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Britain: Labour Party conference pleases big business
By Julie Hyland
29 September 2000
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With a general election expected in May next year, the Labour
Party's annual conference held this week in Brighton came at a
critical time for Prime Minister Tony Blair.
The party is meeting just days after fuel tax protests by hauliers
and farmers swept Britain and Europe, winning widespread popular
support. High levels of indirect taxation have provided the means
through which successive governments sought to shift the tax burden
away from corporations and the rich onto working people.
Blair's efforts to "tough out" the protest, refusing
to make any concessions and threatening the use of the army, met
with widespread public hostility and helped strengthen backing
for the action. According to opinion polls, Labour's support is
reckoned to have fallen by as much as 15 percent, leaving them
behind the Conservatives. Blair himself is almost universally
decried as "arrogant" and "out of touch".
Just as disturbing for Labour, big business has made clear
its extreme displeasure with recent events. Their fundamental
concern was that the sight of pickets on Britain's streets sent
out the wrong message to international investors. They were insistent
that Blair must not be seen to give in to the blockades. The Economist
warned that concessions made in the face of protests "would
send the wrong signal to the throwers of bricks and the blockers
of roads".
Government ministers have admitted that they were completely
unprepared for the protests and the public sympathy they attracted.
They then thought it would be possible to ride the crisis by relying
on the favourable media coverage Labour has enjoyed for much of
its term in office.
With his eye on the stock markets, Blair struck a Churchillian
posethundering that he would "never surrender"
to popular protest. But his statements only deepened public anger.
By exposing the cynicism of Labour's claims to be in touch with
"ordinary" voters, Blair raised far-reaching questions
about whose interests his government does serve.
This set alarm bells ringing in ruling circles. The task facing
the Blair administrationas with all of Europe's social democratic
governmentswas to continue and deepen the offensive against
workers' living standards undertaken by its Conservative predecessors.
However, to try and prevent a repeat of the backlash against these
policies that had virtually destroyed the Conservatives, it was
necessary to present them as something different.
Thus was born the "Third Way", with all its deliberate
amorphousness. Under this slogan the Blair government has claimed
to be tackling poverty, creating a better health and education
system and raising living standards, whilst making sure that the
demands of big business for ever lower corporate taxes, public
spending and "competitive" wages were met.
Many commentators have noted that with the creation of New
Labour, politics saw the triumph of style over substance.
They are referring to the unprecedented reliance on the techniques
normally associated with advertising and marketing in order to
sell policies detrimental to the interests of broad masses of
the population. Labour's real watchword was not education,
education, education, as it claimed at the last election,
but presentation, presentation, presentation. So long
as one has a media friendly persona, plenty of focus groups and
some positive sound bites, any problem could be solved.
Blair was adopted by a ruling class incapable of offering the
type of social and economic concessions that had previously ensured
a degree of social stability within Britain. An admirer of his
Tory predecessor Margaret Thatcher, he concluded from the defeats
suffered by the working class over the past two decades that the
class struggle was now an outdated ideological construct. For
Blair, the historic conflict between capitalism and socialism
that characterised the last century was a tragic misunderstanding.
As long as the necessities of the market were correctly presented,
then all Britain's citizens could pull together in a new and unified
nation.
The fuel tax protests showed that no amount of media hype could
disguise the reality of most people's lives indefinitely. Under
Labour, there has been a squeeze on public services and welfare,
thousands more families and elderly people have been thrown into
poverty and the gap between rich and poor has widened. Public
support for the protests expressed the growing recognition that
the circle cannot be squared.
It is not only the Labour government that feels threatened
by this turn of events. Blair's "Third Way" was embraced
by virtually the entire political establishment. Leaving aside
the ideological decay that this reveals, for many there simply
was no other option. Official British politics resembles a one-trick
pony. With the Conservative Party reduced to an electoral rump
concentrated in the southern shires and the Liberal Democrats
remaining the proverbial "also-rans", all the hopes
of the British bourgeoisie were vested in Blair. At the very least,
given its huge parliamentary majority, Labour was meant to serve
British capital through two terms in office, thus ensuring enough
time for the Conservatives to regroup and rebuild.
The fear generated by signs that these calculations may now
be thrown into question was expressed most openly by Rupert Murdoch's
right-wing tabloid, The Sun. In a rare full-page editorial
on Monday, entitled Britain needs Blair to Succeed, the
paper concluded that the anti-fuel tax protests revealed that
"the entire political and media establishment which bought
into New Labour has been wrong footed by the national rebellion
against it". Explaining that, the mood of the country
is vastly different from what is perceived in London's media village,
the editorial likened this situation to the fable of the Emperor's
new clothes, and stated, "Ordinary people...feel excluded
from powerand they are minded to give the entire new establishment
a good kicking".
This could produce such a decline in Labour's popularity that,
with none of the main parties able to command popular support,
the next general election may result in a hung parliament. This
would leave Britain "up the creek and without a paddle".
The effect on international currency and stock markets would be
"uncertainty", the impact on business confidence would
be "potentially disastrous".
Politically, the Sun warned that New Labour would
be deadOld Labour would be back. The unions could be strengthened.
In short, "All the structural changes that we have all fought
so hard to bring about might be in jeopardy".
The standpoint of the Murdoch press can be summed up as fear
of a return to the type of open class conflict that characterised
the 1970s. Such concerns are shared by much of the political establishment,
who this week urged Blair to show "humility" and "contrition"
in his conference speech, whilst ruling out any significant concessions.
Blair should do a Clinton, political commentators
lectured, and make an "I feel your pain" speech whilst
pressing ahead with unpopular measures.
Faced with a possible roasting by the media, it was not surprising
that the Prime Minister was sweating profusely by the time he
finished his hour-long remarks on Tuesday. Six times he told the
conference that his government was "listening" to the
people. Petrol was expensive and pensions were too low, "But
I was elected to lead", he went on. That meant making "hard
choices". In short, there would be no index linking of state
pensions to increases in average earnings and no immediate cut
in indirect taxation on fuel. Labour would continue as before,
opening up welfare and public services to private capital and
further eroding civil liberties in the guise of "zero tolerance".
The media pronounced themselves quite satisfied. Times
journalist Peter Riddell described the speech as "unashamedly
pro-capitalist in [a] way that past Labour leaders could never
have been in public". Like a gushing uncle, The Sun
wrote, "The young man on the podium had done the job. He
had done just enough to make it all right. He had said sorry,
but not backed down".
Yet within 24 hours, despite a largely subservient party membership
and strenuous efforts to restrict debate, Blair was to suffer
his first conference defeat for six years. A motion calling for
state pensions to rise annually in line with average earnings,
presented by union leader Rodney Bickerstaffe and backed by former
pensions minister Barbara Castle, was carried by a 60-40 margin.
This was not the return to union militancy envisaged by Murdoch
in his nightmare scenario. The union bosses made plain that they
did not intend their resolution as a political challenge to the
party leadership. Rather they were seeking to protect the government
against the growing levels of disaffection and anger opening up
against it. Just one week earlier, government statistics revealed
that 100,000 more pensioners have been plunged into poverty over
the past year while Labour increased the basic state pension by
only 75 pence in this year's budget. With a public spending surplus,
there was no way Labour could get away with holding down pensions
any longer. Unless the government responded, the danger was people
might draw the conclusion that some more direct action
was needed on this question also.
Their efforts to convince Blair of this were in vain. The listening
Prime Minister's ear was only cocked for the voice of business,
which had instructed him to take the line of no concessions,
and verbal platitudes only. Blair and Chancellor Gordon
Brown both made clear that the conference vote would be ignored,
with Brown overheard outside the meeting telling John Edmonds
of the GMB union, stop f*****g with my economic policies!
Despite the praise heaped on Blair's performance, there was
no evidence that he has learned anything new over the last weeks.
The government is still bereft of a strategy to restore public
support for its policies and remains just as dependent on London's
media village and the City for its survival.
See Also:
Britain: government threatens anti-strike
laws following fuel tax protests
[21 September 2000]
New survey shows widespread deprivation
in Britain
[27 September 2000]
Britain
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