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Britain: Blair denounces liberal critics for opposing attacks
on democratic rights
By Chris Marsden and Julie Hyland
28 April 2006
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Prime Minister Tony Blair has utilised an email exchange with
journalist Henry Porter to attack critics of his governments
assault on civil liberties and to promise yet more draconian law-and-order
measures. The emails were published in the Observer on
April 23.
The Blair government has undermined the presumption of innocence
and the right to trial by jury and, under the Serious Organised
Crime and Police Act that came into effect in January, has given
the police extraordinary powers to arrest and impose punishment
on actions never before considered criminal.
Under the guise of the war against terror, police have been
given extraordinary powers to shoot to kill, whilst anti-terror
legislation enables a cabinet minister to declare a state of emergency
and suspend parliament. The provisions of the innocuous-sounding
Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill will set precedents allowing
the government of the day to routinely bypass parliamentary supervision.
These measures have raised concern amongst some journalists
and members of the judiciary who fear that the government is undermining
the rule of law and bringing the entire basis of democratic rule
into disrepute.
In the last months, Porter has written a number of articles
denouncing Blair for allowing the abuses in Guantánamo
Bay, Abu Ghraib and the UKs Belmarsh prison, for the introduction
of ID cards and for moving Britain ever closer to becoming
a totalitarian state.
He also supported the remarks by Lord Steyn, chair of the civil
rights group Justice, where the former law lord asked whether
foreign governments have used 9/11 as cover to justify their crackdown
on human rights.
Using the experiences of Nazi Germany, apartheid South Africa
and Chile, Steyn warned of the dangers of an elected dictatorship,
stating that History has shown that majority rule and strict
adherence to legality is no guarantee against tyranny.
A striking feature of Blairs email correspondence with
Porter was how the prime ministers previous justifications
for repressive legislation as necessary to combat the terrorist
threat were peripheral. Blair declared that terrorism requires
a separate debate and that he would focus instead on the
importance of extraordinary measures to counter anti-social behaviour.
Steyns arguments shows how far out of touch much
of the political and legal establishment is with peoples
lives, he wrote. The reality of the twenty-first century was one
of shifting communities, dysfunctional families, globalisation
and myriad influences, not all benign, to which our young people
are subject.
The social problems that these had wrought justified a complete
overhaul of policing and the legal system: If the traditional
processes were the answer to these crime and law and order problems
that are an age away from Dixon of Dock Green and the stable communities
of 50 years ago, then we wouldnt be having this debate.
But theyre not. Theyve failed.
It was a question of safeguarding the needs of law abiding
people against gangs of youth, vandals,
people who play their music loud until 2am; who vilify anyone
who asks them to stop, indeed anyone who did not treat
others with courtesy and good manners.
Blair concluded with an appeal to those who mourn the
loss of respect: if, in order to get it back, we have to alter
our traditional way of thinking and doing, then people, and I
mean wholly reasonable, moderate people, will make a very conscious
decision to do just that.
Blairs attempts to counter allegations that his government
is undemocratic and authoritarian achieved the opposite effect.
In what amounted to a blueprint for dictatorship, he argued that
democratic rights can no longer be viewed as universal and inalienable.
The government must have the right to withdraw them whenever it
sees fit.
His claim that combating what are essentially petty misdemeanours
necessitates such a fundamental break with democratic and legal
norms appears absurd. However, his reference to the impact of
globalisation on the younger generation does hint at the vast
social alienation and dislocation that has developed in Britain,
which is the real driving force for the ongoing offensive against
civil liberties.
Blair heads a government that acts on behalf of a financial
oligarchy that seeks to enrich itself through predatory wars to
seize control of the worlds major resources, combined with
a massive redistribution of wealth away from working people.
The polarisation of society, between a wealthy elite at one
end and broad layers of the working population facing worsening
economic insecurity at the other, has undermined any possibility
of maintaining social consensus.
At the same time, many people have come to view government
and the official political structures as corrupt representatives
of big business, indifferent to their own basic interests. If
Blair complains of a loss of respect, he has good
cause. What respect can there be for a government that tramples
over international law to wage war against a defenceless country,
in defiance of public opinion and on the basis of monumental lies?
And that has raised the naked self-enrichment of a privileged
few, regardless of the social consequences, to an unquestionable
principle?
Blair cannot even begin to address the criticism of Steyn and
others on the invasion of Iraq and its aftermath. Nor can he make
any accounting for the impact of his governments policies
in fostering the social inequalities that are the breeding ground
for crime.
His only answer to growing social and political discontent
is further repressive measures in order to ensure that the dictates
of big business are met. Tellingly, Blair defended the legislative
framework bill on the grounds that changing economic regulations
through parliamentary acts is a real problem for business.
It costs money and causes hassle.
Immediately following the publications of Blairs emails,
Home Secretary Charles Clarke took up the same theme. He posted
a reply on the Home Office web site to Simon Carr of the Independent,
Britains other major liberal newspaper, who has also attacked
the governments record on democratic rights.
Clarke then summoned around a dozen journalists to a meeting
in his office where he berated Porter, Carr and the Guardians
Jenni Russell, for 30 minutes. Later that day, he gave a speech
to the London School of Economics. He claimed that a dangerous
poison was slipping into the media because of incorrect,
tendentious and over-simplified statements about the governments
record on civil liberties and called for increased powers to regulate
the media.
Such exchanges testify to the extreme nervousness within the
government over any criticism of its actions. It has relied on
newspapers such as the Guardian and the Independent
to provide a pseudo-progressive apologia for its right-wing economic
and social nostrums and its colonialist ambitions in the Middle
East.
Blair and Clarkes exchanges coincide with the campaign
for the May 4 local authority elections in the run-up to which
Labour has insisted that there can be no retreat on reform
of the state-run National Health Service, the privatisation of
education and a raft of other deeply unpopular measures.
Most importantly, Britain is once again functioning as Washingtons
foremost ally in preparing for war, this time against Iran. By
publicly chastising Porter, Steyn, Carr and others, the government
intended to warn anyone wavering within the nominally liberal
establishment that there must be no retreat.
Blair has every reason to believe that this warning will not
go unheeded. Those journalists who are critical of the government
are in a small minority, whilst their newspapers editorial line
is generally firmly supportive of the government.
Notwithstanding differences over the Iraq war, they are unanimous
in critically endorsing Labours domestic agenda, articulating
as they do the outlook of the upper echelons of the middle class
that has benefited from tax cuts and stock market and property
speculation. Blairs focus on the anti-social behaviour of
the poorest within society was calculated to have a visceral appeal
to the prejudices and material interests of this layer.
Sure enough, the Observer did not disappoint the prime
minister. Its editorial described Blairs willingness
to engage in this argument [as] in itself a profoundly democratic
act.
Agreeing with the terms of the supposed debate set down by
Blair, it proclaimed that there can be few more important
ideas than the battle between individual liberties and the collective
good, central to so many modern dilemmas from combating terrorism
to dealing with anti-social behaviour.
It continued, Readers will make up their own minds about
the rights and wrongs of Tony Blairs contention that respecting
the civil liberties of one may trample on the rights of another.
For its part, the Independent left it to the individual
journalists and various civil rights groups to respond to Blairs
and Clarkes diatribes.
However, this readiness to kowtow before Blair undermines the
ability of the media to effectively propagandise on the governments
behalf.
There was an almost universally hostile response to the Observers
editorial amongst numerous comments posted on the newspapers
website.
One reader described the paper as a mouthpiece for the
establishment.... [T]he Observer/Guardian and PM (war criminal)
Blair are all cut from the very same cloth and, broadly speaking,
have the same interests. One wrote, Thanks for reminding
me why I stopped buying the Guardian and the Observer,
namely their obsequious editorial relationships with this vile,
profoundly undemocratic government. Another stated, What
an utter disgrace. Thatcher would never have dared to suggest
such a move in her darkest foaming-mouth moments. God help us,
while another quipped, Perhaps you would like to rename
this Leader column the Our Glorious Leader
column?
The clash between the editorial line of the Observer
and the views of much of its own readership underscores the gulf
that separates the entire establishment from the concerns of broad
layers of the population. It confirms the essential role played
by the World Socialist Web Site in developing a socialist
movement in defence of democratic rights and in opposition to
militarism and war through raising the political awareness and
critical faculties of working people.
See Also:
A mea culpa on Iraq by pro-war journalist
Johann Hari
[22 April 2006]
Britain: Blair sets out ideological
justification for new wars of aggression
[24 March 2006]
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