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Britain: Former home secretary Charles Clarke questions Blairs
survival
By Julie Hyland
28 June 2006
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The crisis within the British Labour Party and the government
of Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair has intensified with a series
of statements by former home secretary Charles Clarke.
Clarke was sacked last May after a media campaign, led by Rupert
Murdochs News International, which accused him of not acting
swiftly enough to deport foreign prisoners convicted of criminal
offences.
He was then hung out to dry by his successor, John Reid, who
blamed Clarke for the scandal and implied that his poor leadership
was responsible for a Home Office that was not fit for purpose.
Such attacks have finally proved too much for Clarke, formerly
one of Blairs staunchest allies. Interviewed on the BBC
and in the Times newspaper, Clarke said he had decided
to speak out to save his reputation, and that the decision to
sack him had been taken out of political expediency at the expense
of the long-term reform of the Home Office.
Although he still believed that Blair should continue as Labour
leader until late 2008, he was uncertain as to whether this was
possible. Blair had been so damaged by recent events
that there were a lot of doubts, which he shared,
as to whether he could recover his leadership and authority
and direction and last the course.
Clarke also criticized Reid, who has said, following a campaign
by Murdochs News of the World, that he will consider
introducing new measures to name and shame sex offenders.
The home secretary of the day should not simply be running
on the band wagon of some particular media campaign, Clarke
said.
Perhaps just as damaging, Clarke refuted Blairs claim
that he (Blair) had been unaware that some 1,000 foreign prisoners
had been released without being considered for deportation. In
a letter to the Home Affairs Committee, which is investigating
the prisoner release, Clarke stated that he had raised his concerns
about the issue with the prime minister on November 16, 2005.
As I am sure the record of that meeting would show,
he continued, I explained to him that I was urgently exploring
options for reducing the number of foreign nationals in prisons
and said that I would come back to this when firm proposals had
been developed.
Clarke, one of the key architects of New Labour,
served Blair for nine years in leading positions, including education
secretary and, finally, home secretary. A committed supporter
of Labours big business agenda, he piloted as home secretary
some of the most draconian attacks on civil liberties, under the
guise of the war on terror, including the undermining
of habeas corpus and efforts to introduce identity cards.
Some in the media saw Clarkes statements as a rerun of
the attack made by Geoffrey Howe on Conservative Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher in 1990, which triggered behind-the-scenes maneuvers
that led to her removal as Conservative Party leader and prime
minister.
Howe served Thatcher as chancellor, foreign secretary, leader
of the House of Commons and deputy prime minister. But, in protest
at Thatchers anti-European stance which had left Britain
increasingly isolated on the continent, he resigned from the cabinet
on November 1, 1990. In his resignation speech before parliament,
Howe attacked Thatcher for sabotaging British interests and called
on other Tory MPs to consider their own response to the
tragic conflict of loyalties with which I have myself wrestled
for perhaps too long. Thatcher was out within one month.
In contrast, at no time in his statements and interviews did
Clarke express any political disagreements with the governments
course. And his suggestion of a 2008 deadline for Blairs
departure does not suggest that Clarke intends any serious challenge
to his leadership. Nevertheless, by giving his blessings to Chancellor
Gordon Browns successionClarke said he would be happy
to see the chancellor in Number 10the former home secretary
has ratcheted up the factional warfare within New Labour.
To some extent, the absence of any political substance to the
faction fight between Blairs supporters on the one side
and Browns on the other makes the internal party dispute
all the more incendiary. Not only Blair, but the entire New Labour
project has been profoundly discredited. Its claim that it was
possible to reconcile the interests of big business and the rich
with the social needs of working people has been exposed as a
sham.
Whilst the super-rich have enjoyed a financial bonanza under
Labour, many families are burdened with record levels of debt,
whilst the public services on which they depend are being undermined
and hived off to the private sector.
The Iraq war remains a key focus of public hostility to the
government. The fact that Blair lied about Iraq possessing weapons
of mass destruction to justify joining the Bush administration
in its pre-emptive war of aggression has destroyed his governments
credibility. As the ongoing occupation of the country becomes
ever bloodier, popular opposition to Blairs imperialist
agenda has become more entrenched.
In local authority elections in May, Labours vote fell
to a historic low, and it dropped into third place behind the
Tories and Liberal Democrats. Public disaffection from official
politics has led many commentators to predict the general election
due in 2009 will result in a hung parliament.
Labour has long been indifferent to popular opinion. Indeed,
its ability to function as the political representative of the
super-rich and the transnational corporations has depended entirely
on its efforts to distance itself from any form of popular, democratic
control. In the run-up to the Iraq war, Blair proclaimed his readiness
to ride roughshod over the wishes of the majority of working people
as the defining characteristic of his administration.
But Blair is now so despised that some within the ruling elite
are casting their eyes toward the new Tory leader, David Cameron,
in the hope that his compassionate Conservatism will
better serve their ends.
In his effort to reinforce his political credentials with the
likes of Murdoch, Blair has made clear nothing will stand in his
waynot personal loyalty and certainly not political principle.
Reids public denigration of the Home Office has been
followed by virulent attacks on sections of the judiciary, the
police and others deemed by the right wing press to be soft
on crime or too cautious in backing Blairs privatisation
of the public sector.
As a result, the current government has become a major destabilizing
factor in the institutions of rule.
In recent weeks several leading judges and police chiefs have
attacked the governments recklessness in trying to assuage
its media critics. Referring to Reids announcement that
he would look at publicly branding sex offenders, Chief Constable
Terry Grange said he was concerned that the home office had surrendered
power over policy to the News of the World.
This government has accepted the principle that they
are prepared to be blackmailed, he said, adding that it
was impossible for his force to work coherently when
every few weeks there is a policy change or reaction brought
about by pressure from the media.
Earlier, the former chief inspector of prisons, Lord Ramsbotham,
complained that Blairs pronouncements on law and order were
undermining public confidence in the judicial system, and he urged
the prime minister to shut up.
See Also:
Britain: the political issues
behind Labours factional warfare
[9 May 2006]
Tony Blair reshuffles Cabinet
after Labours local election debacle
[6 May 2006]
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