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Britain: unions found anti-Blair ginger group
By Julie Hyland
23 July 2004
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On Saturday July 3, some 350 delegates gathered at the Trades
Union Congress headquarters in London for the founding congress
of a Labour Representation Committee.
The original Labour Representational Committee (LRC) was established
on February 27, 1900, by representatives from the Independent
Labour Party, the Social Democratic Federation, the Fabian Society
and the trade unions. At a time when the ruling class was waging
a legal offensive against the unions and the right to strike,
the LRC called for a break from trade union support for the Liberal
Party and the political enfranchisement of the working class within
parliament through the founding of a Labour Party based on the
trade unions. Its founding in 1906 represented the first step
by British workers towards their own independent political party.
But the party was never a socialist organisation. Financed
by the unions, Labour advocated a limited programme of social
reforms in order to ameliorate the worst excesses of capitalist
exploitation. Today, under conditions of the globalisation of
production and intense competition for markets and resources,
the Labour Party has abandoned even this goal and has been transformed
into a party openly committed to defending the interests of big
business.
By adopting the name LRC, the recent conference clearly hoped
to invoke Labours so-called glorious past. But
such an historical analogy is fraudulent. For unlike the earlier
pioneers of the LRC, the concerns of those gathered in Congress
House was not how to secure independent representation for working
people against the parties of big business, but to ensure that
workers remain tied to what has now become the favoured party
of businessLabour. They are seeking to safeguard and restore
the political monopoly over the working class enjoyed by the bureaucratic
monolith that constitutes Labour by building illusions that it
can be returned to its former reformist programme.
Though billed as a meeting of the rank and file,
the founding congress comprised in the main seasoned bureaucrats
such as veteran Labourite Tony Benn, MPs John McDonnell, Alice
Mahon, Alan Simpson and former cabinet minister Michael Meacher.
They were joined by trade unions leaders, including Billy Hayes
(Communication Workers Union) and Mick Rix (former general secretary
of the rail drivers union ASLEF).
It was supported by nominally left groups, such as the Stalinist
Communist Party, Labour Left Briefing and the Socialist Campaign
Group. These organisations are united in their bitter opposition
to any break by the working class from Labour, the mere mention
of which produces a chorus of denunciations of sectarianism,
delusions of grandeur and a mantra-like insistence
that Blairs party remains the mass party of the working
class by virtue of its connection with the unions.
It is now a decade since Labour, under its newly elected leader
Tony Blair, finally repudiated any connection between the party
and its working class basethrowing out Clause 4 of the party
constitution committing it to social ownershipand openly
refashioned itself as a big business party.
During Labours seven years in government it has implemented
a programme of privatisation and attacks on welfare more far-ranging
than even that carried through by Conservative Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher, policies that have widened social inequalities.
Alongside the United States, it has set out on a path of neo-colonial
conquest and military aggression, launching and joining wars in
the Balkans, the Middle East and Africa.
Yet none of the above had caused Blairs critics assembled
at Congress House to launch any challenge to this right-wing course.
Moreover, these policies have been carried out in lock-step with
the trade unions organised within the Trades Union Congress. It
is only the fact that the Labour Party faces complete meltdown
as a consequence of these policies, and the fact that Blair seems
deaf to the entreaties of the union bureaucracy to moderate aspects
of his right-wing course for fear of provoking a political rebellion
by their membersthat have finally pushed them into action.
In the June ballot for local authority elections and representation
in the European parliament, Labour fell to third place, losing
even such traditional strongholds as Doncaster, South Yorkshire.
At the same time, the partys official membership has
fallen to less than a quarter of a million and is, in reality,
much, much lower. So drastic is the decline that some members
have formed a Save the Labour Party group to highlight the fact
that the organisation is virtually incapable of mounting any effective
political campaign.
The founding congress of the LRC made clear that its aim is
to try and stop this hemorrhaging of support by mounting a pretence
that some life is still left in the Labour corpse.
The congress heard that the objective was not so much to reclaim
the party (the position traditionally put forward by those claiming
to mount a left-wing challenge to the leadership), but to rebuild
it.
It is certainly the case that it would be impossible for those
gathering at Congress House to mount any kind of effective campaign
within the party, given that virtually any one with a shred of
principle, let alone socialist convictions, has already left.
But the emphasis on rebuilding the party was also aimed at reassuring
Labours hierarchy that the LRC has its best interests at
heart.
The LRC sought to give hope to socialists within our
movement that Labour can achieve a third term with a radical socialist
agenda. But a wish-list presented to conference by Billy
Hayes for such a radical manifesto, said nothing about
opposing imperialist war, and did not even call for a fight against
Labours ongoing efforts to privatise such vital services
as health and education, which threaten a disaster for working
class families and the elimination of tens of thousands of jobs.
Hayes silence on such matters was entirely diplomatic, given
that some of those behind the LRC project have made clear they
support the occupation of Iraq.
Hayess proposals for democratising the party
went only as far as allowing annual conference to amend policy
documents drafted by the Labour Party hierarchy.
Such mealy-mouthed proposals make clear the content of the
professed opposition by the trade union bureaucracy to Blair.
In the last months, the Fire Brigades Union has disaffiliated
from Labour, whilst the transport union, Rail, Maritime and Transport,
was expelled for allowing its branches to sponsor other parties
besides Labour.
The General Municipal and Boilermakers union (GMB) refused
a request of £744,000 for Labour funds and the Transport
and General Workers Union (TGWU), Blairs own union, has
threatened to withhold £750,000 from Labours coffers.
Writing in the Guardian, GMB leader Kevin Curran spelt
out that the unions criticisms arose primarily because they
feared being excluded from positions of power and influence. They
have arisen because we [the trade unions] have been excluded
from consultation... A self-selected group of people lock themselves
away in secrecyand then when a decision is made we are all
expected to rejoice in its wisdom.
Thats how policy all too often emerges from No
10. We arent part of the process. Indeed, we arent
even aware that a process is taking place despite the fact that
we represent employees who would be affected. Then, when we are
told, we are expected to support itand if we dont
we are accused of being disloyal.
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