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Britain: Parliament overwhelmingly approves anti-terrorism
bill
By Chris Marsden and Julie Hyland
23 November 2001
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Mondays near unanimous parliamentary vote for the Anti-Terrorism,
Crime and Security Bill marks a political watershed in Britain.
It confirms the absence of any commitment to the defence of democratic
rights throughout much of the Labour Party and the ruling establishment.
MPs voted by 458 votes to five to allow the bill to pass on
to a second reading and then the House of Lords, after which the
government hopes it will become law before Christmas. The five
voting against included four Labour MPsJeremy Corbyn, George
Galloway, Paul Marsden and Brian Sedgemoreand former Conservative
minister John Gummer. The debate was limited to just six hours,
with a number of other MPs and the Liberal Democrats initially
abstaining in protest at the short time allotted.
At its second reading on Wednesday, the number of dissenters
increased, with 32 Labour MPs voting against, including three
former ministers, Mark Fisher, Peter Kilfoyle and Tony Lloyd.
Nonetheless the bill was passed by 325 votes to 89, a government
majority of 236, whilst a sunset clause, which means
the bill must be renewed every five years by parliament, was presented
as a triumph for civil liberties.
The bill enables Britain to intern foreign nationals suspected
of terrorism without the need for a trial, and gives the state
wide-ranging powers to access phone and Internet data. (See: Britain: government unveils draconian anti-terror
bill) As internment is a breach of the European Convention
on Human Rights, which prohibits imprisonment without trial, Home
Secretary David Blunkett declared a national state of emergency
last week, to enable the government to derogate the Conventions
Article 5.
The measures contained in the bill go far beyond the governments
professed aim of combating terrorism. The declaration of a state
of emergency and the bills 128 clauses impact significantly
on the democratic rights of every person in Britain. Yet Blunkett
has responded with impatience to anyone voicing concern. Earlier
he had dismissed his critics as airy fairy. During
the debate, even Blunketts own contempt for civil liberties
was exceeded by Labour MP Kevin Hughes, who derided the bills
opponents as the yoghurt-eating, muesli-eating, Guardian-reading,
sandal-wearing fraternity.
Explaining his concerns regarding the proposed bill, Labour
MP Brian Sedgemore described its measures as a result of panic
and hysteria following the September 11 terrorist outrages,
which he compared to the reaction within the British establishment
in the aftermath of the French Revolution.
Sedgemore is wrong in simply attributing the measures to panic
and hysteria; the government has used September 11 as a pretext
for implementing a series of measures that have previously been
blocked. However, he says more than he perhaps intends when he
compares the present legislation to that enacted by the British
ruling class following the revolutionary events of 1789. Edmund
Burkes Reflections on the French Revolution galvanised
the ruling class, who were determined that nothing but the most
ruthless opposition to social and political change was possible
if they were to survive. In October 1790, the Habeas Corpus Act
was suspended. Radical leaders were arrested on charges of high
treason after they held a national convention. Some were transported
to the colonies under the most brutal conditions. The Treason
and Sedition Acts of 1795 and 1799 meant that the Corresponding
Societies, clubs of working men that maintained contact with the
Jacobins in France, were suppressed. In 1799 the Combination Acts
banned all clubs and societies formed by working men for the purpose
of improving their pay and conditions.
Although there are few signs of independent political activity
on the part of the working class at present, the scale and scope
of the measures being proposed by the Labour government can only
be understood as a political reaction on behalf of the ruling
elite to the depth of social antagonisms within Britain and internationally.
Labour came to power in 1997 after almost two decades in which
working peoples living standards had suffered constant attack,
resulting in the widest-ever gap between rich and poor. Labours
task was to find some political means of stabilising class relations
whilst it continued the pro-big business policies of their hated
Conservative predecessors.
Traditionally, Labour had fulfilled this responsibility by
advancing a programme of limited social reforms designed to ameliorate
the worst excesses of capitalism. This time, however, Britains
rulers refused to countenance any retreat from their class war
agenda. The Blair government took office after the Labour Party
had abandoned its old reformist programme and was proclaiming
itself to be a peoples party, rather than one
prioritising the interests of the working class.
A key element of what became known as Prime Minister Blairs
Third Way, was his claim to have returned to a classic
liberal democratic agenda; describing the formation of the Labour
Party in 1906 through a split with the Liberals as a mistake.
Long before September 11, however, the Blair government had
already proved itself to be the most illiberal and authoritarian
in modern history. Having proclaimed its central political and
economic aim to be the defence of private profit through the erosion
of wages and social welfare provisions, New Labour has implemented
legislation curtailing freedom of speech, virtually abolishing
data privacy, restricting jury trials, and a plethora of other
measures. Under conditions where class antagonisms have reached
such an extraordinary degree of maturity, the ruling elite can
no longer tolerate genuine democratic expression for those it
seeks to exploit.
Labours repudiation of democratic principles was most
fully articulated in a speech by Foreign Secretary Jack Straw
to the Institute of Strategic Studies on October 22. Straw identified
the danger of terrorism emerging from what he termed failed
states. In describing what constituted the essence of a
healthy, viable state, however, Straw took as his starting point
political philosopher Niccolo Machiavellis (1469-1527) assertion,
The chief foundations of all states... are good laws and
good armies, and sociologist Max Webers (1864-1920)
insistence on a states monopoly of the legitimate
use of physical force within a given territory. Straw concluded
from this, whatever the historical reasons, where the basis
of the state, its laws or its armies, are fatally weakened, chaos
is the result.
Though Straws policy speech was couched in terms of being
Britains response to the threat of international terrorism,
its implications for Britain have now been made abundantly clear
by the new Anti-Terrorism Bill.
One need only recall that the Public Order Act was passed in
the 1930s, ostensibly to deal with Oswald Mosleys British
Union of Fascists. It has been used ever since to curtail the
political rights of the working class. The present bill can easily
be extended so that its provisions also cover British citizens.
Part 13, Clause 109, enables European Union legislation concerning
the pooling of judicial and police powers throughout the EU to
be implemented without parliamentary approval. The measures currently
under discussion in Brussels are by no means limited to terrorist
crimes. The creation of a European arrest warrant, for example,
could enable Britons to be arrested and sent abroad for trial
without ever appearing before a British court.
To those who base their political calculations on superficial
appearances, it would seem barely credible to assert that the
government is motivated primarily by the need to suppress domestic
opposition to its policies. After all, strikes and other forms
of protest are at an all-time low; the parliamentary opposition
is marginal; the Labour left has all but disappeared and the trade
union leaders are so fully integrated into the structures of corporate
management that they have effectively ceased to exist as an independent
factor.
The government claims that the new legislation is required
to deal with just 15-20 people. When Blunkett declared the state
of emergency, he described it as a technicality that
was solely aimed at enabling the government to imprison a handful
of suspected foreign terrorists. He has insisted that the public
take on good faith that the government will not abuse the wide-ranging
powers it is accruing.
Only a fool would believe such assurances. The present legislation
is being pushed through parliament under conditions of a highly
volatile political situation, both at home and abroad. The bombing
of Afghanistan is only a prelude to a more extended campaign to
determine who will control the oil-rich Central Asian and Middle
East regions. It marks the resurgence of colonial wars of conquest
that must generate widespread opposition. Most importantly, the
world economy is already teetering on the brink of recession,
threatening the livelihoods of millions of people.
Faced with a return to mass unemployment, and the gutting of
public finances to pay for further military adventures, the Labour
government has made it clear that it will respond by strengthening
the states repressive apparatus in order to deal with the
social and political consequences of its policies. As Straw so
crudely indicated, what is needed today is not government by consent,
or any other democratic ideal, but the possession of strong armies
and the preservation of the states monopoly of physical
force.
See Also:
Britain's "anti-terror" measures--a
fundamental attack on democratic rights
[14 November 2001]
Britain: Jack Straw and "The Invention
of Peace"
[17 November 2001]
Military tribunals, monitoring of lawyers:
Bush announces new police-state measures
[17 November 2001]
The 2000 election and Bushs attack
on democratic rights
[14 November 2001]
Bushs war at home: a creeping coup
détat
[7 November 2001]
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