The Question is Whether Or Not We Can Unite to Defeat Britain’s Macron & Learn From the French Left How to Defeat ‘Centrist’ Warmongers
This coming
Friday at 6.30 the Socialist Labour Network has invited a range of different
speakers to give their views on the election that has just gone by and the
prospects, as they see them for the Left during the Starmer government.
Register here:
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_K7IgyMP5TcKfyPnp-5oYYw
Never before has a government been elected with a huge majority to almost universal public indifference if not hostility. The voting turnout, 59.8%, speaks for itself. The second lowest since the war. This says everything about the decay of bourgeois democracy. Anyone who remembers the 1964 election of Harold Wilson’s government with a nail biting majority of 4, after 13 long years of Tory government, cannot help but notice the difference.
1964
was a time of the Beatles and optimism. Change was in the air. It was no mere
slogan. With Starmer Change is a PR slogan
signifying nothing more than a change in the Board of Directors of UK Ltd. It
is the kind of change that Big Brother would have approved of in 1984.
In
1966
Wilson achieved a majority of 98. The Labour government abolished capital
punishment, outlawed racial discrimination, introduced equal pay for women, homosexual
law reform as a result of the Wolfenden
Report and the 1967
Abortion Act.
Unlike
Starmer’s toadying to the USA, Wilson refused the request from US President
Lyndon Johnson for British soldiers to fight in Vietnam. In a curious reversal
of US policy, which up till then had been to eliminate British influence in the
Middle East, the Americans argued against Dennis Healey’s decision to retreat
from East of Suez. See The Fall and Rise of Britain’s ‘East of Suez’ Basing
Strategy
In
1951, 1955, 1959, 1970, 1979, 1992 and 2017 (under Corbyn!) Labour had a higher
% of the vote but didn’t win the election. Under Corbyn in 2017 Labour won 40%
compared to Starmer’s 33.8% and yet it won 150 fewer seats.
Starmer
Labour went out of its way to dampen expectations. His main selling point was
that he would be no different from the Tories. Whatever else you can say about
Blair people were excited by his victory. Starmer by way of contrast is a
personality free zone. A man entirely devoid of charm or charisma. He is the
personification of the Coercive State. He is the face of corporate capital.
Nowhere
was this more evident than in his own constituency Holborn and St Pancras. In
2017,
under Corbyn, Starmer received 41,343 votes, (70.1%). In
2019
he gained 36,641 votes (64.5%). In 2024 his vote
halved to 18,884 (48.9%).
Socialist Independent Andrew Feinstein came from nowhere to pick up 7,312 votes
(18.9%). Starmer repels even his own constituents.
Putting
it another way, in 2024 Labour received 600,000
fewer votes than in the ‘disaster’ of 2019. Whichever way you look at it,
Starmer’s Labour Party did not receive a vote of confidence.
Starmer’s
support for genocide in Gaza has cost it dearly. Four right-wing
Labour MPs lost their seats
to candidates opposing Starmer's support for Israel's Nazi behaviour.
Despite
predictions from the pollsters, Jeremy Corbyn sailed home winning
by over 7,200 votes. Even the BBC found it hard
to find critical voices in his constituency. George Galloway unfortunately lost
his seat in Rochdale but by less than 1,500 votes.
If you are wondering who UK's new PM @Keir_Starmer is, wait no further.
— Esha K (@eshaLegal) July 5, 2024
This will be an interesting thread. pic.twitter.com/ZmoSEPzp5o
The
Green Party had their best
ever general election performance and gained 3 seats
compared to their previous one, including a 10,000 vote victory over obnoxious
war monger Thangam Debbonaire in Bristol West. However as I
have previously
warned, the Green Party is not a left-wing party although
they make radical noises. They support staying in NATO and want to green
capitalism.
The
other highlight of the night was the defeat
of Jonathan Ashworth, shadow Paymaster General. Ashworth
lost his Leicester South seat by nearly 1,000 votes to Shockat Adam, who said: “This is for Gaza.”
Craig Murray - stabbed in the back by Muslim communalists
In Blackburn, the constituency once held by Barbara
Castle and Jack Straw, Labour’s Kate Hollern lost by 132 votes to Adnan
Hussain. Craig Murray for the Workers Party got over 7,000 votes too.
Ayoub Khan - the new independent MP for Birmingham Perry Barr
In Dewsbury and Batley, Labour’s Heather Iqbal, lost by nearly 7,000 votes to Iqbal
Mohamed. In Birmingham Perry Barr the corrupt former Labour MP and Henry
Jackson Society member Khalid Mahmood lost to Ayoub Khan causing the Jewish
Chronicle’s David Rose to froth at the mouth over his having questioned Israel’s fictitious
rape narrative and stories of beheaded babies.
Really ugly scenes during @jessphillips‘ acceptance speech. Absolutely appalling; men shouting down a woman when she’s legitimately won an election is disgraceful and a bad look for our democracy. pic.twitter.com/2aO7TbPqRG
— Ferhanasṭīn 🍉 (find them @ferhankhan.bsky.social) (@QueerhanKhan) July 5, 2024
In Birmingham Hodge Hill, former cabinet minister Liam Byrne
won by 1,566 votes over James Giles, the Worker’s Party candidate. In Birmingham Yardley Jess Phillips won by 693 votes
against the Workers’ Party Jody McIntyre.
In Birmingham Ladywood Labour’s Shabana Mahmood defeated Akhmed Yakoob of the Workers’ Party by 3,421. In
2019 Mahmood won by 28,582 votes. Mahmood was the shadow justice
secretary before the election. Birmingham Ladywood is another area with a high
proportion of Muslim voters.
This produced a backlash by far-right ex-Jewish Chronicle Editor Stephen
Pollard who described
them as “the rise of sectarian voting”, while
Telegraph columnist Sam Ashworth-Hayes condemned their victories as: “Total, utter failures of integration.”
It is a bit rich of Pollard to call Muslim voters ‘sectarian’ given the
campaign he waged amongst Jewish voters not to vote Labour under Corbyn!
In Bethnal Green and Bow, where many were also angered by Starmer’s talk
about deporting Bangladeshi people, Labour’s Rushanara Ali won by less than 1700 votes against independent Ajmal Masroor .
This election saw a determined challenge to Starmer and his most loyal
sycophants by two main groups. One was by the Workers Party which fielded 150 candidates and which aimed to build itself
through its opposition to genocide in Gaza, aiming at the Muslim vote.
The other was a determined campaign by left and Muslim campaigners that
saw Ashworth defeated and Wes Streeting very nearly defeated by Leanne Mohamad in Ilford North. Just
500 votes separated them. If the Green
Party hadn’t stood, Streeting might now be out in the cold.
The example of the French where a united left campaign has squashed the fascist National
Renewal’s hopes of winning control of the government, should be a lesson to us.
A united left in Britain could also do this but this means burying the
tradition of sectarianism which means that one’s differences over who said what
in 1917 are more important than today’s struggles.
There is a very useful compilation of all of the left’s candidates that
has been compiled by the very public sociologist blog. It includes all the left groups that
stood. I have compiled a table of how many candidates each group stood and
their average results.
The list is effectively divided into two: on the one hand the socialist
and Muslim independents did relatively well.
The Workers Party candidates also did well but not on the scale of the
above.
On the other a kaleidoscope of left sects did very badly, making no
impression. It is to be hoped that some of the latter might eventually realise that
standing candidates who receive only a fraction of 1% achieves nothing other
than a lost deposit.
1.
The Socialist Independents
There were 65 candidates and in total they gained just under a quarter of
a million votes with an average of 8.9%. This is clearly a promising start.
They included Corbyn. People were primarily campaigning over one issue,
Gaza. It included Muslims and the thousands of socialist exiles from the Labour
Party that was.
What distinguished many of the campaigns was a wide community
involvement. I can only speak from personal experience in Hove where British
Palestinian, Tanushka Marah, was elected at an all-Brighton
meeting of 150 people. The campaign came primarily out of the wider Palestine
solidarity campaign in Brighton & Hove against genocide in Gaza.
Socialists, feminists and environmental campaigners participated in an
energetic campaign. We chose Hove because the current Labour MP, Peter ‘Killer’ Kyle, is an ardent supporter of genocide
in Gaza and Vice-Chair of Labour Friends of Israel.
Hove is not a naturally left constituency. When I came to Brighton 50
years ago it was one of the safest Tory seats in the country. All three
Brighton & Hove seats were Tory. Brighton Pavilion was represented by
Monday Club MP Sir Julian ‘gunboats’ Amery. Kemptown’s MP was Andrew Bowden,
who finally got caught up in a corruption scandal and was ousted in 1997. Only
Kemptown had ever been Labour, during the Wilson era when it was won in 1964 by
Dennis Hobden by 7 votes.
Hove was won in the Blair landslide of 1997. Before this year left
candidates usually got derisory votes, usually under 500. So the achievement by Tanuksha of 3,048 votes (5.9%)
marked a real triumph. She also saved her deposit.
Overall 27 of the 65 independent candidates got over 5% and thereby saved
their deposits. The total vote for the independents was nearly a quarter of a
million
The Workers Party is very much the creation of George Galloway whose
profile has never been far from the limelight. When George won a by-election in Rochdale in February and slimy Sunak slithered out of 10 Downing Street to condemn the election result (one wonders
whether he or Paul Mason had considering making it a criminal offence to vote
for George) his reputation was established nationally.
Soon after George announced an intention by the WP to contest 500 seats
but that proved too difficult and the final tally was 152. The 152 candidates
gained a total of 210, 000 votes with an average of 3.48%. Although some
candidates did well, a lot got derisory votes. 26 WP candidates (17.1%) saved
their deposit compared to 41.5% of the Independents.
It obviously makes sense for the Independents and the Workers’ Party to
join forces in future elections but there are formidable political obstacles to
this. The targeting by Galloway of migrants and refugees as a threat to British
workers’ standard of living, pay and conditions is unacceptable.
Galloway fails to recognise why it is that the boat people crossing the
Channel are scapegoated despite being a fraction of overall migration. Our
rulers only rule because they are able to divide and rule, setting one section
of the poor against another. Galloway plays into this and thinks he’s being
smart by being seen to be tough on law and order and refugees.
‘Patriotic socialism’ has a long and inglorious history.
It resulted in social democratic parties supporting their own ruling classes in
World War I. It has been tried, not least by Henry Hyndman of the Socialist Federation, who was an anti-Semite and a
supporter of imperialism and the Boers. It has always been a disaster.
Patriotism is how the ruling class fools the working class into supporting
their imperialist ventures and dying in their wars.
People Before Profit stood 3 candidates in one of
Britain’s remaining colonies, Northern Ireland. They gained an average of 2,80l
votes and 7.1%, saving two of their deposits.
4. The
Left Sects
One must not forget the 84 candidates that a variety of the left sects
stood. Without fail they gained derisory votes and lost their deposits. One
wonders what is the point of such an exercise in futility but to some like
Arthur Scargill’s Socialist Labour Party what matters is keeping the flag
flying. Scargill has spent nearly 40 years since the Miner’s Strike trashing
his own political reputation. It is
rather sad.
The main group is the Trade union
and Socialist Coalition [TUSC]. At one time it was sponsored by
the RMT under Bob Crowe but since then it has distanced itself from it. TUSC
was the creation of the Socialist Party.
TUSC stood 40 candidates and without exception they did abysmally. Not
one of them saved their deposit or gained over 1000 votes. The highest vote was
by Dave Nellist, the former Coventry MP, who secured 2.2% in Coventry East. They
secured an average of 0.79%.
Given the success of the socialist independents it’s time that TUSC
called it a day and threw its lot in with other socialists. It is clear that
their project has failed.
The Communist Party of Britain, which prints the Morning Star, stood 14 candidates. They
did even worse than TUSC. They secured
an average of 0.46% which is less than 1 in 200. My advice to them is to join with
other socialists, ditch your resident Zionist Mary Davis and stop plugging the two-state
apartheid solution for Palestine.
Scargill’s Socialist Labour Party
was formed after Labour ditched Clause 4. It stood 12 candidates who got an
average of 0.7%. Scargill once turned up at a party AGM with more votes in his
back pocket than the rest of the delegates put together, representing the
previously unknown Lancashire Miners Welfare Organisation! The SLP today is the
living dead and is unlikely to survive Arthur’s passing.
The grandly titled Workers Revolutionary Party stood 5 candidates obtaining an average of 0.52%. The WRP
has been around a long time and it was led by Gerry Healey before he was expelled for raping women comrades. This did
not stop Corin Redgrave extolling his ‘achievements’ and proclaiming that “If this is the work of a rapist, let’s recruit more rapists.”
Other left fragment which stood candidates included the Alliance for Green Socialism (in 2005 I was a candidate for them!)
which stood 2 candidates who gained an average of 0.3%.
There is Communist Future, of which I know nothing, which stood one candidate who
obtained 0.3%.
Communist League stood 2 candidates who obtained an average of 0.4%. It
is one of the splinters of the old International Marxist Group and supports the
American Socialist Workers Party, which is no longer on the left,
supporting as it does Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
Socialist Equality Party is another Trotskyist sect, an offspring of the WRP, led by David North. It
publishes the World Socialist Web Site which often has well informed
articles. It also stood 2 candidates, obtaining an average of 0.3%, one of whom
stood against Starmer, thus splitting the socialist opposition, or rather they
would have done if Tom Scripps had obtained more than 0.2%!
The Socialist Party of Great Britain was founded in 1904. They are the
Jehovah Witnesses of the left. They stood 2 candidates obtaining an average of
0.25%.
The newly inaugurated Transform also stood 2 candidates obtaining an average of 0.75%.
Clearly they haven’t transformed anything.
One would hope that all these groups would either disappear or join with
other socialists but I suspect life would have no meaning for them if they were
to make an acquaintance with reality.
Tony Greenstein
Corbyns job is to capture oppositional energy in a movement that will go nowhere. That was his job as a backbencher and its a job he has again now. No one should fall for the hype here. Corbyn will lead you nowhere because that’s his job.
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ReplyDeleteSome interesting statistics in your latest posting and a good analysis. We're often told that the British voter won't vote for a socialist led Labour government which I did in 2019. What I voted for was Labour's policies and not so much Jeremy Corbyn who I thought was a bit of a weakling and a fluffy. These figures do show that Corbyn won more votes than Starmer in both 2017 and 2019. However, the political statistics also show that the Tory party has been the dominant party in power for over a century and that England is predominantly a conservative country. Even the Labour Party has become Tory-lite and pale blue. Maggie Thatcher said that Blair and New Labour were her greatest legacy to the country. Since 1900 when Labour was formed, the party has won only eight out of 32 general elections. In the last 121 years, only three Labour leaders have won general elections. When people have been asked why they will be voting Labour in 2024, they say to get the Tories out. They don't say they're doing so because they like Keir Starmer or Labour's policies. They see Starmer has dull and uninspiring and don't really have a clue what Labour stands for. I agree that having 57 different varieties of sectarian socialist groups in Britain doesn't help things. It seems that the modestly named Tony Blair Institute for Global Change and the billionaires that bank roll it, are now running the country.
ReplyDeleteI agree with most of this. However there are reasons to do with British imperialism and its legacy for why we are a conservative country. I think part of our task is trying to clear away the illusions in 'great' Britain's role and also that of our rulers of course
ReplyDeleteAs bad as Starmer is, the problems the Labour Party, so its a dead end putting our discontent into it. Having said that, it's also not great to have so much sectarianism on the left - England seems to lead the way in having all these different groups, which appear to all be Trotskyist. We need one mass socialist movement, and part of that will mean that we have to reject the likes of Novara Media, Jeremy Corbyn etc as the voices of it.
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