The Labour Left Alliance Seems Determined to Repeat Every Mistake of
the British Left in a Flickering Replay of the Past 50 Years I have been ‘Suspended’
for Dissent
The victory
of Keir Starmer represents a massive political defeat for the Left. Anyone who
believes it is just a passing episode or that we can bed down and live with him
is fooling themselves. Starmer is a class enemy as surely is Boris Johnson.
Starmer is no ‘unity’ candidate. He
is the candidate of a hard Right out for blood. When they say ‘anti-Semitism’
what they mean is what Joe McCarthy meant when he said ‘communism’. ‘Anti-Semitism is the new Communism’. Except there is
no one around to do what Joseph
Welch, the army prosecutor did, when he asked McCarthy ‘Do you have you left no sense of
decency?"
Starmer is first out of the box to welcome my expulsion |
Starmer is
the man who prosecuted Julian Assange. He is the man who prosecuted
women for making false allegations when their assailants were acquitted of rape,
thus putting them through a second trauma. He is the man who protected Metropolitan Police
officers who killed Ian Tomlinson. He is the man who was first to welcome
my own expulsion. His membership
of the shadowy Trilateral Commission, alongside war criminal Henry Kissinger
and the late Jeffrey Epstein says all you need to know.
There will
be a new and far more extensive witchhunt. According to Siobhan McDonagh anti-capitalism
is anti-Semitic, presumably because being a Jew and a capitalist are
synonymous! As the Zionist leaders stated
3 days ago:
Keir Starmer has already achieved in
four days more than his predecessor in four years in addressing
antisemitism within the Labour Party.
The clear and
obvious question that poses itself is this:
One good effect of Coronavirus is that the poisonous Jewish Chronicle has gone bust! |
Is there a place inside the Labour
Party for socialists?
There is no
easy answer to this. One of the most remarkable things about the Corbyn
phenomenon is how little it is understood by the Marxist left. This was why it
came as much of a shock to the Left as the Right when Corbyn nearly won the
2017 General Election. My blog was one of the very
few to have predicted
it.
As the
election campaign wore on I became convinced we would lose. My final article
for Weekly Worker, Expect
the Worst, Hope for the Best summed up my mood. On the eve of poll, in Open
Letter to Seamus Milne, I wrote that we were heading for ‘disaster’.
Ed Miliband and friend |
The Corbyn
Phenomenon represented a mass upsurge against both the legacy of New Labour and
the effects of 5 years of austerity. Ed Miliband’s austerity-lite policies
offered no alternative. Anyone who remembers the Edstone and the mugs with
Immigration Controls on them knew that he was no socialist. Yet he was still too
left for Blair who spoke
of how a “traditional left-wing party
competes with a traditional right-wing party, with the traditional result”.
Despite trying to suppress the debate, the LLA's Facebook pages are filled with people saying they are going to resign from the Labour Party |
Cameron won
a small majority in the 2015 election due to the collapse in the Lib Dem vote,
which allowed the Tories to gain a small majority with just 36.9%
of the vote. This produced a popular reaction and wave of disillusionment which
led to Corbyn’s election.
New Labour
had become convinced that the way to permanently defeat the left was to open
the leadership vote to every single member rather than having the trade union
barons fix things.
Their
solution was an American-style primary system whereby anyone, on payment of a
fee, could vote. Blair and his acolytes had always wanted Labour to become another
party of capitalism like the American
Democrats. Their assumption was that the Left would always be unpopular.
But the
best laid plans of men and mice can go awry. Corbyn needed to gain 15% of the parliamentary
Party, about 35 nominations. Many MPs, including the self-style ‘moron’
Margaret Beckett, ‘lent’ him their nomination in order that it could be shown
that it was a genuine contest rather than a beauty contest between Corbyn and
his opponents who all represented a continuation of New Labour.
My own son,
then aged 13 and thousands of others bombarded Labour MPs on social media with
the demand that they lend Corbyn their nomination. The rest is history. From 200-1 outsider Corbyn won by 60%.
When it
became clear that Corbyn would win the flack began. At first there was a demand
to stop the contest! We were told there were thousands of Trotskyist infiltrators.
British Trotskyism would have difficulty filling a modest sized church hall. The
whole point of having registered supporters was in order to allow non-Labour
Party members to vote. It seems that they were the wrong kind!
Then began
the attacks. John Mann accused
Corbyn of having ignored child abuse in Islington care homes as MP. In fact the
Leader of the Council at the time was Margaret Hodge who was a party to a deliberate
cover up by the Council.
The
‘anti-Semitism’ campaign began with an article
in August 2015 in the Daily Mail accusing Corbyn of having consorted with a holocaust
denier, Paul Eisen. Soon after the now
bankrupt Jewish Chronicle took over with a series
of questions to Corbyn. Of course it didn’t want answers.
The LLA's refusal to discuss what is on the mind of its supporters is the height of unreality |
We had the spectacle of the right-wing press and their Labour collaborators suddenly becoming interested in the fight against anti-Semitism. Of course all other forms of racism were kosher. The Sun and Mail even hired Katie Hopkins (‘refugees are cockroaches’).
Despite numerous warnings and
articles by not only me but Asa Winstanley in Electronic Intifada (How
Israel lobby manufactured UK Labour Party’s anti-Semitism crisis) and Jonathan Cook (Anti-Semitism.
Orchestrated Offensive against Jeremy Corbyn in the UK) Corbyn was
determined to appease his accusers. He even
accepted that to deny you are anti-Semitic is in itself anti-Semitic! Forgetting
that he too had been so accused. Even when Jews were the victims of the
anti-Semitism witchhunt he did not question it. The rest is history.
Daniel Platts of the SC seeks to exclude Chris Williamson from playing any part in relation to the LLA |
Last February
Chris Williamson MP was suspended after the vilest distortion of what
he had said:
“The party that has done more to stand up to racism
is now being demonised as a racist, bigoted party. I have got to say, I think
our party’s response has been partly responsible for that because in my
opinion… we’ve backed off far too much, we have given too much ground, we’ve
been too apologetic… We’ve done more to address the scourge of anti-Semitism
than any other party.”
Yet what did the ‘i’ and other papers
do? They omitted
any reference to the ‘scourge’ of
anti-Semitism. In order to prove ‘anti-Semitism’ the mass media and the
Zionists had to twist and distort everthing we said.
Alan Pearson of the OG supports my suspension |
It was at this point, the very last stop on the journey, that Jeremy Corbyn should have spoken up and declared, unequivocally, that Chris was no anti-Semite. And when a Labour Party Panel ruled that he should be reinstated Tom Watson raised a petition of right-wing Lords and MPs demanding resuspension, which was later ruled unlawful by the High Court.
This was literally last chance saloon
yet Corbyn remained silent, throwing Williamson under the bus. In so doing he
ensured that he would never become Prime Minister. Arguably the point of no
return had occurred at the 2018 Labour Party conference when he was responsible
for the defeat of Open Selection.
In response I wrote that this was the
end of the Corbyn Project. Are these the
Dying Days of Corbyn’s Leadership? And so it proved. The question is
where we go from here.
Chris Williamson in Brighton at the meeting that the Zionists pulled out all the stops to prevent happening |
Labour Left
Alliance – Can It Fill the Gap
Around July last year, the Labour
Left Alliance was launched by Labour
Against the Witchhunt, the LRC and Red Labour with a statement which has now been signed
by over 2,000 supporters. The conference took place in the context of a campaign
by the Zionists to ban any all opposition.
‘Israeli democracy’ had come to Britain.
In Brighton in the preceding summer
the Zionists had made fevered
attempts to stop Chris Williamson speaking. 3 venues were harassed or
abused before we held a large open air meeting
in Regency Square. You will note that the local Argus
report pictures the dozen Zionists as being larger than over 150 people!
For a full report see here.
Our reaction in Brighton LLA was to organise
a Free Speech
Centre in Brighton’s Rialto to ensure that the Zionists could not ban us.
For 2 days we put on a variety
of events. There was Jackie Walker’s The
Witchhunt, Chris Williamson, the LRC and even a book
launch for Pluto’s
Bad News for Labour which Waterstones
cancelled at the last minute after receiving a volley
of abuse and threats from the very people that Keir Starmer has got into
bed with. As one of the 5 distinguished academics, Birkbeck’s Justin Schlosberg
said this was book
burning. As Heinrich Heine predicted,
they first burn books and then they burn people.
In the wake of this successful
defiance of the Zionists the LLA held a meeting on the final day of the
conference. I spoke at what was clearly a polarised meeting. It was clear that
there were differences between LAW and the LRC as to where the LLA were going.
The LRC and Red Labour later
pulled out. I made two points.
Firstly the LLA had very little time
to get organised. It was clear an election was round the corner. Secondly knowing
that Labour stood little chance of victory, the LLA must become an
organisational bridge between the Left inside and outside the Labour Party.
Phil Pope fending off criticism |
Chair Phil Pope equates political criticism with 'he did seem to be attacking the SC' |
I went to the AGM in Sheffield on
February 22nd. About 130 supporters attended, however it was
extremely badly organised. On the surface it seemed fine but the decisions it
took and the way debate was structured were disastrous. The morning was devoted
to motions and general discussion. We had the absurdity of a pro-Brexit
resolution being passed with one speaker for and one against. This is not
serious politics. Instead of prioritising 2-3 issues and debating them fully we
had a whole series of policies approved on the nod.
The afternoon was devoted to the
Constitution. This was even worse. I moved an amendment
on behalf of BH arguing that the LLA
‘needs to be a bridge between socialists inside and
outside the Labour Party. It is essential that the LLA abandons the sectarian
traditions of the Left which has contributed to the ongoing weakness of the
socialist left.
The Conference Arrangements Committee
instead of giving delegates a clear choice between different proposals decided
instead to salami slice every proposal and stage the debate in sections. It
meant no one had any idea of what the final constitution looked like, which was
a dog’s dinner.
For example whilst the Constitution
included policies that should be debated separately, it also said nothing about
the powers of the different bodies (such as the power to open a bank account or
spend money) and did not specify who was sovereign.
The Constitution does not have any
provision for disciplinary action (somewhat important in view of my
suspension!). And for an organisation
which is claiming to be socialist it has no mention of socialism (or even
capitalism) anywhere!
One member of the Organising Committee comparing their actions to Jon Lansman |
On 21st March I submitted
a discussion discussion
paper to the Organisation Committee [OG]. It began:
The history of the Left in Britain is a history of
failure. Our past is littered with failed organisations and the husks of what
were once considered bright ideas...
There needs to be a debate on the left as a whole as
to our relationship to the Labour Party, what is possible for socialists within
it and how best we build the Left.
I warned at the end that ‘To fail to reconsider sacred nostrums is the
characteristic of a sect and sects have a habit of dying off.’
Reaction to my suspension from one member of the OG |
The reaction of another member of the OG compares the situation unfavourably to Momentum! |
Being naive I had hoped to stir up some discussion of where the LLA was going. Instead it went down like a lead balloon. Lee Rock, the National Organiser, responded alleging various mistakes and calling me dishonest no less than 4 times. I responded to Lee’s paper two days later and Lee this time replied with an 11 page paper.
For those who are interested I have
supplied the links. I followed this up, not with another response to Lee but a
series of 9
proposals as Lee had repeatedly asked me to do. I proposed
that
1.
The LLA becomes a membership organisation as well as a federal organisation of
affiliated branches....
2.
That the LLA has as its perspective both organising the socialist left
inside the Labour Party and acting as a bridging organisation to those members
who have resigned or been expelled.
Despite urging me to make concrete
proposals my paper seemed to produce a personal crisis in Lee. He exploded,
resigning and sending abusive messages. It was as if I was threatening his whole
personality.
The dead cat strategy of the Tories has been adopted by the Steering Committee to avoid discussion |
The Steering Committee which met on
April 1st decided,
with no warning, to suspend me as a way of persuading Lee to retract his
resignation, which he appears to have done (the membership not being informed
of these things I can’t be certain). I responded alleging that Lee’s ‘resignation’
had been contrived with Tina, the Secretary. In order to forestall proper discussion
of my proposals they had engage in a ‘dead cat strategy’ with Lee’s resignation.
Instead of deciding to discuss my
proposals the SC referred them to the next conference which is in 6+ months
time, if ever.
Lee Rock asks what has changed since February 22. Err, Coronavirus lockdown. Election of Keir Starmer. What more is needed? |
The obvious point to make is we can’t
wait. Thousands of people are resigning from the Labour Party now.
Any organisation worth its salt would be dealing with the problem NOW
not in the distant future. If the LLA refuses to deal with what is the most
serious issue facing us now then it is irrelevant.
I responded
to the SC on 4th April but the main points were that:
1. The SC had no power to
suspended anyone, least of all a member of the body that appointed it (OG).
That is such an obvious point that it really needs no explanation.
2. The OG itself, being a
network or federation, cannot suspend anyone. All they can do is ask the group
they represent to send someone else.
3. Since there is no
membership, everyone is a supporter by virtue of signing the original statement,
how can anyone be suspended or expelled anyway?
The nominal Chair, Phil Pope has responded by denying that suspension is
a disciplinary action! Despite which I have been removed from not only the OG
Facebook and WhatsApp groups but ALSO the LLA’s own Organisation and Discussion
Facebook Groups by Daniel Platts, even though admission to these is by virtue
of signing the statement not membership of the OG.
In short the very constitution that these mini-dictators have been
swearing loyalty to has been jettisoned at a moment’s notice!
It is clear that the LLA has nowhere to go and no strategy. While Starmer
gets his act together do we just sit passively by whilst thousands of people
exit the Labour Party or do we try to organise them? We seem to be saying,
because of an ideological fetish, that if you aren’t in the Labour Party then
you are irrelevant.
It is clear that the LLA has nowhere to go and no strategy for getting there. While Starmer
gets his act together do we sit passively by whilst thousands of people
exit the Labour Party or do we try to include them? We seem to be saying,
because of an ideological fetish, that if you aren’t in the Labour Party then
you are irrelevant and not wanted.
The LLA is now a place where members feel free to tell other members that they don't belong - its called 'comradeship' |
LACK OF A DEMOCRATIC CULTURE
What though
is the underlying problem? How has it come about that submitting a discussion
document ends up with my being suspended on trumped-up charges? Why is it that
an organisation, whose founding statement
states it ‘organises democratically and transparently’ and which ‘campaigns for a disciplinary process in the Labour Party which is
wholly based on natural justice and due process’ suspends someone without
them being either present or informed of what is happening and which simply
disregards its own constitution? Is democracy only for the Labour Party?
In the internal
correspondence following my submission of the document, I sent an email to
Lee Rock of 23rd March in which I wrote that the way the Committee was
operating was ‘the antithesis of a healthy democratic culture.’ Another
member Peter B made the same point writing that the LLA ‘requires a culture of open discussion and debate, which as ever should
be conducted in a comradely manner.’
On the
socialist left there is a long history of a
Command and Control Culture, going under the name of ‘democratic
centralism’ which in practice is anything but democratic though it is certainly
centralist.
One member
of the OG, Peter Flack confessed to have being a full-time organiser for the
Socialist Labour League/WRP, perhaps the most revolting organisation on the
left, if it can even be called left. It was an organisation headed by one Gerry
Healey, which engaged in systematic
abuse of members, including rape and violence against members. Corin
Redgrave, brother of Vanessa, infamously stated
re Healey’s ‘accomplishments’ that “If this is the work of a rapist, let’s recruit
more rapists.’
The SWP was also convulsed
when the organisation tried to cover up allegations of rape and abuse by former
Secretary Martin Smith. Although it was not on the scale of the WRP it was symptomatic
of an underlying culture that had developed in the two largest so-called revolutionary
organisations. A daughter of a friend, who worked at the SWP HQ, was summarily
dismissed when she expressed her support for the women who had been raped. An
article on the Socialist Unity website
makes disturbing reading.
I am sure that Peter did not support Healey’s
activities and probably was unaware of them. However he was a full-timer in an
organisation which more resembled the mafia than a socialist organisation. It
is no coincidence that Peter has been to the fore in opposing discussion and
supporting summary justice.
Why do I raise this? Because what was common to both the WRP and
SWP was a lack of any democratic culture or accountability. What the behaviour
of the majority on the OG represents is a continuation of this tradition and a total
disregard not only for its own (inadequate) constitution but for the most basic
of democratic norms.
Tony Greenstein
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