Black Flag 212 index
The Dawning of a New Era
responses to labour election victory
How many times since 1st May and the landslide election of Tony Blairs
Labour Government have you had conversations with punch drunk lefties that
begin What was your favourite memory of election night 97?. Maybe its a
sign of political illiteracy that party manifestoes are so dull that no one
bothers to read them anymore, but it seems that the media euphoria and the
popping of champagne corks at Walworth Road have served to obscure the fact
that New Labour was supported by The Sun, The Times, The Financial Times and
The Economist and the New Labour Manifesto set out its aims as follows: In
industrial relations we make it clear that there will be no return to flying
pickets, secondary action, strikes with no ballot or the trade union laws of
the 1970s.
In their book The Blair Revolution Peter Mandelson and Roger Liddle set
down in detail what Labours pledges to crackdown on petty crime and
neighbourhood disorder and stop the growth of an underclass in Britain
will actually mean.
On crime; To improve the effectiveness of the police, so they catch more
criminals....The issue is not just more bobbies on the beat but how the
police best organise themselves to exploit technological advance - from
genetic identification techniques to the use of video recorders, to data
matching systems.
...To increase the likelihood of convictions in the courts and through
reform of our criminal justice procedures, reduce the number of technical
acquittals.
On the underclass; It is not right that some people should collect the
dole, live on the black economy and then refuse to co-operate with societys
efforts to reintegrate them into the labour market. It is dishonest and
corrosive of our attempt to build a sense of mutual obligations in the
community. In the circumstances where new opportunity is being offered and
refused there should be no absolute entitlement to comtinued receipt of full
social security benefits.
The Economist and The Sun both backed Labour because they read between the
lines and anticipated what lay behind all the cheery grins and photo
opportunities.
European capital cannot afford the cost of the maintenance of the welfare
state. Germanys unemployment stands at 4.5 million, French unemployment is
over 3 million, Britains around 3.5 million. The cost of unemployment is
borne through the provision of welfare benefits. The welfare state is a drag
anchor on economic growth. If European capital is to compete with the Asian
economies and the US economy, it requires labour market flexibility to hold
down wages so intervention by the state to msustain the labour market as a
way of reducing unemployment is out. The only remaining solution is to
dismantle the welfare state itself. The Financial Times, in calling for
support for Blair, recognised that the party best placed politically to
dismantle the welfare state is the party which gave birth to it. Blairs
vision, which he has sold to the CBI, The Economist and a host of other
business forums, is of a hi-tech, low wage economy. As Mandelson describes it
John Major presided over a massive boost to government spending in the run
up to the 1992 election. Public spending rose by 5.7% in the election year
alone.... Public borrowing has too often absorbed too high a share of the
countrys savings. Government policy must ensure that the ntaions savings are
put to productive purposes, rather than immediate public or personal
consumption.
The vote cast for Labour on 1st May was objectively a vote for the
dismantling of the welfare state, slashing of public sector pay, workfare and
a high tech police force to save the middle classes from the disorder likely
to result. Does anyone still need to ask why Labour didnt oppose the
Criminal Justice Act?
Whatever subjective intentions Labour voters had, the end result was the
replacement of a weak, divided anti-working class government with a right
wing anti-working class government with a massive majority!
Over the next 5 years Labour will seek to drain resources form working class
communities. The closure of schools, youth clubs, libraries and playgroups,
and the selling off of housing stock and chronic disrepair which are the
trademark of Labour in local office will be attempted on a national scale.
Unless the resistance to this responds on the basis that Labour is the class
enemy in office, and opposes it as such and fights from the basis that every
school, every youth club, every council home, belongs to the community in
which it is based and is not the property of the grinning Rachmans of
Blairism, the Labour project will succeed, and the wholesale abandonment to
3rd world levels of poverty of whole sectrions of the working class which is
the legacy of Clinton in the US will be our fate here.
My favourite memory of May 1st? Well, mine was a week or so later, in
Socialist Worker, with a headline We Didnt Vote for This. Tough shit,
comrades, you voted for it, campaigned for it and the rest of us are now
going to pay for it.
Martin