansgatewas a radical Liberal MP who opposed the coalition
between conservatives and liberals and transferred his allegiance
to the Labour Party in 1927, declaring that he would just have
to be a Liberal in the Labour Party. He later became Secretary
of State for India in MacDonald's minority administration of 1929.
His mother was a leading Presbyterian. Benn has said he was brought
up on the Old Testament, the conflict between kings who exercised
power and the prophets who preached righteousness. In the 1970s,
he described early British socialist thought as deriving from
the Bible.
Benn prides himself on his historical viewpoint.
Through his father, the experiences of the 1930s became a formative
influence on him politically. From this tumultuous decade of fascism,
defeated revolutions, depression and war, he developed a loathing
for class conflict. This reinforced his belief that parliamentary
democracy and social reform were all that stood between Britain
and chaos.
When Anthony Wedgewood Benn entered parliament in 1950 as the
Labour MP for Bristol South East, his Fabian views placed him
in the party's mainstream. His early career was distinguished
only by the successful fight he waged between 1960 and 1963 to
disclaim the aristocratic title he inherited after the death of
his father, which disqualified him from sitting in the Commons.
At around the same time he authored a pamphlet on constitutional
reform, published by the Fabian Society. This bore the logo of
a red tortoise, meant to signify the superiority of gradual change
over the hare of revolution.
Benn was a trusted member of the party's inner circle and he
was a speech writer for Labour leaders Hugh Gaitskill and Harold
Wilson. He was a liberal opponent of communism, but argued that
it could not be dealt with through repression. At the height of
the McCarthy witch hunts in 1953 he told the BBC: Fear breeds
oppression and if you try to oppress anybody, be they Communists
or Fascists or Christians, you strengthen the thing you are trying
to stamp out and destroy the thing you are trying to protect.
[ Tony Benn, A biography, by Jad Adams, Pan, London 1993,
p. 101]
In the 1960s and 70s, Wilson, and his successor James Callaghan
entrusted Benn with three cabinet posts. This included his time
as Secretary of State for Energy in the 1974-79 government. During
the mass strike movement of 1978-79, known as the Winter
of Discontent, he was charged with approaching the Queen
to declare a State of Emergency. But fearing the consequences
of this, he relied instead on negotiations with the trade union
leaders to bring the situation under control.
He wrote in his diary: There is a part of me that tells
me I am just being sucked into this terrible military operation
to hold the working class back. On the other hand, I have to protect
emergency supplies and argue for a radical programme for the Labour
Party. But there is no doubt I am compromised up to the hilt by
remaining in this bloody awful government.
Following the Winter of Discontent Labour was forced
out of office due to the well of hostility it had built up amongst
workers, and the alienation of significant layers of the middle
class. The Tories were swept to power in May 1979, under the leadership
of Margaret Thatcher. This was a seminal moment for Benn, in which
two great concerns came together to dictate a political shift
on his part.
Benn believed that the Labour Party was being discredited as
a vehicle for realising the social interests of the working class.
Moreover, the Thatcher government was intent on dismantling the
welfare state and carrying out a monetarist programme of economic
deregulation and privatisation. He feared that the next explosion
in the class struggle would surpass anything that went before
it, and Labour would not be able to keep it within parliamentary
channels.
These considerations, together with the split from Labour by
the right-wing Social Democratic Party in 1981, motivated Benn
to position himself as leader of the party's left wing. He ran
against leading right-winger Denis Healey for the post of deputy
leader, losing by less than one percent.
This was to be the high point of Benn's influence inside the
Labour Party, however. To his dismay, Labour progressively adapted
itself to the Thatcherite agenda, culminating in the ditching
of Clause Four and the creation of Blair's New Labour
Party. Benn became increasingly marginalised, losing his position
on the National Executive and seeing his Campaign Group
of Labour MPs dwindle in both size and influence.
Benn's retirement from parliament reflects deep and growing
concerns. A man whose life has been shaped by his striving to
preserve the rule of parliament and the sway of Labour over the
workers' movement senses that his two great political loves are
under threat. He has been fiercely critical of the Blair government
and its New Labour project. He described the recent setting up
of a joint Labour-Liberal Democrat cabinet committee as "the
beginning of the end of the Labour Party.
It's being presented as modernisation and reform. Actually,
it is complete realignment of British politics.... I think the
truth is what this will do is to obliterate debate in parliament
and obliterate choice in the ballot box," he warned.
Earlier this year he presented a bill seeking to assert the
supremacy of Parliament over matters governed by the so-called
Crown Prerogative, amidst criticisms of the "increasingly
presidential nature of the [Blair] premiership. His bill
sought the transfer of a host of powers to the Commons. These
are formally exercised by the monarch, but practically by the
Prime Minister, and include dissolving Parliament before the end
of a five-year term, inviting someone to form an administration,
declaring a state of emergency and declaring war or committing
forces to armed conflict.
This latter point reflects Benn's recent conflicts with the
party leadership over the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. He was particularly
critical of Blair's decision to authorise air strikes against
Yugoslavia and previously against Iraq without referring to parliament.
He said of the bombing of Iraq last year that its effect is
to destroy democracy in Britain at the very moment we are supposed
to be defending it abroad."
His decision to concentrate his remaining years on extra-parliamentary
campaigning followed Labour's European election debacle, in which
its share of the vote fell by 22 points and voter abstention reached
an all-time high.
Benn has long believed that, in its lurch to the right, Labour
has lost the support of the broad mass of working people. He has
called New Labour the smallest political party that's ever
existed in Britain.
But his attempt to rescue the authority of the Labour Party
from outside Westminster is futile. In the final analysis, the
influence of reformism in all its various guisesFabianism,
Labourism and the Communist Party's British Road to Socialismrested
on the ability of the bourgeoisie to grant real material concessions
to the working class. Today, however, under the whip of global
competition, official politics offers no such prospect. The undermining
of parliamentary democracyand with it Labourismis
rooted in the growing gulf between rich and poor in Britain. The
United Nations lists Britain as one of the most unequal societies
in the world, comparing social conditions there with those found
in Eastern Europe.
This social chasm cannot be bridged through the old political
mechanisms; all the more so when it is a Labour government that
is presiding over the systematic impoverishment of working people
at the behest of big business. Despite Benn's deep unease, social
conflict must inevitably assume more open forms in the coming
period, and workers will seek a new political vehicle through
which to defend themselves. Just as there is no longer a place
in parliament for Mr. Benn, so too there is no possibility of
breathing life into the Fabian corpse.
See Also:
Labour's European election debacle
raises the spectre of the class divide in Britain
[29 June 1999]
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