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British general election announced for May 5
By Julie Hyland
6 April 2005
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Prime Minister Tony Blair has announced Thursday, May 5, as
the date for the UK general election. The same day, elections
will also be held for 34 county councils in England, three unitary
authorities, local councils in Northern Ireland, and four mayoral
contests in English towns.
A May 5 ballot date had been long expected, although Blairs
announcement was delayed by 24 hours due to the death of Pope
John Paul II.
The election campaign will officially begin on Monday, April
11, after the Queen has dissolved Parliament. The tight schedule
means that the government has just days to try to push through
some 28 outstanding parliamentary bills. Almost half are expected
to fall to the wayside in the rush, including government plans
to introduce identity cards.
Labour is hoping that a third-term in office will enable it
to remedy such setbacks, however, and to reinforce its role as
the preferred party of big business. Blair has spoken of his driving
mission to secure a third term, but has said that the election
should not be considered a referendum on his past eight years
in office. Labours campaign slogan, Forward, not back,
whilst presented as a progressive and dynamic catchphrase, is
indicative of the partys wariness of any examination of
its record.
Blairs desire to avoid any genuine discussion on the
issues confronting working people is no surprise. It is less than
two years since Labour took the country into a pre-emptive war
of aggression against Iraq, in defiance of popular opposition
and international law. By supporting the US in its efforts to
militarily enforce its unchallenged hegemony in the oil-rich Middle
East, Blair hoped to secure a share in the spoils of war for British
capital and to legitimise a renewed turn to imperialist conquest.
After having reduced Iraq to rubble and installed a bitterly
resented occupation force, killing tens of thousands in the process,
all Labours justifications for warthat Iraq possessed
weapons of mass destruction and constituted an immediate threat
to Britainhave been exposed as lies.
By any democratic criteria, Blair should be facing charges
of war crimes alongside his co-conspirator US President George
W. Bush, not running for another term in office. But none of the
official opposition parties will raise such a demand. The Conservative
Party backed the war, whilst the Liberal Democrats quickly fell
into line.
Similarly, they have all signed off on the so-called war
against terror, which has been used to abrogate longstanding
civil liberties. On the pretext of possible involvement in terrorism,
any British citizen can now be held incommunicado under unlimited
house arrest without charge on the say-so of the home secretary
or a judge.
To divert from these fundamental questions, the general election
will be run as a right-wing contest between the parties, focussing
largely on law and order, anti-immigrant measures and plans to
expand the creeping privatisation of essential public services.
Whilst opinion polls forecast a Labour win on May 5, this cannot
cover over the widespread alienation of millions of working people
from the electoral process. The announcement of the election,
together with the phoney campaign that has been conducted
in the past few weeks, has been met with general disinterest.
Turnout on May 5 is already predicted to fall below the 59
percent mark of 2001, itself an all-time low. In some inner-city
areas, which in the past provided the bulk of Labours vote,
just half of the voting age population have even registered to
ballot. According to Electoral Commission research, just 3 percent
of voters strongly agree that they have a say in how
the country is run.
None of the major parties can address this situation because
their policies are dictated by the requirements of a financial
oligarchy, whose interests are diametrically opposed to those
of working people.
As a result, the general election campaign will be targeted
at a select group of so-called swing voters in key
marginal constituencies and the editorial offices of the major
newspapers.
Such is the narrow basis of the election process, that a slight
shift in opinion by any of these can introduce unprecedented swings
in political fortunes. The April 5 front-page declaration by Rupert
Murdochs Sun that its mind has still be made
up over whether to back Labour or the Tories, will see both
parties move even further to the right as they compete to satisfy
the billionaire owners demands and prejudices.
Symptomatic of the disconnect between official politics and
the broad mass of the population is the proliferation of protest
campaigns. Although the full list of candidates has yet to be
announced, the Electoral Commission has reported an unprecedented
increase in the number of new parties registering to stand.
Under new rules, parties must be registered with the commission
or their candidates can only run as independents or with the space
for the partys name left blank. To register they must provide
a written constitution, financial records, the names of two party
officials and pay a £150 fee.
Despite these hurdles, a total of 61 new UK political parties
registered in 2004, with a further 28 signing up since January
2005. Almost half of these focus on a single issue, such as local
residents campaigns.
See Also:
Britain: row over spending cuts hits
Conservative election bid
[2 April 2005]
Britain: Conservative Party
promotes racist campaign against gypsies
[26 March 2005]
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