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Britain: Tessa Jowell and the politics of kleptocracy
By Julie Hyland
16 March 2006
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The revelations surrounding Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell
and her multimillionaire husband David Millss financial
dealings say much about the corrupt social elite that run Britain.
One of the main claims made by Prime Minister Tony Blairs
incoming Labour government in 1997 was that it would put an end
to the sleaze that had characterised Conservative administrations.
Whilst it would pursue the same pro-big business policies as
its predecessor, Blair pledged there would be no more allegations
of brown envelopes full of cash passing between politicians and
wealthy individuals as in the repeated scandals that had fatally
undermined the Conservatives. Rather, his government would act
as an honest broker between the major corporations and working
people, to the benefit of all.
The Jowell affair has not only revealed Labours own corruption.
It underscores the degree to which this has been accompanied by
the deliberate eviscerating of all democratic norms.
Over the years, there have been numerous scandals involving
the financial dealings of leading Labour ministers, such as former
Trade Secretary, now-European Union Commissioner Peter Mandelson,
and former Home Secretary David Blunkett.
The Jowell/Mills revelations are even more damning. Mills faces
prosecution in Italy on charges relating to a £350,000 bribe
allegedly paid to him on behalf of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
for his favourable testimony in criminal proceedings against the
Italian premier in 1997 and 1998. This money was allegedly laundered
through a complex web of global arrangements culminating in the
re-mortgaging of Jowell and Millss family home in 2000,
which was paid off just one month later with the Italian gift.
Although a co-signatory to the re-mortgaging contract, Jowell
has claimed she was unaware of the £350,000 payment, despite
co-signing another mortgage application for the same London home,
in which she said there were no outstanding loans on the property.
The parliamentary code of conduct states that ministers should
inform their permanent secretary of any interests, including gifts,
that may give rise to a conflict and that this applies to the
concerns of a spouse or partner.
Italian prosecutors are also said to have documents detailing
how Mills used his wifes position in government to further
his business dealings, including one letter written to the authorities
in Dubai citing Jowells role as a member of Blairs
cabinet and assuring them that he had the support and sympathy
of very many people in public life, from the prime minister down.
Even if one were to accept Jowells protestations of ignorance
in this particular instance, that she was aware her husbands
financial dealings might give rise to a conflict of interest was
confirmed by reports that she has not participated in cabinet
discussions on Britains relations with Iran for the past
three years because of her husbands business links with
Tehran.
These latter include a reported payment of thousands of pounds
to Mills for advising the Iranian airline Mahan Air on buying
aircraft from British Aerospace. To this end, Mills had sought
and received advice from the Foreign Office on the deal, which
failed because of US embargos against Iran.
Subsequently, government ministers agreed to an extraordinary
arrangement whereby the culture secretary would apparently leave
the room or remain silent whenever cabinet discussions on Iran
took place.
Despite these latest revelations, Blair has continued to defend
Jowell and has insisted that she has nothing to answer for. On
her first day in parliament after the scandal broke, the culture
secretary received enthusiastic cross-party support, and has never
once faced any questioning on her husbands business allies.
What accounts for this state of affairs?
In defending Jowell, Blair is not simply protecting a political
ally but his own relations with the rich and powerful. Notwithstanding
the numerous criminal charges that have been laid against Berlusconi
and the allegations of his links with the Mafia, Blair has publicly
embraced the right-wing Italian premier as a close friend and
political backer, and had holidayed with his family at the media
tycoons Sardinian mansion.
The prime ministers intimate relations with Berlusconi
reflect Labours transformation into the political representative
of an international financial oligarchy whose wealth derives from
the gutting of social provisions and workers living standards
so as to fund corporate tax breaks and provide rich pickings for
the stock markets.
It is the parasitic requirements of these layers that provided
the impulse for the formation of Blairs New Labour.
By the 1990s, the ability of globally organised capital to
shift production around the world in search of the cheapest labour,
lowest taxation and production costs meant that it was no longer
possible for the traditional labour bureaucracies to combine their
defence of the profit system with the advocacy of limited social
reforms.
For almost two decades, the corporate elite had looked to the
Conservative administrations of Margaret Thatcher and John Major
to do their bidding. But in implementing its demands for union
busting and cuts in public spending and social services, the party
had become an isolated and discredited rump.
Under conditions where mass anti-Tory hostility threatened
the long-term interests of capital, the Labour and trade union
bureaucracy stepped into the breach, officially repudiating any
connection with the working class and offering its service as
the avowed political representatives of big business.
For corporate heads such as Rupert Murdoch, the absence of
any ideological conviction other than the naked enrichment of
a privileged few made Blair the ideal choice to lead this offensive.
Over the last eight years, the Blair government has delivered
on its promises. Social inequalities have deepened as the government
has laid waste to the health, education and social services of
millions of workers to feed the demands of the transnationals
and major shareholders.
Labour has drafted numerous multimillionaire businessmen into
government and has distributed peerages in the House of Lords
to wealthy financial donors, who thereby have a direct role in
drawing up policies that will facilitate their further enrichment.
At the same time, it has encouraged the type of tax avoidance
and stock market speculation by which Mills made his fortune.
Under Blair, the richest 1 percent of the population now enjoys
a greater share of national income than at any time since the
1930s. London has become the home of some of the wealthiest people
in the world, due to laws that exempt those who spend fewer than
90 days a year in the UK from paying tax on any earnings overseas.
As the social basis of all the main parties has been reduced
to a privileged few, the drive to remove official politics from
any form of popular control has accelerated. The result is a political
establishment completely removed from the concerns and circumstances
facing the broad mass of the population and a government with
the characteristics of a kleptocracy.
Corruption and sleaze flow inexorably from the essential political
function of such an administration. Like the Tories before them,
the Labour politicians who now carry out the bidding of the super-rich
do so with the expectation of reward for services rendered. And
just as Labour now depends on the wealthy elite for its funds,
so too do its representatives seek self-advancement through their
contacts with the business elite.
A position in government has always been a path to self-enrichment.
MPs often assume their places on company boards while still in
office, and once leaving government there are no limitations on
their activities. One of the documents leaked during the Jowell
scandal was from a broker supporting the culture secretarys
application for a re-mortgage. Her financial security was assured,
the broker stated, as She is likely to stay in politics
for two more terms of office, and then would probably move to
the House of Lords.
Undoubtedly, one reason why parliament gave Jowell such an
easy time of things was that few MPs want to draw unnecessary
attention to the fiction that the dealings of their own spouses
are somehow unrelated to their own political role.
Nevertheless, today there is an even greater degree of hostility
and impatience with the minimal restrictions placed on sitting
MPs in furthering their business careers. In part, this is driven
by the social milieu in which Labour operates.
By normal standards, an MP, let alone a cabinet member, enjoys
a privileged existencewith pay, expenses and grace and favour
houses and cars, etc., putting them in the top 10 percent of top
earners. Blair and his barrister wife Cherie would make it even
higher up the social scale.
But in comparison to their billionaire backers in the top 1
percent, they view themselves as virtual paupers at the banquetthe
poor relation constantly made aware that others enjoy a lifestyle
of which they can only dream.
Writing in the Independent on March 6, the right-wing
columnist Bruce Anderson noted how Blairs sycophantic fawning
on those wealthier than himself is matched only by his envy. Numerous
dinner guests of Blair and his wife had told Anderson how Late
at night, when the official guests have gone, the Blairites have
a topic to which they always return, like a man prodding a sore
tooth. They are obsessed by their own poverty; envious of some
of their friends riches, and always hoping that
some of the dosh will rub off on them.
Peter Mandelsons boast in 1998 that New Labour was intensely
relaxed about people getting filthy rich was not motivated
by altruism. For Blairs New Labour clique, neither political
probity nor democratic norms can be allowed to stand in the way
of their acquiring a share of the riches that their policies are
helping others to accumulate.
See Also:
Britain: Culture secretary embroiled
in Silvio Berlusconi bribery scandal
[7 March 2006]
The British working
class and the 2005 general election
[12 April 2005]
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