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WSWS : News
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: Britain
No to the European UnionYes to the United Socialist
States of Europe
Statement by the Socialist Equality Party (Britain)
14 May 2004
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The U-turn by Prime Minister Tony Blair in accepting the need
for a referendum on the proposed constitution for the European
Union (EU) has provoked a political crisis in Britain and Europe.
His call was made without any reference to his cabinet immediately
on his return from Washington on April 19, after having rejected
such a move only three weeks before. It was an attempt by a weakened
government to placate right-wing critics in Britain. Blair faced
the threat of a withdrawal of the backing of Rupert Murdochs
News Corporation and the prospect of the Conservatives making
a referendum demand the centre of their election campaign in the
local and European elections on June 10, and the general election
expected for May 2005. He therefore accepted a referendum in principle,
while making clear that this would not take place until well after
the general election.
Blair still hopes to convince the bourgeoisie in Britain and
his allies in Washington that he can play a key role in shaping
Europe in their interests. But irrespective of his aims, Blairs
announcement risks bringing to a head conflicts within the bourgeoisie
that he has sought to stifle.
It is imperative that the working class determines its own
independent attitude to the fundamental question of European integration.
The European population has every right to decide the continents
fate. But this cannot be done in a referendum, whose politically-loaded
terms will be decided by the Blair government and its counterparts.
Workers must be politically hostile to both sides of the official
debate on the European Union. They have no interest in supporting
any aspect of the EU project, which is being carried out entirely
at the behest of big business and the banks. In the event of a
referendum being held on any aspect of EU consolidation, therefore,
the working class must vote no. But workers must also
be implacably hostile to the official no camp that
is dominated by sections of the bourgeoisie who are just as reactionary
and anti-democratic as those leading the yes campaign.
The progressive and necessary task of unifying Europe and overcoming
its divisions into antagonistic nation states is the responsibility
of the working class itself. This requires the development of
a political movement against all sections of capital and its market-driven
EU agenda, for the creation of the United Socialist States of
Europe.
Mounting US-European conflicts
The growing conflict within the ruling class over European
integration raises grave dangers for working people throughout
the continent. At its heart it is driven forward by the escalating
rivalries between the US and the major European powers. These
issues are being played out in Britain because it has become the
focus of this incendiary global conflict.
Blairs government is hostile to any democratic control
by the electorate. Just as he went to war against Iraq in defiance
of the popular will, so Blair would also have endorsed the EU
constitution without reference to the views of the British people.
His retreat was made in the face of a determined campaign led
by the Murdoch press, at the cost of angering his European partners
whom he never consulted and thrusting him into a fight he never
wanted.
Blair is being moved by events, rather than shaping them. He
is seeking to manoeuvre under conditions where his strategy since
coming to power seven years ago is in tatters.
During the entire postwar era, British imperialism has sought
to maintain a world role for itself based on an acceptance of
US hegemony. By offering itself as Washingtons most trusted
ally both internationally and within Europe, Britain has been
able to punch above its weight and to strengthen its hand against
the other major European powers. Blair attempted to continue this
perspective, but under dramatically altered international conditions.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, and particularly since
the coming to power of the Bush administration, the dominant sections
of the US bourgeoisie have broken with the policy of compromise
with the European powers and Japan through such mechanisms as
the United Nations and NATO.
In a desperate effort to offset its economic crisis, US imperialism
is seeking to reorganise the world under its undisputed hegemony
through an explosion of military conquest, directed not only against
the smaller countries such as Iraq, but also against Americas
major imperialist rivals.
Blairs strategy has been based on an accommodation with
this explosion of US aggression, even at the risk of alienating
his European partners, as he did over Iraq. But he nevertheless
considered that this stand was entirely compatible with his intention
to place Britain at the heart of Europe, epitomised
by his claim to be a bridge between the US and Europe and a moderating
influence on American unilateralism.
Blair calculated that British participation in the EU project
was both necessary and desirable. It was his hope that he could
continue to utilise US influence to subvert the dominance of Germany
and France and to ensure that Europe developed as a loose free-trade
zone that did not conflict with the transatlantic alliance. Indeed
Britains appeal to Washington was precisely as a trustworthy
ally in Europe.
Since conceding that a referendum should be held, Blair has
mounted a defence of Britains role in Europe that is designed
to undermine the strident anti-European stand of the Conservatives.
But he has done so by pitching himself as a determined advocate
of British sovereignty, the transatlantic alliance and a vision
of the continent free of expensive welfare provisions, deregulated
and open to US penetration.
Blair argues that Britain can lead the accession countries
in Eastern Europe in a pro-US campaign to reshape the continent.
He told the April 30 edition of Murdochs Times, that
Enlargement should reinforce liberal economies and the alliance
with the US.
He argued that the East European states share the same
vision for Europes future direction, as they were
determined to preserve this independence within the EU,
believe in a liberal, competitive economy and, perhaps
most importantly, are keenly aware of the role that the
United States has played in helping them to achieve their freedom
and are determined to maintain its partnership with the EU.
Blairs vision for Europe echoes the efforts of Washington
to curtail the power of France and Germany, and to assert Americas
role as a European power by playing off what US Defence Secretary
Donald Rumsfelds referred to as new Europe in
a struggle against old Europe.
That Blair makes such an appeal confirms the extent to which
the dominant voices within Washington have broken with Americas
old policy of supporting European integration as a means of stabilising
the continent and opposing Soviet expansion, in favour of ensuring
that Europe remains politically divided and incapable of advancing
itself as a serious rival to US might. Should Blair win the support
he seeks from the bourgeoisie in Britain and the US, in the long
run this would do nothing to lessen inter-imperialist antagonisms.
The impact of the Iraq crisis
Tensions between America and Europe, and within Europe itself,
that were manifest at the time of the invasion of Iraq have only
been worsened by the difficulties facing the US-led occupation.
The growing national resistance faced by US and British troops,
together with the ever-worsening scandal over torture and human
rights abuses, will not signal a retreat by Washington. The Bush
administration is determined to succeed in its efforts to subjugate
the Middle East, and in this it has the full support of the Democrats.
They are demanding firstly of Britain that it despatch thousands
of extra troops and for the European powers and the United Nations
to support the so-called transfer of sovereignty to
Washingtons puppet regime on June 30.
In Europe, however, there is mounting reluctance to become
embroiled in what is shaping up to be a second Vietnam. That reluctance
has been strengthened by the fall of Washingtons other major
European ally, Spains José María Aznar, as
a result of mass anti-war sentiment.
When Spains incoming social democratic government declared
that it would withdraw its troops from Iraq, this prompted ferocious
denunciations by the US media, slandering the Spanish people as
appeasers and cowards.
On every front the US is responding to its crisis with a reckless
offensive. In Iraq it has stepped up its violent repression of
the civilian population. And abandoning all attempts at impartiality
in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, President George W. Bush
ripped up the so-called road map peace accord jointly
negotiated with the EU and embraced Israeli Prime Minister Ariel
Sharons plan to unilaterally seize most of the West Bank.
Such actions only intensify Blairs difficulties, but
he is determined to maintain his alliance with Washington at all
costs. Blair acts as the political flunkey of a financial oligarchy,
of whom Murdoch is only the most high profile representative.
This layer views trade with Europe as only one area of interest
that is subordinate to their ability to exploit the resources
of the entire world. They look to Americas military might
as the primary guarantor of their success in despoiling the planet
and regard the US economic model of deregulation and an absence
of welfare provision as their template for social relations everywhere.
To the extent that this ruling layer is concerned with a particularly
defined interest of British imperialism, it is its strength as
a financial power: Britain as the largest overseas investor in
the US, as a safe tax haven and the pound as a secondary alternative
to the dollar. Moreover, Britains geopolitical interests
are also global. It cannot afford to be left out of the major
redivision of the world that the US is leading, particularly in
the oil-rich regions of the Middle East and Eurasia.
Hence the dominance of this pro-US wing within the British
bourgeoisie. They view any strengthening of the homogeneity of
European capital as a political threat. The only aspects of the
EU agenda they are prepared to endorse are the elimination of
all restrictions on capital mobility and the imposition of measures
that deregulate the labour market so as to ensure the maximum
exploitation of the working class. They are for a single market,
but a politically disunited Europe. If Blair does not give them
that, they have made clear they will ditch him and champion the
Tories instead.
For this reason Blair has determinedly faced off all attacks
on his alliance with Washington, with his spokesman declaring,
It is obvious that there is a desirereflected in the
mediato try and drive divisions between us and the US. And
that is not going to be allowed to happen.
Blair can do nothing that will alienate the oligarchs because
he has no other social base for his policies. Indeed, his readiness
to translate the demands of the super-rich into government policy
has succeeded in deepening the isolation of his government from
the broad mass of working people.
As the situation in Iraq has deteriorated and Blairs
unpopularity has deepened, even his most sycophantic backers have
begun openly questioning the wisdom of his strategy and his own
future as prime minister. There are reports that only a minority
of ministers are now prepared to back Blair as party leader should
Labour win a third term in office and that some are considering
moving against him prior to next years general election.
Writing in the normally fiercely pro-Blair Guardian, Polly
Toynbee concluded, there is no good news anywhere on the
horizon. Not in Iraq, America or Europe... When Blair addresses
one of the wicked issues, he begins to seem more like part of
the problem than the solution.
Europes reaction
Amongst Blairs critics there is a belief that he has
endangered Britains interests by too closely aligning himself
with the Bush administration. Many are insistent that it is vital
that the prime minister now distances himself from Washington
and tries to check American unilateralism by aligning himself
with the more critical stand taken by Germany, France and the
new Spanish government.
Despite the level of concerns expressed, however, there is
something impotent and desperate about such entreaties. Those
suggesting a closer alignment with Europe do so only in an effort
to moderate and curb the worst excesses of the US administration.
Few believe an alliance with Europe can achieve more than this,
given the extent of Americas military supremacy and the
absence of any ability or willingness on the part of the European
powers to seriously challenge Washingtons hegemony. Amongst
those who are raising the possibility of Blair being replaced,
there is virtual unanimity that the only possible alternative
is Chancellor Gordon Brown, who has reacted by stepping up his
own Euro-sceptical rhetoric and holding a number of meetings with
Murdoch.
To date the response of the European bourgeoisie to Americas
unilateralist turn has been to seek some form of accommodation.
The EU has lent its backing for Bush and Sharons offensive
on the West Bank and is actively seeking some agreement on Iraq
through the mechanism of the UN. Blair is only the most consistent
appeaser with respect to US militarism. Europe, together with
Japan and China, is also continuing to bankroll Americas
huge debtsnever once threatening any serious disciplinary
or retaliatory action against it.
This poses the European bourgeoisie with a strategic dilemma.
Every concession to Washington only whets its appetite for more.
The only possible counterweight to complete subordination available
to the European bourgeoisie is to strive to integrate the continent,
while building up its own military capabilities.
The draft EU constitution represents precisely such an attempt
to consolidate Europe as a unified economic, political and military
challenger to the US. The draft proposes giving the EU exclusive
competence over monetary policy in the euro zone and the
role of coordinating economic, employment and social policies.
This would be a recipe for major attacks on welfare provisions
in order to pay for tax breaks and other incentives to business.
Internationally the draft constitution sets out to grant the
EU powers covering all areas of foreign policy and all questions
relating to the Unions security, including the progressive
framing of a common defence policy, which might lead to a common
defence. This is a clear attempt to establish Europe as
a military force independent of the US and NATO, replete with
its own command structure and foreign minister.
It is this which explains the insistence by Blair and Brown
that they will not sign up to any treaty which does not guarantee
a national veto on tax and fiscal policy and ensures that the
EU has no right to determine a common stance on foreign policy,
social security and defence. Should Germany and France concede
to such demands, it would eviscerate the EU constitution. Hence
the angry reaction by Paris and Berlin to Blairs referendum
decision. Even before his u-turn, the possibility of a two-track
Europe was being raiseda continental version of the coalition
of the willing led by Germany and France that would exclude
those countries that failed to ratify the constitution. After
meeting with Blair, French President Jacques Chirac raised the
possibility of including a ratify or quit clause into
the constitution.
It is questionable as to how far the European bourgeoisie will
proceed on a course that threatens to bring it into direct conflict
with the US. In the final analysis, all they are seeking is to
strengthen their own hand at the negotiating tables and secure
a greater share in the ongoing efforts to divide up the worlds
markets and resources.
For the United Socialist States of Europe
The only basis on which to oppose the drive to militarism and
colonial conquest being spearheaded by Washington, and to defend
social gains and democratic rights, is through a combined political
offensive of the European working class.
The one goal shared by all sections of the bourgeoisie is the
desire to destroy workers living standards and democratic
rights. The most enthusiastic advocates of the EU and its staunchest
critics within the ruling elites agree that Europes still
relatively extensive welfare provisions must be dismantled, the
state sector privatised and all restrictions on the activities
of the transnational corporations eliminated.
It is this which dictates the efforts by Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder to completely refashion Germanys economic and
social policies by 2010, and the strivings throughout Europe to
eliminate pensions and other social benefits that have led to
mass demonstrations in opposition.
The accession of the Eastern European countrieswhere
wages are as little as a fifth of their level in Western Europe,
social welfare is practically non-existent, and corporate tax
is minimalwill be used to drive down wages and conditions
throughout Europe. Accession will inaugurate a combined offensive
of governments and the major corporations, which threaten relocation
if wage cuts, speed ups and job losses are not accepted. Far from
levelling up the conditions facing workers in the countries formerly
run by the Stalinist regimes, workers in the west will see their
conditions levelled down.
Workers in Britain must be hostile to all attempts to sow divisions
between them and their brothers and sisters in Germany, France
and throughout Europe. The EUs opponents within the bourgeoisie
have attempted to dress up their agenda in democratic clothes
and to utilise patriotic rhetoric in order to deceive and disorient
working people. And they have had some success in manipulating
the legitimate grievances felt towards the EUs undemocratic
structuresespecially under conditions where the introduction
of the euro was accompanied everywhere by massive price hikes.
But their road is not towards democracy, but towards war and repression
in alliance with Washington and on behalf of a predatory oligarchy.
It would be equally false to place any confidence in the EU
as offering a progressive alternative, or even a check on US military
aggression and the free market model associated with American
capitalism.
European integration is not simply the inevitable objective
process that proceeds in accord with economic logic, as it is
portrayed by the majority of the governments and media on the
continent. From its inception the EU project has been determined
by the economic and political requirements of the dominant sections
of the European bourgeoisie. Under conditions of relative social
peace at home and the friendly competition with the US that dominated
the post World War II period, this project was portrayed as benign
and progressiveas a means of overcoming the terrible national
divisions that had twice plunged Europe into all-out war and a
means of securing economic development by creating a large and
efficient market that could in turn provide the basis for developing
Europes extensive network of social provisions.
Today this seems like a distant memory. Under capitalism European
unification means the domination of the continent by the strongest
imperialist powers. Its aim is still to create a vast internal
market, but one with an abundant supply of cheap labour and without
expensive social provisions that can end all restraints on the
exploitation of Europes people by the major corporations.
If the old professions of a social Europe ring
hollow, then so too does the claim of the European powers to be
pursuing a purely defensive military policy within the NATO and
UN framework. The fall of the Soviet Union has not brought about
a decline in militarism, but the reverse. Appeals to pacifism
have given way to an attempt by Europe to strengthen its own military
capabilities so that it can assume the role at least of a junior
partner in the US campaign to reimpose colonial-style subjugation
of the worlds peoples.
The only means of uniting Europe in a progressive and harmonious
fashionthat would genuinely make it a powerful counter-pole
to American imperialismis unification from below. The alternative
to the Europe of the big banks and corporations is not a retreat
into national isolation, but the forging of a political movement
for a Europe shaped by the fundamental social and economic requirements
of the working class on the basis of a revolutionary socialist
policy.
The United Socialist States of Europe is the only conceivable
alternative to the terrible prospect of further wars of colonial
conquest, social devastation and right-wing reaction that is threatened
by the bourgeoisie of Europe and America.
Bitter experience has shown that opposition to the warmongering
of US imperialism can be developed only in conflict with Europes
governments and institutions, which have their own predatory military
ambitions. The working class of Europe must unite their forces
in recognition of the irreconcilable clash of interests between
the European and American working class on the one side, and American
and European imperialism on the other.
To fight for this socialist and internationalist perspective,
working people need a new leadership. The Socialist Equality Party
in Britain and our sister Partei fur Soziale Gleichheit (PSG)
in Germany are dedicated to the construction of such a leadership
throughout Europe, as sections of the International Committee
of the Fourth International. We urge all our readers to support
the campaign being waged by the PSG on the basis of this perspective
in the forthcoming European elections.
See Also:
Blair and Bush plan further
crimes in the Middle East
22 April 2004
Election statement of German
SEP: For the United Socialist States of Europe
27 March 2004
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