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What is behind Labour's expulsion of Scottish MP Tommy Graham?
By Steve James
17 September 1998
The Labour Party's expulsion last week of Scottish MP Tommy
Graham has highlighted an ongoing and bitter struggle within the
national party, central and local government circles.
Renfrewshire West MP Graham had been the subject of a 14-month
internal Labour Party enquiry, following the suicide last year
of Gordon McMaster, MP for Paisley South. Labour's National Constitutional
Committee took just five minutes to reach their expulsion decision,
having questioned Graham for 18 hours.
Considerable media coverage of both this investigation and
others also under way has had two main characteristics. It has
focussed on the many allegations of sleaze, and has attempted
to make them fit a certain political template. Labour's scandals
are either presented as another shining example of the Blair governments
attempt to clear out local corruption--"new" Labour
sweeping clean--or as an attack on the "old" Labour
faithful. What is the truth?
Gordon McMaster killed himself shortly after the Labour Party's
election victory on May 1, 1997. A heavy drinker and ME sufferer,
he had been depressed following a street attack. His suicide note,
which has never been published in full, reportedly stated "I
hope Don Dixon [a former Labour official] and Tommy Graham can
live with themselves." The note also reportedly criticised
Paul Mack, a political ally of Graham and former deputy leader
of Renfrew District Council, and suggested that McMaster had been
the target of a sexual smear campaign organised by Graham and
Mack.
McMaster was a Blair supporter and friend of the then Scottish
Labour General Secretary Jack McConnell. Tommy Graham, a Labour
Party member for 33 years, is a former Rolls Royce engineer and
shop steward with the engineering union, AEEU. He was elected
a Labour MP in 1987, having been a local councillor in the now
defunct Strathclyde Region. The "new" versus "old"
Labour line-up is seemingly given more weight by the addition
of local MP Irene Adams. Another Blair supporter, Adams has been
involved in a series of bitter clashes with Graham in the past.
The new/old political template breaks down, however, as soon
as one moves beyond labels. There is no record of any political
basis for the Adams/Graham clash, which appears to have focussed
entirely on a battle over personal fiefdoms. Boundary changes
meant that part of what had been Graham's constituency was transferred
into Adams's. Graham, who had assembled many political contacts
amongst lawyers, local government politicians and Labour party
members over the years, was not prepared to let it go. One of
the accusations against Graham was that he was trying to win a
more secure parliamentary seat by muscling in on areas neighbouring
his own.
Nor has Graham any political record of opposing the Blair leadership.
Whilst he immediately denied any responsibility for McMaster's
suicide--blaming his one-time associate Mack for the smear--he
agreed to Labour's demands that he kept silent until after the
referendum vote on Scottish devolution had been held in September
1997.
At the time, the Labour government was concerned that a damaging
factional battle would undermine support for a Scottish assembly.
Labour claimed that devolution would give people more local control.
This appealed both to Scottish nationalists and to many working
people who were increasingly angry at the deterioration in social
conditions and services, especially in Labour's traditional heartlands
such as Renfrewshire and Paisley.
The Labour Party in Scotland has had an effective majority
for decades through its control of the local authorities. During
this time it has spawned a distinct social layer who control billions
of pounds in revenue, awarding building and planning contracts,
administering services, etc. Around these local authorities there
has been built up a network of both formal and informal relations
involving MPs, councillors, lawyers, building contractors, and
union bureaucrats, to identify but a few. Whilst the living standards
of millions of workers and their families has drastically declined,
these layers have established a cosy niche for themselves.
During the Graham investigation the Scotsman newspaper
ran several articles on Ferguslie Park Community Business Holdings
(FCBH), in Paisley. This scheme, established in the 1980s in the
working class area of Ferguslie Park, was supposedly aimed at
building "community" businesses as a means of tackling
unemployment. The Scotsman reported that at least
part of the FCBH--a director of which was a close associate of
Graham's--had fallen under the control of Paisley's drug gangs
and was being used to launder money.
Graham was cleared of any involvement in the drugs operations.
However the Labour inquiry was said to have uncovered a "substantial
body of evidence," pointing to the systematic attempt to
gain "political and personal advantage for some individuals."
Graham was accused of rigging meetings, stacking membership with
his supporters and restricting access to public funds. He was
also alleged to have offered Labour officials sexually compromising
pictures of a leading gay Scottish trade union official in return
for the personal file on Brian Oldrey, a Labour councillor who
planned to stand against Graham in his own constituency. He was
found guilty on five charges including "bad mouthing"
opponents, attempting to use compromising photographs, membership
"irregularities", and a general "sustained course
of conduct prejudicial to, and acts grossly detrimental to, the
party." Graham left the hearing vowing to fight on. But the
following day his lawyer announced that they would challenge only
one aspect of the membership rigging charges in court.
Elsewhere in Scotland, Glasgow's Lord Provost, Patrick Lally,
only recently successfully prevented Labour's attempt to expel
him from office following allegations of corruption. Also in Glasgow,
millionaire Labour MP, Mohammed Sarwar, has been suspended and
faces legal action for allegedly attempting to bribe political
opponents. The Scottish National Party has exploited Labour's
local feuding and "sleaze" to win several recent by-elections
in working class areas.
Nationally some 20 local Labour Party organisations are under
internal or police investigation. In Hull, the head of the local
authority housing committee and a long time associate of Deputy
Prime Minister John Prescott, was forced to resign after allegations
of membership rigging. In Doncaster four councillors and the entire
local organisation have been suspended for "planning irregularities."
Six councillors have been arrested and one jailed for alleged
expenses fiddling and a council leader was suspended for allegedly
receiving an "excessive" gift from a property developer.
In Birmingham, Labour's national executive committee found "massive
abuse of the membership system". The scenario can be repeated
in virtually every main town and city. None of those under investigation
in either Scotland or England have any record of political differences
with the Labour leadership.
That these scandals are now coming to light is not accidental,
however. The Blair government has embarked on a major restructuring
of the local authorities, centring on the introduction of regional
assemblies and further privatisations. From now on spending is
only to be allowed where it directly serves private capital--transnationals
seeking locations to build factories, finance capital backing
new service companies, or infrastructure spending to service both.
Capital will no longer tolerate any reduction in profits caused
by having to finance decent local service provision nor the inefficiency
created by having to work through petty bureaucrats and their
cliques. These changes have disturbed previous relations, generating
all manner of frictions.
Faced with numerous damaging revelations, Labour has attempted
to "turn the tables". It has presented the investigations
as proof that it intends to crack down on sleaze whilst attempting
to build up support for a new set of local autocrats, charged
with reorganising local authorities under the banner of "modernisation"
and "efficiency".
In this the Blair government is responding to the demands of
big business that it pursue the changes in local government far
more ruthlessly. Prior to the final hearing in the Graham case,
the August 15, 1998 edition of the finance journal The Economist
complained that too many previous Labour investigations had been
"frustratingly inconclusive". It described Tommy Graham's
case as "a big test of [Labour's] resoluteness" and
demanded that Blair be more "vigorous". Less than one
month after The Economist's call, Graham was duly expelled.
Labour's effort to do the bidding of its big business backers
will prove the undoing of both the party and the government as
a whole. The continuous revelations--regardless of Labour's "spin"--are
politically destabilising. Moreover the scale of the investigations
under way within the Labour Party indicates that it is not only
the parasites but the host body itself that is rotten.
See Also:
Growing levels of poverty
in Scotland
[4 March 1998]
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