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Britain: Labour expels antiwar MP Galloway
By Chris Marsden
30 October 2003
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George Galloway, MP for Glasgow Kelvin, has been expelled from
the Labour Party for the sole crime of opposing the Blair governments
participation in the US-led war against Iraq.
Galloway faced five charges before the three-person panel from
Labours National Constitutional Committee (NCC) under rule
2A.8 of the partys rule book, which states: No member
of the party shall engage in conduct which in the opinion of the
NCC is prejudicial or in any act which in the opinion of the NCC
is grossly detrimental to the party.
On March 28, Galloway gave an interview to Abu Dhabi television
in which he is accused of inciting Arabs to fight British troops.
On April 1, he gave an interview to ITV news in which he was accused
of inciting British troops to disobey orders. He is also accused
of calling on voters not to back Labour candidates in Plymouth,
of threatening to fight for election as an independent, and of
supporting an antiwar candidate against Labour in Preston.
The latter charges were made to fill out the dossier, with
the main accusations being his supposed urging of Arabs to fight
the US and British invasion forces and inciting British troops
to disobey orders.
Galloway denied all the charges, preparing a 50-page deposition
to the NCC tribunal stating that he was being singled out for
punishment for voicing legitimate opinions shared by many in the
party. After a two-day hearing, however, the tribunal acquitted
him of only one chargeof urging voters in Plymouth not to
back Labour. He was found guilty by unanimous verdict of inciting
Arabs to fight British troops, inciting British troops to defy
orders, threatening to stand against Labour candidates, and backing
an antiwar candidate. The media and public were barred from the
tribunal, and the transcript has not yet been published.
Galloway responded by denouncing the proceedings as a kangaroo
court whose judgment had been written in advance in
the best traditions of political show trials.
His verdict on the tribunal is correct. Even the charges against
Galloway do not stand up to scrutiny. In the Abu Dhabi TV interview,
which earned him the hatred of the party leadership, he had only
asked rhetorically, The Iraqis are fighting for all the
Arabs. But where are the Arab armies? He went on to effectively
rule out the possibility of Arab military resistance, proposing
an oil embargo instead.
Galloway said of this charge and the supposed crime
of inciting troops to disobey orders, I didnt call
on Arabs to attack the British army, I called on British soldiers
to disobey illegal orders which is an obligation on all armies
since the Nuremberg trials.
In any case, Galloway was entirely correct to support resistance
by the Arab peoples to an illegal invasion by the worlds
most powerful imperialist power and its British ally Blair. And
his calling on troops to disobey what were automatically illegal
orders, given that the war against Iraq was an illegal war of
aggression, is entirely supported by the Geneva Conventions.
Galloways expulsion even flouts the partys own
rule book. As The Guardians Seamus Milne pointed
out before the verdict, the accusations against him relate
not to anything he has done, but only to what he is alleged to
have said... [S]ince the party rules specify that no member can
be disciplined for the mere holding or expression of opinions,
New Labour apparatchiks have conjured up a new category of opinions
so inflammatory they go beyond mere expression.
One need not whitewash the witchhunt mounted against the left-wing
Militant Tendency leadership that led to several expulsions in
the 1980s, or the expulsion of Ken Livingstone MP in 1998, to
acknowledge this point. In both cases, those expelled were at
least accused of practical breaches of the partys constitutionof
operating an entryist faction in the first case and standing against
an official Labour candidate in the other. Galloways is
a thought crime of Orwellian mould.
Galloway is considering as one option legal action against
the Labour Party at the High Court in London precisely because,
he says, Rule 2a (8) guarantees that a member may not be
expelled for the mere expression of their views and opinions.
Ive not been accused of having done anything, Ive
been accused of saying something they didnt like.
More generally, regarding the significance of his expulsion,
Galloway commented, Mr. Blairs response to the disaster
of the war is to attack those who stood against the war and to
root them out of British politics.
His remarks were echoed by the veteran leader of the partys
left wing, Tony Benn, who said, The message that is sent
out is: if you are in favour of the UN charter and peace, then
dont be a member of the Labour Party because if you do,
you might be expelled.
This accurately sums up the general aim and underlying message
of the government. But no one should expect Galloway, Benn or
any representative of the dwindling left wing to provide an effective
opposition to Blair. Even now, Galloway has not called for workers
to leave the Labour Party and wage a political struggle against
Blair. There was talk that he might resign and force a by-election
to stand against Labour, but he has not yet done so. Instead,
he is reportedly concerned not to test the divided loyalty of
his supporters by forcing them to effectively resign by backing
his candidacy. And Benn has famously declared that he will die
in the Labour Party.
The only legitimate response to Galloways expulsion is
for working people to draw the most fundamental conclusions regarding
the political character of the Labour Party to which Galloway
has been a loyal member for 36 years. In targeting the Glasgow
MP for his antiwar stance, Labour is acting as the political representative
of a powerful financial oligarchy intent on cowing and intimidating
all of its political opponents and even proclaiming the holding
of dissenting views to be criminal. Galloway has said that the
transcript of his interview with Abu Dhabi TV was given by the
Labour Party to the Sun, owned by media mogul Rupert Murdoch,
precisely in order to discredit him at a time when the public
was overwhelmingly opposed to the war: They gave them the
transcript; not only do I know that, but the Daily Record
was given it first and the editor rang me to say they had been
given it by the Labour Party and wouldnt be using it...
The transcript comes from MI6.
The Sun used the transcript to launch a campaign against
Galloway, branding him as a traitor. The press witchhunt
continued when the Daily Telegraph claimed to have uncovered
documents in a bombed-out building in Iraq indicating that the
MP had received money from Saddam Husseins regime. Labours
attorney general Lord Goldsmith then announced that he was conducting
a fact-finding mission into allegations that Galloway
spent charitable donations to an appeal set up to fund the treatment
of an Iraqi girl who contracted leukemia. On April 24, the Christian
Science Monitor in the US joined in by claiming to be in possession
of documents proving that Galloway had received £6.3 million
from Saddam Hussein. The Monitor was later forced to apologise
for its story and admit that its documents were forgeries.
The World Socialist Web Site responded to the attacks
on Galloway by explaining on May 3 that the aim of the witch-hunt
was to discredit the entire antiwar movement while intimidating
others who took a stand against Blairs warmongering by implying
that it was led by stooges of Saddam Hussein. (http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/may2003/gall-m03.shtml)
On May 6, Galloway was suspended from the Labour Party. We
responded by writing on May 21, Blair made plain his contempt
for public opinion, when in the run-up to the war he blithely
dismissed the 2 million-strong antiwar protest in London on February
15, and insisted that history would be his judge,
as opposed to the electorate.
Now contempt has been replaced by an active suppression
of dissenting views that will not stop with Galloway. His fate
is meant to intimidate all opponents of the government, both within
the party and in the population at large. (http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/may2003/gall-m21.shtml)
Galloways expulsion confirms the prescience of these
warnings and Labours readiness to trample on democratic
rights in order to defend the interests of its big business backers.
His fate is indeed a warning that the government is now intent
on actively suppressing all dissenting views.
Former cabinet minister Robin Cook, who resigned over the war,
has demonstrated his political cowardice in supporting the party
leaderships claim that Galloways expulsion is a special
casetelling Scotlands Daily Record, I
have had no pressure on me from within the party to stop making
the case against the war. Nor have the 130 Labour MPs who voted
against the war. But make no mistake that only those
who toe the line will be safe in the future. There are already
reports that Glenda Jackson MP could face disciplinary action
for calling for Blairs resignation over Iraq.
More important still, the governments draconian antiterrorism
laws have already been used by the police last month to arrest
144 people protesting against an arms fair in London. The civil
rights group Liberty has challenged the use of emergency powers
contained in sections 44 (1) and 44 (2) of the Terrorism Act 2000
as illegal. Libertys court action has revealed that on two
occasionsfrom August 13 for 28 days and from September 11
for 28 daysthe Metropolitan Police had unrestrained power
to treat everyone in London as a terrorist, and stop, search and
hold them without cause or reasonable suspicion. The Met. has
already declared that the provisions of the legislation could
be used against those demonstrating against President Bushs
November 19 state visit to Britain, which will be policed by up
to 250 armed officers under the leadership of Londons head
of antiterrorist and security operations, David Veness.
Under the rule of the Blair government, all opponents of war
are to be treated as traitors and potential terrorists. The grave
dangers this poses to democratic rights cannot be answered by
any partial protest against Labour, but only through a political
break with the party of the oligarchy and the building of a genuine
socialist party by the working class.
See Also:
Christian Science Monitor
admits using forged documents against antiwar British MP Galloway
[5 July 2003]
Britain: Labour Party suspends
MP George Galloway for antiwar stance
[21 May 2003]
Britain: Media attack on MP
George Galloway aimed at smearing antiwar protests
[3 May 2003]
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