Thread: The myth of British Labour as a left wing party

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    Default The myth of British Labour as a left wing party

    Hi to RL members,

    I'm a student of law and politics. My own political beliefs are kind of hard to categorise - I guess, most are centre-left to left but on other issues they are more to the side considered "right wing". I'm here to learn more about far-left
    views and have read many of the threads here with great interests over the last few days.

    I am British, and one great source of concern for me is the fact that all mainstream UK parties are essentially, neoliberal. Not even right-wing, but way to the right in many issues. Specifically in England, the only viable left-of-centre party is the Greens. But they have a big problem in convincing the population that they are not a single issue party.

    The following is an excellent summary by the blogger "Another angry voice" of just how neoliberal New Labour has become.

    The very idea that the New Labour government of 1997-2010 was some kind of left-wing project is probably the single biggest myth in UK politics.

    (...)

    New Labour

    Of course the preceding paragraphs must read like a familiar potted history to those that have followed politics carefully and noted the dramatic veer to the right that the Labour party undertook after the wilderness years of the 1980s, but many people still don't seem to have noticed that since the 1990s the New Labour party have occupied economic territory way to the right of the Tory administrations of the 50s and 60s.

    There are clearly many people that would disagree with my historical explanation and maintain that New Labour hasn't utterly betrayed its left-wing roots, however firm evidence of this dramatic shift away from socialism can be seen in the actual economic policies enacted by the New Labour regime.

    New Labour policies

    Please consider whether any of the New Labour policies in the long list below are in any way compatible with the concept of socialism. As a quick refresher I'll provide a brief and uncontroversial definition of socialism before I begin the list of New Labour policies.
    "Socialism is an economic system characterised by social ownership of the means of production and co-operative management of the economy. "Social ownership" may refer to cooperative enterprises, common ownership, state ownership, citizen ownership of equity, or any combination of these."
    Refusal to renationalise the Tories dreadfully botched rail privatisation fiasco despite a 1997 manifesto pledge to do so, and a landslide parliamentary majority to do it with. It is worth noting that public opinion was strongly in favour of rail renationalisation, the grass roots of the Labour party even more so. However New Labour continued handing out vast taxpayer funded subsidies to keep the whole shambolic mess from systemic failure. New Labour barely even tried to reform the hopeless over-priced, over-crowded jumble the Tories had created, let alone doing what the public actually wanted and bringing the railways back under democratic control. Had New Labour been the slightest bit left wing they would have taken the public railways back off the bunch of rent-seeking corporate parasites that have been bleeding the taxpayer and the rail traveler dry ever since it was privatised.

    Deregulation of the financial sector which New Labour did in line with the bonkers right-wing neoclassical economic theory that deregulated markets tend towards equilibrium and stability.

    Abandonment of democratic control over the Bank of England, which entailed handing control of the central bank to unelected private interests, giving them absolute control over monetary policy and even introducing specific regulations to prevent the democratically elected government from trying to even influence goings on at the central bank.

    Refusal to renationalise or even effectively regulate the privatised utilities companies. This allowed corporate rentiers to rinse as much profit out of the general public through cartel like price inflation of their water and energy costs, whilst simultaneously overseeing a catastrophic abandonment of infrastructure investment.

    Building up an estimated £240 billion black hole of debt through the use of PFIs, which are catastrophically inefficient neoliberal economic alchemy schemes. PFIs allow private sector interests to milk the taxpayer for many times the actual construction value of an infrastructure project (school, hospital, bridge, council offices etc) for several decades after completion. PFI is basically a way of stealing from future generations in order to fund lavish, over-priced infrastructure projects. The concept of PFI was dreamt up by a bunch of conservatives as a kind of significantly more lucrative Privatisation 2.0, yet New Labour embraced PFI much more passionately than the Tory administration of John Major which preceded them.

    Turning a blind eye to the rampant tax-dodging of multi-national corporations and the super rich minority. New Labour operated a hands-off approach to tax collection, allowing HMRC the freedom to engage in all kinds of back door deals with major corporations, costing the country £billions. This lax tax-collection regime has continued under the current government, but New Labour were just as guilty of turning a blind eye to the tax-dodging escapades of multinational corporations and the super rich minority as the Tories are now. New Labour bear a great deal of responsibility for the tax-dodging situation being as desperately bad as it has become nowadays.

    Allowing the development of a vast housing Ponzi bubble built on unsustainable levels of debt accumulation. New Labour were quite happy to ride the feel good wave of false prosperity as the property bubble inflated and the public used home equity extraction to "live beyond their means". George Osborne is attempting exactly the same housing inflation trick with his Help to Buy property price inflation subsidies right now, which illustrates that New Labour and the Tories share remarkably similar economic territory, and that George Osborne is too thick to have even learnt probably the most important lesson of the 2007-08 financial sector meltdown; that debt fueled property price inflation does not represent the road to sustainable economic growth.

    Refusal to invest in much needed social housing. The construction of social housing is a proven fiscal multiplier (the kind of government investment which returns more economic growth than it costs in government expenditure) yet New Labour refused to build. Instead they oversaw the mass privatisation of council housing stock into the hands of privately operated and undemocratic housing associations and continued the "sell it off on the cheap and prevent the proceeds being used to invest in new social housing" policy of the preceding Tory administration.

    Refusal to regulate the Buy-to-Let slumlords. The use of rent controls, increased security of tenure for good tenants legislation, construction of new social housing and/or the application of decent living standards in private rents could easily have prevented some of the most egregious property rentiers from extracting so much wealth from the economy, and dampened unsustainable debt fueled house price inflation bubble into the bargain. New Labour did none of these things.

    The introduction of "Workfare" schemes. Workfare (compelling the unemployed to abandon their labour rights and work for no wage under threat of absolute destitution) is a brazen assault on the value of labour. There is hardly a more glaring example of a political party having completely abandoned their roots than a party called "The Labour Party" introducing mandatory labour schemes that are nothing less than a direct assault on the value of labour.

    The Privatisation of air traffic control, which was done in 1998. Left wing parties shouldn't go around privatising things, yet as we'll see, air traffic control was far from a unique case of New Labour privatisation.

    Overseeing an exponential growth in corporate outsourcing contracts. New Labour lavished ever more (absurdly one sided) outsourcing contracts on private sector outsourcing parasites, which are companies that extract near enough 100% of their profits through milking government contracts (companies like G4S, Serco, Capita, Atos, A4E). There were countless massive beneficiaries of the corporate outsourcing boom that went on under the New Labour administration.

    Planning to privatise the Royal Mail. Long before the Tories and Lib-Dems sold off Royal Mail for a fraction of its true market value New Labour had plans to do exactly the same. The fact that the majority of the UK public have consistently opposed Royal Mail privatisation, yet all three of the Westminster establishment parties have been strongly in favour of it illustrates that they are all adherents of a right-wing ideology that is at odds with the will of the public and the very concept of socialism alike.

    Prison privatisations. New Labour oversaw the introduction of several privately operated prisons and detention centres. Although pseudo-communist regimes like the USSR have utilised forced prison labour (the Gulags), meaning that the left hardly has a clean sheet on the issue, the prison-industrial complex built on a foundation of private profit making prisons and lavishing corporations with virtually free prison labour is a particularly right wing beast. A right wing beast that New Labour were more than happy to ride.

    Kick-starting the privatisation of the NHS. Alan Milburn was the New Labour health minister between 1999 and 2003. After introducing the legislation to well and truly kick open the door to NHS privatisation, Milburn walked straight onto the payroll of Bridgepoint Capital, a hedge fund that has capitalised on NHS privatisation. As with the Railways and the Royal Mail, the public is strongly opposed to NHS privatisation, yet New Labour went ahead and started privatising it anyway.

    Kick starting the privatisation of the education system. By the time Labour left office in 2010 they had overseen the introduction of over 200 privately operated, yet taxpayer funded schools called academies. As soon as the Tories came to power they used the academies model to mass privatise the English education system. As of December 2013 a total of 3,522 schools had been turned into private academies. These schools (£billions worth of infrastructure) have been given away for free to be operated by unaccountable private sector interests, including several major Tory party donors. As is the case with many of the most egregiously right-wing policies of the Coalition government, the origins can be traced back to New Labour.

    Introducing the ATOS administered WCA regime for the disabled.The Atos administered WCA regime of blatant discrimination and psychological torture for the disabled is one of the most appalling policies of the Tory led government, however, once again, the origins of the policy can be traced back to New Labour. Not only is the policy of employing a foreign corporate outsourcing giant to hound the disabled off their benefits a disgraceful policy, it is also distinctly right-wing. A left-wing government with a determination to abuse the disabled would surely have kept the "work" of imposing psychological torture on the disabled "in-house", rather than outsourcing it to a foreign corporation.

    Attempting to introduce extremist copyright protection laws. One of the clearest indicators that New Labour were in the pockets of the corporations that any legitimate left-wing party would be working to protect us from was the fact that they spent the dying months of their 13 year rule pushing through some extremist copyright protection laws known as The Digital Economy Act. Parts of this legislation (which have subsequently been repealed) were designed to allow the copyright lobby to cut off a persons Internet for copyright violations, with no trial and no right of appeal.

    Revocation of the right to trial by jury and other attacks on the justice system. Equal access to justice is definitely a left-wing principle, one which New Labour desperately tried to undermine with their revocation of the ancient British right to trial by jury and other reforms to the justice system such as their attacks on Legal Aid in 2006.

    Privatisation of the HMRC property portfolio (into the hands of a company based in Bermuda for the purpose of dodging tax). This case is way beyond parody. In 2001 New Labour oversaw the sale and leaseback of the tax collection authority property portfolio to Mapeley Steps, a company based in Bermuda for the purpose of dodging tax! Not only was this yet another glaring illustration that New Labour behaved absolutely nothing like a socialist party would be expected to (socialist parties don't go around privatising everything they think they can get away with), it also demonstrated the shamefully lax attitude to tax-dodging corporations I mentioned earlier.

    Backing the imperialist pretensions of the most fanatically right-wing government the US has ever suffered. The invasion of Iraq was a disaster. Admittedly imperialism in itself is not exclusive to right-wing regimes (Soviet imperialism) however it is quite easy to see that the invasion and occupation of Iraq was a policy dreamt up by a bunch of fanatically right-wing Neo-Conservatives in the US. When making character judgements it is often useful to consider the company that is kept, and the governments that the UK aligned with in order to carry out the invasion and occupation of Iraq included arguably the most right-wing government in US history, the fanatically right-wing (and corruption riddled) Partido Popular of Spain led by José María Aznar, Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia and the right-wing government of Japan led by Junichiro Koizumi (aside from pushing Japan into the invasion of Iraq he was also famous for privatising the Japanese postal service and regularly paying homage to Japanese war criminals).

    Pseudo-Socialist window dressing

    Even some of the seemingly left-wing policies introduced by New Labour during the early years of their 1997-2010 regime were not what they seemed.

    National Minimum Wage. Even though the introduction of the national minimum wage was vehemently opposed by the Tory party, it was not much of a socialist policy because it was set at such an appallingly low level (especially for teenagers and young adults). Setting the minimum wage at such a low level legitimised businesses paying wages that are insufficient to keep their workers from suffering destitution.

    Working Tax Credits. In order to stave off the absolute destitution of the working masses and their families, New Labour introduced Working Tax Credits, which are basically state subsidies for employers that pay poverty wages. If corporations were compelled to pay a living wage the need for these kinds of subsidies would be massively reduced. If we look a bit more closely at the economic ideas that underpin Working Tax Credits we can see that it is a particularly bureaucratic form of Negative Income Tax, which was an idea originally developed by the Tory politician Juliet Rhys-Williams and further promoted by Milton Friedman (the spiritual leader of the pseudo-economic ideology of neoliberalism).

    Child Tax Credits. On the face of it Child Tax Credits also appear to be a left-wing policy, but if we compare them with a genuinely socialist policy such as free childcare for all working parents we can see that at best, Child Tax Credits are poorly conceived pseudo-socialist window dressing. The big problem with Child Tax Credits was that nothing was done to prevent child care providers from inflating their prices in order to soak up all of the tax credits they knew the parents were receiving plus a bit more for good measure. New Labour allowed the cost of childcare to spiral out of control, meaning that British parents pay out the highest childcare costs in the developed world as a percentage of net family income.

    Miliband's Labour party

    Some people seem to be under the impression that under the leadership of Ed Miliband, the Labour party have taken significant steps back towards the left. Once again, a look at some of their actual policies shows that they are certainly not a socialist party, and if they have shifted back towards the left, they have only taken a few almost imperceptibly small baby steps away from the course of orthodox neoliberalism.

    Renationalisation. The Labour stance on renationalisation has not changed since Miliband came to power. The Labour leadership are vehemently opposed to it despite the fact that the vast majority of Labour voters want to see the NHS, the railways, the Royal Mail and the utilities companies renationlised and run as not-for-profit public services. It is not just Labour supporters that favour renationalisation, the public as a whole are strongly in favour or renationalisation and even a majority of Tory voters favour renationalisation of the energy companies and the rail network! After decades of egregious profiteering from the rail franchises and utilities companies it is beyond doubt that there is a strong public appetite for the explicitly socialist policy of returning these vital services to public ownership, yet all Ed Miliband seems capable of doing is offering the feeble pseudo-socialist policy of capping (already massively inflated) energy prices for a few months.

    [evidence to support all of these assertions in the above paragraph can be seen in this article]

    Trade Unions. Another indicator of Ed Miliband's determination to steer Labour away from socialism is his bizarrely cowardly reaction to the Falkirk debacle. Instead of turning the tables by focusing on the rogues gallery of tax-dodgers, banksters, asset-strippers, and vested interests that fund the Tory party, he meekly caved in and tried appease the right-wing press by attacking the trade unions (an utterly futile task, the right-wing press will never side with him). By doing this he allowed David Cameron to land punch after punch without reply. The trade unions are not perfect, but they are democratic organisations which represent millions of ordinary working people. If anyone seriously believes that trade union influence over the Labour party is worse than the dodgy characters that fund the Tory party, they should perhaps familiarise themselves with some of the biggest donors to the Tory party and how David Cameron's so called "Leaders Group" operates.

    Workfare. In my view, the Labour stance on "Workfare" mandatory unpaid labour schemes is the single strongest indicator that the Labour party have utterly abandoned their left-wing credentials. The decision of the Labour party leadership to collude with Iain Duncan Smith to get his "I'm Above the Law" Retroactive Workfare Bill through parliament in a single day by whipping their MPs into abstaining on the vote was a betrayal of the people that Iain Duncan Smith unlawfully robbed and more importantly a betrayal of their left-wing roots so dire that they could probably have only have gone further by smearing excrement over the graves of Kier Hardie and Clement Attlee.

    [A list of the few honourable Labour party MPs that defied Ed Miliband in order to vote against Iain Duncan Smith's disgraceful "I'm above the law" bill can be seen here]
    I will post any further updates on right-wing Labour policy in this thread.
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  3. #2
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    New Labor / Democratic Parties in UK / US respectively have proven the Marxist doctrine that the parties are the purveyors of capitalist policies. There have been very little mandate for the party positions (often they are directly opposed by their constituents) especially true when you look at the vanguard positions the parties put most of their "political capital" into.

    The western democratic systems would be hardly representative of the public's interests even if they worked correctly. But this dysfunctional state is not even in place.
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    Well, the thing is, even if New Labour did nationalise the railways, even if they collected tax efficiently, even if they abolished the monarchy, the House of Lords etc., that would still not be socialism. Socialism is the social ownership of the means of production - the abolition of capitalism. It can not be enacted by bourgeois parties presiding over a bourgeois government.

    Bourgeois parties are not "economically left" or "economically right" - they manage capitalism to the full extent of their capabilities, which is why New Labour stood for privatisation and, for example, the Tories under Harold Macmillan for nationalisation,
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    There have been very little mandate for the party positions (often they are directly opposed by their constituents) especially true when you look at the vanguard positions the parties put most of their "political capital" into.
    You are correct. One example: Polling has shown that most people in the UK, of all 4 major parties, support renationalisation of the rail network. But the only party comitted to it is the Greens, a minor party.

    I think part of the problem here is confusion over the meaning of "right wing" or "left wing".

    Examples:

    To some Americans, Europe's governments are uniformly "socialist" and left-wing.

    In the US, the Democratic party is considered to be on the left - even far-left ("Obama is a communist" etc.) while in the UK and Europe must would consider it centre to centre-right.

    In the UK, the 3 main parties were and continue to be considered centre-left, centrist, and centre-right for Lab, LD, and Cons respectively. Infact, from the 40s to the 70s all 3 were centrist. Now, all 3 are objectively centre-right to right. There has been a massive shift in the British political centreground since the end of WW2.

    I suppose that the terms left-wing or right-wing are pretty vague. Terms like "socialist" or "capitalist" can be too. Some right-wingers describe modern day western Europe as socialist while others call the former USSR (state) capitalist.
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    Hi to RL members,

    I'm a student of law and politics. My own political beliefs are kind of hard to categorise - I guess, most are centre-left to left but on other issues they are more to the side considered "right wing". I'm here to learn more about far-left views and have read many of the threads here with great interests over the last few days.

    I am British, and one great source of concern for me is the fact that all mainstream UK parties are essentially, neoliberal. Not even right-wing, but way to the right in many issues. Specifically in England, the only viable left-of-centre party is the Greens. But they have a big problem in convincing the population that they are not a single issue party.

    The following is an excellent summary by the blogger "Another angry voice" of just how neoliberal New Labour has become.
    Welcome to revleft, (and best of luck with your law/politics degree). I'm kind of in the same boat in that I live in the UK and I would prefer to be centre-left, but it simply is not an option because Labour is so far to the right. [the summary mentioned a few things I hadn't heard such as prison privatization. I thought that was just in the US, so thanks for that]. I keep find myself pushed further leftwards, but don't really know where to go so I hang round revleft for now.
    The Greens are still committed to retaining a capitalist system but with some progressive policies, mixed economic system and have a socialist tendency in the 'red greens' within the party.

    The Far left in the UK is extremely divided and marginalized and if memory serves, they don't score more than 1% in general elections and are regrettably out performed by the far right in UKIP and the BNP, but the Greens have done well too. If I'm not mistaken, another problem is that EU membership restricts the state's ability to nationalize private companies, except in case of emergencies (like Northern Rock and Royal Bank of Scotland), so introducing 'Socialism' (in whatever form) would challenge the UK's membership of the EU.

    The UK's far-left parties:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UK_poli...t-wing_parties

    The distinction between the centre-left and the far-left is that the centre-left will criticize individual policies and politicians and work within the system to reform it; the far left blames the problems on the institutions themselves, arguing it is a more systematic failure requiring systematic changes. This is true of both anarchist and Marxist criticisms.
    In theory, it's easy to sign up to the far left as an attractive group of ideas, but finding ways to break out into the open to gain wider support is really difficult as the neo-liberal consensus is so pervasive and embedded and given the historical problems with how badly things turned out in the USSR etc, there are legitimate questions on what we can and would do differently.

    Anyway, I think I'm rambling, but I hope this might be of some help.
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    The Labour Party is well named as it was never set-up to be a socialist party but a party that represented the interests of organised labour. Those interests were determined and limited by the trade union bureaucracy from the outset. Nevertheless, throughout the 20th century it had many socialists among its rank and file. I'm not sure that is the case today.
    "Events have their own logic, even when human beings do not." - Rosa Luxemburg

    "There are decades when nothing happens; and there are weeks when decades happen." - Lenin

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    I've found it better to attack old labour instead of new labour when people spurt out it being left wing or even the more absurd claim of it being a working class party. Reason's simple, before long someone will say "hold up, that's new labour. Old labour wasn't like this" when you're using fairly recent labour party policies to criticise them. If you're going down this road i suggest a particular pamphlet...

    The long defunct Syndicalist Workers' Federation in the UK had a good pamphlet titled 'How Labour Governed, 1945-1951' You can grab it on Libcom https://libcom.org/history/how-labou...rned-1945-1951
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    Red Economist,

    Thanks for the reply.

    and if memory serves, they don't score more than 1% in general elections
    The Communist party fielded only 6 candidates, and won just under 1000 votes. The Workers revolutionary party, which is Trotskyist, won over 700 votes with 7 candidates (out of almost 30 million votes).

    The self-described socialist parties won more votes but still pretty minor (the largest of this type got 11,000 votes).

    Their support would undoubtedly be much higher if so many committed left-wing people stopped supporting New Labour.
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    I've found it better to attack old labour instead of new labour when people spurt out it being left wing or even the more absurd claim of it being a working class party. Reason's simple, before long someone will say "hold up, that's new labour. Old labour wasn't like this" when you're using fairly recent labour party policies to criticise them. If you're going down this road i suggest a particular pamphlet...

    The long defunct Syndicalist Workers' Federation in the UK had a good pamphlet titled 'How Labour Governed, 1945-1951' You can grab it on Libcom https://libcom.org/history/how-labou...rned-1945-1951
    Well, for a while Labour was what Lenin called a "bourgeois workers' party", a party that attracted workers based on their immediate, trade-union interests and organised them to fight for a purely bourgeois program. However, this is not an endorsement of the Labour Party - that "bourgeois" in the name trumps everything else, and the "workers'" part stopped applying to labour arguably before the forties-fifties.

    One particularly problematic line of thinking on the British left argues that if "old Labour" could just be restored somehow, this living anachronism would somehow contribute to the proletarian cause in Britain. The SLP and those who orbit around it are pretty much guilty of this sort of thinking.
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    One particularly problematic line of thinking on the British left argues that if "old Labour" could just be restored somehow, this living anachronism would somehow contribute to the proletarian cause in Britain. The SLP and those who orbit around it are pretty much guilty of this sort of thinking.

    lol, i come across that from some local "Trots", it just boggles the mind.


    scarequotes mandatory here xD
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    I wonder if some UK socialists are taking a similar plan of action to the far-right in the US.

    Many far-right people in the US believe the only way to electoral (and therefore, governmental) success is via the GOP.

    It seems what is going on here is some British socialist people see Labour as the route to victory, as the party is far more electorally appealing and viable than the socialist and communist parties.
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    From the libcom website

    Labouring in vain - a critical history of the Labour Party

    An account of the foundation and development of the Labour Party and how it has acted in power and in opposition, effectively countering many of the claims for Labour having once been a working class, socialist party.

    The Origins of the Labour Party

    Unlike most of its European counterparts, the British Labour Party was not created by people calling themselves socialists. It was set up by the Trade Unions, to act in the interest of those unions. In fact in its early days it made no claim to being a socialist party at all. We would claim that in fact it has never been a socialist party.

    To understand just why Labour has never been a socialist party, it is a good idea to go right back to its roots. The Labour Party was officially formed in 1906, but its origins really lie back in the 1850s, with the creation of the first successful trade unions in Britain.

    Britain was the first capitalist society. From the earliest days of capitalism there has been a fierce struggle between the bosses and the workers. At times this struggle was industrial, with workers trying to set up types of unions (the first we know of was in the middle of the 17th century), at times it was political, with workers struggling for "democratic rights", at times direct action was used, with workers destroying machines, blowing up factories and burning hayricks. Until the 1850s the responses of the ruling class was always the same. Brutal repression was the order of the day. Workers were sacked, imprisoned, hanged and deported.

    By the 1850s the capitalist class were firmly established in control of Britain. The 1832 Reform Act (which altered the way parliament was elected) and the abolition of the Corn Laws in 1846 (which introduced free trade in food), put the old aristocracy firmly in their place. The working class political agitation for the vote had been defeated with the failure of the Chartists in 1848. The capitalists could afford to loosen up a bit on their hold on the working class.

    The 1850s saw the first ever successful setting up of Trade Unions. These weren't mass organisations of all workers. They were small tightly organised associations of skilled workers. Craftsmen in the building trades and skilled engineers were the first to get organised. These men were quite highly paid and saw themselves as a cut above their fellow workers. Some might call them an aristocracy of labour. They saw themselves as being respectable members of society who wanted nothing to do with notions of revolution. It was this social group that was rewarded with the vote in 1867. Essentially, capitalism realised it had nothing to fear from them.

    These groups were followed by other skilled workers in organising unions. They set about creating Trades Councils and the TUC. Unskilled workers were kept firmly in their place by the capitalists. When agricultural workers tried to organise they were smashed.

    Politically these newly unionised and enfranchised workers saw themselves as being part of the Liberal tradition. It was to the Liberal party that they looked for help, and it was as Liberals that the first working men were elected to Parliament.

    In fact this tradition was so strong that even after the Labour Party was formed, a significant group of MPs were elected as Lib-Labs, that is they were Liberal MPs, but they saw themselves as Labour men. These Lib-Labs were mostly from mining constituencies in Wales.

    In the 1880s the first socialist organisation in Britain was formed. This was the Democratic Federation, which was soon renamed the Social Democratic Federation. This group was never very large and failed to attract much support from the "new" unions.

    The 1880s also saw the setting up of unions for semi-skilled and unskilled workers. The first of these was formed during the Match Girls Strike against Bryant and May. Equally significant was the Dockers Strike and the setting up of the Dockers Union. Others soon followed. These unions, however, were firmly under the control, not of their members, but of supporters and patrons who were either members of the craft unions or were actually members of the ruling class.

    It wasn't until the 1890s that significant groups of workers began to look for independent labour representation. In 1893, the Independent Labour Party (ILP) was set up in Bradford. Its title explained its reason for existence. It still failed to gain much support from the existing unions. However, members of both the SDF and ILP did get themselves elected into important positions in the unions and Trades Councils.

    The 1880s and 1890s were like the 1980s and 1990s in one way. They both saw the coming of a great economic crisis. That of the 1880s and 1890s was called the Great Depression . Faced with falling profits and declining markets, the ruling class hit back against the working class. Many were sacked, others were forced to leave their unions. The overall effect was catastrophic for the Trades Unions. This was made even worse by a series of court cases which threatened the finances of the unions. The crunch came with the Taff Vale case (in 1901) which said that employers could sue unions for the effects of a strike.

    It was these court cases that persuaded the unions that they needed to get their act together politically. Faced with financial ruin, the TUC agreed to the setting up of a Labour Representation Committee in 1900. Its aim was to get independent labour MPs elected who would change the law in the unions interests. The LRC was a coalition of unions and socialist societies - the biggest of which were the ILP and the SDF. The SDF soon left when the LRC refused to adopt the politics of class struggle.

    Stabbing the Working Class in the Back

    After the election of 1906 and the winning of 29 seats by the LRC, it changed its name to the Labour Party. It wasn't socialist theory which had created the party, it was the action of a group of hard headed union leaders who realised that only by winning seats in parliament could they hope to alter the legal balance against themselves. This set the tone for the party and ensured that points of principle always had to give way to expediency and horse-trading.

    Even to get elected these MPs had had to do deals. In those days many constituencies had two MPs. Ten of the MPs were elected in these, where the Liberal party only put up one candidate. Sixteen of the others didn't have to put up with Liberal opposition. Only three of them had to fight for their seats against more than just a Tory. Most claimed to be devoutly religious, usually Methodist or Congregationalist, only a couple claimed to be Marxists. So the first group of Labour MPs were elected on the coat-tails of the Liberal party as a result of electoral deals and pacts. Small wonder that there was little difference between the two groups.

    This group of MPs achieved little other than state payment of MPs (in 1911). Then in 1914, war broke out between Britain and Germany. The Labour Party had been part of the Second International and as such was supposed to be against war. In fact it took them just three days to decide to support the war!

    For revolutionaries and socialists it is a simple principle that we oppose capitalist wars. They are always fought in capitalist interests, whether to capture new markets, to defend trade routes or to grab sources of raw materials. They are always said to be for "freedom", "democracy" or to defend the "rights" of small nations. These justifications are equally always lies. These lies are used to con workers into joining up and dying while the boss class rakes in the profits. At times it can be difficult to see this. But in 1914 the issues were quite clear. Socialists in 1914 recognised this in Britain and in other countries. Almost without exception, the social democratic and labour parties rushed to support their ruling class against workers in other countries. This act clearly marked these parties as being on the side of the bosses and against workers all over the world.

    The grateful capitalist class were quick to reward the Labour leaders. In May 1915, the Liberal Prime Minister, Asquith, decided that to run the war properly he needed a coalition government. Arthur Henderson , the leader of the Labour Party, joined the cabinet and two other Labour MPs got junior jobs. In return, they collaborated with the introduction of conscription and the deskilling of industry. As the war went on Labour's membership of the government increased.

    This involvement in government was at a time of rising class struggle. As prices soared, food became scarce and wages failed to rise. There was an upsurge in class struggle, particularly on Clydeside. Many socialists were imprisoned for refusing to join up, speakers were beaten up and public meetings had to be cancelled. Labour's response was to fight to "Win the War", to break strikes and try to exclude from the party the influence of groups like the ILP which tended to take a more pacifist line. In 1917 their influence was broken forever by the power of the trade union bureaucrats with the introduction of the union bloc vote.

    It was in 1918 that the party adopted what it claims to be a "socialist" constitution. This was adopted under the influence of the Russian Revolution and the upsurge of struggle that followed it all over Europe. In theory it proposed very radical sounding policies, in reality it enshrined the unions bureaucrats control of the party. The constitution for the first time allowed individual membership of the party, thus it let in all sorts of guilt ridden, privileged, public school types who hoped to run a reformed capitalism. In fact it was written by one of them, Sidney Webb.

    It was this constitution that contained the famous Clause Four. This said it was the party's aim: To secure for the producers by hand and brain the full fruits of their industry, and the most equitable distribution thereof that may be possible, upon the basis of the common ownership of the means of production and the best obtainable system of popular administration and control of each industry or service

    This doesn't sound too bad on paper. Now we have something to judge them against, instead of just a desire to save union funds from the courts.

    The First Two Labour Governments

    They soon had a chance to put their ideas into practice. In December 1923 there was a General Election. Although the Conservatives won most seats they were in a minority. Labour and the Liberals massively outnumbered them. As the second largest party, Labour got the chance to govern. This first Labour government, led by Ramsay MacDonald, only lasted from January to November, before being replaced by the Tories again. They claimed that they were "in office but not in power" and so couldn't really be blamed for not having done much.

    A good sign of just how much they intended to do, and how clear their attachment to socialist principles was can be seen from the following. J H Thomas, Union leader and MP, was appointed to the Colonial Office. He introduced himself to his departmental heads with the statement: "I"m here to see there is no mucking about with the British Empire."

    In February 1924 the dockers called a strike. This was opposed by the Labour government. In March the tramway workers in London came out. The railway unions proposed to come out in sympathy. MacDonald's response was to use the full force of the law on the side of the bosses. He invoked the 1920 Emergency Powers Act, this would have meant the declaration of a state of emergency if the strike had not been called off. In August the Attorney General tried to prosecute J R Campbell, the editor of the 'Communist' Workers Weekly , on a charge of incitement to mutiny. These actions all helped set the tone for the future.

    Other notable Labour victories of this government were to go ahead with rearmament, including the building of five new cruisers, the bombing of indigenous people in Iraq and shooting strikers in India - presumably for "mucking about with the British Empire".

    Just six years after adopting its so-called socialist constitution, Labour had had a chance at government. It had acted like any other capitalist party - for the bosses and against the workers.

    Labour got elected again in 1929. Again it was a minority government. It promised to reduce unemployment, which stood at 1,164,000. Within a year it had gone up by 750,000 to 1,911,000. In two years it had more than doubled - reaching the then record level of 2,707,000.

    Faced with drain of gold from London in 1931 the government discussed ways to "Save the Pound". What this meant was cuts in civil service pay and unemployment benefits. The Cabinet split over this and MacDonald, the ILP member, formed a coalition with Liberals and Tories to force the measures through. The majority of the party went into opposition.

    In the two years Labour had been in power, 4 million workers had had their wages reduced, including the Government's own employees.

    What followed was a period in the wilderness with continued Tory government. The party came under the leadership and control of two men - Clement Attlee and Sir Stafford Cripps. Both were members of the ruling class. Attlee was the son of a solicitor who had gone to public school. During the First World War, this famous socialist and ILP member had been a Major in he army. He had tried to enlist just two days after the war started, but had been refused because he was too old. Undaunted he kept on trying and had on a number of occasions considered shooting men for cowardice.

    When war broke out in 1939, Labour were quick to support the British ruling class. In fact Attlee"s biggest concern in the early days of September was that Chamberlain, the Tory PM, wouldn't declare war on Germany.

    In 1940 Attlee got his reward. Labour entered into coalition with the Tories and Attlee and Greenwood got into the War Cabinet.

    Attlee"s first job was to introduce an Emergency Powers Bill which gave the government the power to control every aspect of life. He went on the BBC to announce that "Parliament has given to the Government full power to control all persons and property .... The direction of persons to perform services will be under the Minister of Labour, Mr Ernest Bevin."

    Like the First World War, the Second brought increased prices and lowered standards of living to workers. Like in the First, workers didn't just accept this. There were strikes in many industries, most notably in the mines. As Labour and the TUC were partners in the capitalists war effort, their response was simple. Strikers were saboteurs and enemies. They must return to work. Everything was to be subordinate to the war effort. Workers must wait till the war was over.

    The Attlee Government

    With the end of the war in Europe, July 1945 saw another General Election. This time Labour won with a huge majority. They had 393 MPs out of 640. They could do anything that they liked. They finally had the chance to really do something and put Clause Four into effect. What they did was nationalise great swathes of industry, notably coal, rail, gas, electricity, iron and steel and the Bank of England. They also introduced the National Health Service and other features of the Welfare State. It is upon this that most Labour members rest their claims of socialism.

    Looking back we can clearly see that nationalisation has nothing to do with socialism. All it does is replace one set of bosses with another set, who work for the state. For workers the old problems remain. We still have to work for a wage or salary. We still have to pay the rent or mortgage. We still have to feed and clothe our kids. We do this while the new bosses live lives of luxury on enormous salaries. We have no control over our own lives and constantly face the prospect of the sack. All over the world, workers have rejected state capitalism.

    Why did Labour nationalise all these industries? They did so mostly because they were not making profits for their bosses. After the war and the pre-war experiences of the Great Depression, British capitalism was in a bad way. Industry was crumbling and needed replacing. Industry that had been destroyed in the war needed rebuilding. If private capital remained tied up in the loss making mines and railways it could not be used to reconstruct British capitalism. The obvious answer was to nationalise. In return for their ownership of particular firms, the ruling class were given lavish compensation which could then be invested in other, more profitable industries.

    A good example of this was with the nationalisation of the Bank of England. Stockholders were guaranteed the right to continue to receive a 12% dividend on their investment, even after the Bank was taken into state ownership.

    Workers on the other hand, according to Herbert Morrison , could only get the benefits of social insurance, "by increasing the total national income ... it could only be done by work, thought, drive and initiative." (Times,September 6th 1945) . What this meant of course was increased productivity, greater exploitation to screw more surplus value out of the working class - in return for which a few crumbs would be thrown off the bosses table.

    The "Communist", Arthur Horner, a senior NUM bureaucrat explained that he wanted, "The workers in the pits to adopt a new attitude ... Hitherto the policy of the Union had been to get what they could out of the owners. Now they had taken on the responsibility of assisting in running the industry they must accept new methods. They must take a more active part in assisting greater technical efficiency and increasing output." (Daily Telegraph, Sept. 7th, 1945)

    The Labour Party and the Unions were hand in hand with the bosses, aiming to screw more out of the working class by conning them that the promised land had arrived.

    They showed just whose side they were on in the docks. Just like in 1924, Labour had to deal with a dockers strike. This was in October 1945. The strike was unofficial. Both union leaders and Labour MPs told them to go back to work. But the men, who had suffered big wage cuts after the war ended, carried on with their strike. What was Labour"s response? They sent troops into the London docks to break the strike. They repeated this tactic many times in the course of their government. Indeed it is a regular feature of Labour in power that it uses troops to break strikes. It did it in the 1970s against the fire fighters, the bin men and others.

    What about the NHS? Surely this was a great socialist venture? Actually it was all based on the wartime Beveridge Report. This was partly aimed at keeping workers quiet in the hope of avoiding upheaval after the war. It was also partly aimed at ensuring a healthier and more compliant workforce that would produce more profits for the bosses. In any case Beveridge, the great architect of the NHS, was a member of the Liberal party and his report had the broad agreement of all the main political parties. Any argument was over points of policy, not the policy itself.

    What was Labour's record on the NHS in this government? They passed a law in 1949 allowing for prescription charges and in 1951 introduced charges on glasses and false teeth.

    Other notable features of this Labour government were the building of the British atomic bomb and Hydrogen bomb, the rising of the cost of living by 30% and the demand that workers exercise "restraint" and not ask for pay rises. Wartime rationing was kept in place, which ensured that money was spent not on consumption but on investment. This meant not only less for workers, but a drabber, more monotonous existence. In fact between 1947 and 1951 working class people suffered a drop in their real wages.

    All in all, the great Attlee government gave little to the working class. In this it revealed once again just whose side it was on. This time its membership began more closely to reveal this fact too. In 1945 more than 40 of the Labour MPs were lawyers...... " between 20 and 30 were business men, and a good sprinkling of farmers, accountants, consulting engineers and other professions" were among the rest. Arthur Greenwood, the Labour Lord Privy Seal, said at the time, "I look around among my colleagues, and I see landlords, capitalists and lawyers. We are a cross -section of the national life, and this is something that has never happened before." A party originally set up to protect the unions had acquired a constitution written by middle class intellectuals and was now being run by a coalition of union bureaucrats and traditional members of the ruling class.

    Nationalisation is not, and never has been, Socialism. Socialism means the common ownership of the means of production and distribution. It means getting rid of the bosses, getting rid of working for a wage or salary, getting rid of the whole rotten buying and selling system. It means that people will freely come together to produce what is needed and will freely take from the abundant products of their labour. It will involve the abolition not only of the ruling class, but also their state. It will not mean that state being replaced by a new state. Nationalisation is just one form of state capitalism.

    It is hardly surprising that the Labour Party and the unions ended up as the firmest supporters of state capitalism. Trade unions do not exist to change society. They were set up to fight over the division of the capitalist cake, not to take over the bakery. Indeed, without the buying and selling economy, based on wage labour, there is no role for a trade union. With no role for a trade union, there is no job for a union official. However, the power, privileges and status of the union bureaucrats are very much determined by how much their status is recognised by the capitalist class. To protect their position, it is natural for unions to look for a more regulated capitalism, a capitalism based on partnership between employers and labour organisations. It was to achieve this that the Labour Party was set up in the first place.

    Their position was recognised and they were welcomed as junior partners in the state machine during the First World War. It was a logical step for them to go beyond mere regulation and favour full blown state ownership, with the state as the major employer working in partnership with the unions. Thus Clause Four was adopted as a means of selling this to the working class at the same time as the Unions" control over the party was established. Their function as part of the state machine was re-emphasised during the Second World War, and continued afterwards with the various tripartite commissions, quangos like the National Economic Development Corporation, and the routine appointment of Trade Union General Secretaries to the House Of Lords.

    As part of the state wanting more state control the party attracted to itself those sections of the ruling class who would benefit from it. This helps explain the number of lawyers and other professionals in the Attlee governing party. By the 1940s even the leaders of the party came from this social group.

    In 1951 there was another General Election. This time Labour lost. It was followed by 13 years of Tory government. The most startling fact about this period is just how similar it was to the previous Labour administration. There was no privatisation. Municipal housing programmes increased in speed. The welfare state thrived.

    The Wilson Years

    1964 saw the return of yet another Labour government. Again they came to power on the back of promises to the working class. It would be pointless to give a detailed account of their practice. Some high points, however, deserve mention. This period of government saw an almost continual balance of payments crisis, accompanied by pressure on sterling and the exchange rate. To combat this, Labour put a freeze on wages, but allowed prices to keep on going up. At the same time as freezing wages, they devalued the pound - which of course meant a further falling of wages.

    The working class"s response to this was to increase the number of strikes and other methods of industrial struggle. Most of the most effective strikes were unofficial. The government"s response was to introduce a White Paper, In Place of Strife, which attempted to force the unions to police their members better. The unions felt unable to do this and resisted the White Paper. It was later picked up and introduced into law by the Heath Conservative Government.

    As part of their attempt to force austerity on the working class, the government introduced NHS prescription charges and the charge for dental treatment increased by half. They got rid of free school milk in secondary schools, a policy followed up by Margaret Thatcher under the Heath government. New taxes were introduced on imported goods, which made them more expensive for working class people. Even holidays were made less pleasant. Exchange controls were brought in that only allowed people to take £50 with them if they went abroad. Of course the rich soon found ways round this.

    On immigration Labour took the racist path. In 1968, a racist regime in Kenya threatened to kick thousands of Asians out of Kenya. Nearly all of these held British passports. Labour"s response was to pass the Commonwealth Immigrants Act which stopped most of them coming to Britain.

    Throughout the sixties, the Labour government supported the USA in its war in Vietnam. This was at a time when the Americans were regularly terror bombing cities, napalming villages and massacring civilians.

    Labour"s foreign policy was crowned by the decision to build the Polaris submarine force. This came from the party which had adopted unilateralism as its policy at the beginning of the sixties.

    Callaghan and the Social Contract

    The Heath government was beaten when they tried to take on the miners. The ruling class were clearly unhappy with the idea of a three day week and showed little enthusiasm for a continuation of his rule. In 1974 there was another election and again Labour was elected. This was the start of the last period of Labour government up to today.

    Once again there was a balance of payments crisis and to this was added the twin problems of unemployment and inflation. True to their past, Labour chose to tackle inflation. They did this with the Social Contract. Pay freezes backed by law had proved very unpopular, and extremely difficult to enforce faced with unofficial and wildcat strikes. Labour"s alternative was a voluntary scheme which relied on the Unions to police their members. In fact the whole Social Contract idea was the scheme of left-wing union leaders, notable Jack Jones of the TGWU. So in the winter of 1975-76, inflation ran into double figures, unemployment rose to unheard of levels and workers were prevented from getting more than £6 a week extra in their pay packets. The success of this policy led to even lower pay rises the following year.

    In 1976 the state of British capitalism was so severe that the government called in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to arrange a loan. They imposed severe austerity measures, which Callaghan, the new PM, was only too happy to impose. These called for cuts in public expenditure, particularly hitting education and health. Some of the first anti-cuts demonstrations were held not against Tories, but against Labour.

    When workers resisted or fought back they were subject to the full range of state sanctions. Striking fire fighters had army scabs used against them, as did refuse collectors in Scotland. Political trials were started against the British Withdrawal from Northern Ireland Campaign and their supporters who tried to get British troops to desert. In Northern Ireland they continued the policy of repression with the Prevention Of Terrorism Act and increasing the number of soldiers there.

    Meanwhile, the cabinet secretly agreed to upgrade Britain's nuclear submarine force with the Chevaline missile system. This significantly increased the number of warheads carried on Polaris submarines and improved their accuracy.

    In the end the working class had enough. The winter of 1978-79 saw a massive upsurge in class struggle as workers struck for wage rises to keep up with inflation. This was the so-called Winter of Discontent. The Labour Party became so unpopular that the election of that year saw the election of Thatcher"s first Tory government.

    In Opposition

    Since 1979, Labour has been in opposition. This has not prevented it acting in the interests of the ruling class. When the Falklands War started, it was the pacifist leader of the Labour Party, Michael Foot, who gave his whole hearted support for British military action. His speech in Parliament did more to ensure that the task force was sent than anyone else. After Thatcher had finished speaking he stood up to give her his blessing. He said that the Falklands had been,"betrayed and that the responsibility for that betrayal rests with the Government. The Government must prove by deeds that they are not responsible..." With those words he helped condemn nearly 2000 young men to their deaths.

    When the miners came out on strike the Labour Party and TUC acted to isolate the strike. They insisted that other groups not come out in sympathy. They condemned mass picketing and any forms of imaginative action that broke the law.

    This was repeated when the seafarers came out on strike against Townsend Thorensen. That time they told workers not to strike, but instead to travel with Sealink! Every time the working class has come up against the law, Labour have told them to give in.

    Nowhere is this last statement more truly shown than over the Poll Tax. Millions refused to pay. Throughout Scotland, England and Wales, Labour was the governing party in local government. Those Labour councils have summoned millions and imprisoned hundreds for refusal or inability to pay. Bryan Gould even proudly stated in February 1992 that Labour had prosecuted more people for non-payment than the Tories. The council with the highest imprisonment record, Bolton, is a Labour council. Salford even sacked an office worker for refusing to pay. Even now as the Poll Tax is coming to its end Labour councils are looking for new and better ways to collect the millions owed in arrears.

    In education, Labour have implemented the governments cuts. One particular case is the special provision for ethnic minority children and adults. Here they have happily sacked teachers and closed adult classes. Once again they have shown how happy they are to play the racist card.

    Can Labour be Changed?

    In office and out, Labour is a party for capitalism. It is a party that has regularly and routinely acted against the working class. Yet we are constantly told not to give up hope. Every time an election comes round the different left wing groups tell us to vote Labour. Can Labour be changed? We think that its history proves the impossibility of changing Labour.

    We are often told by the left that Labour must be supported because it is a working class party. Our reply is that although it may have working class members, that does not make it a working class organisation. We think that the history we have outlined in this pamphlet shows quite clearly that Labour has never acted for the working class. Labour was set up by the Trade Unions to act in their interests, which is not the same thing as being set up by the working class. The Unions may once have been working class organisations. Now they are junior partners in the state machine whose job is to manage the buying and selling of labour power. They may no longer be as influential as they were in the 1970s but their influence remains. All over the country (and indeed the world) unions and their representatives are engaged in the day to day process of ensuring that production carries on smoothly. Employers value the contribution that union representatives make and go so far as to give them time off work for union activities, provide them with offices, seek their advice and assist their attending union training courses. The influence of the unions on the Labour Party is not as great as it was. But they continue to provide most of Labour"s funds. The old adage holds true, "whoever pays the piper calls the tune."

    The trouble with Labour is that many thousands of working class people belong to it and millions still support it. Faced with the awful reality that is capitalism they want to do something about it. Clearly the solution needs to be at least partly a political one, so they look for a party which seems to offer change. Labour are most able to offer this because they are usually a party of opposition nationally. Being out of office so frequently they can always claim that next time things will be different. However, things never can be different.

    Labour long ago gave up any pretence at wanting to get rid of capitalism. Equally they have got rid of any notion of nationalising large parts of it. Now they claim that they will make it operate more fairly. This is impossible. Capitalism is based on the making of commodities (things to buy and sell) and on the exploitation of labour. When we say this we mean that people who work receive less than they produce, the surplus going to the bosses, whether private or state. Capitalism needs competition to work properly and this means that the bosses must try to keep prices as low as possible. This in turn means they have to get workers to make as much as possible for as little as possible. That is why we are constantly being told to work harder and make more. With increasing regularity capitalism is thrown into crisis by this very competitive drive, millions of workers are thrown out of work and others have their wages or benefits cut. This is the reality of the society we live in. Politicians who try to ignore this are soon brought to account by Stock Market crashes, galloping inflation, flights of currency and capital, currency crises and more. Then they have to return to capitalist normality. This has been the fate for left wing governments the world over, and as we have seen has forced various Labour governments to viciously attack working class living standards.

    It is this reality which has turned every so-called "left" leader into a "traitor". Ramsay MacDonald and Clement Attlee were members of the ILP. Harold Wilson was a left winger who left Attlee"s government over charges for NHS glasses and dentures Kinnock was a well known left winger in the 1970s and indeed rose to power on the back of his reputation. Left wing Labour councils have been forced to introduce enormous rate bills and Poll Tax bills and when Militant controlled Liverpool they were forced to sack thousands of workers.

    Groups like the SWP say that they know that Labour is rotten. Yet come every election they demand that we all troop out and dutifully "Vote Labour". They qualify this by saying we should do it "without illusions." They do this for a number of reasons. One is that despite all their talk, many SWP members and readers of Socialist Worker still do have illusions in Labour. To be open and tell workers not to be conned would risk alienating a lot of support. As the SWP leadership prefer masses of followers to conscious revolutionaries, they have no problem making the choice of saying Vote Labour. Another reason is more sinister. The SWP leadership know what Labour is. However, for all their fine talk, they do not believe that the working class is capable of making a revolution itself. They believe it has to be led to what they call "socialism" by an elite of professional revolutionaries. Part of this process, as they see it, is that the working class has to go through a whole host of "experiences" before it will turn to the SWP for leadership. One of these steps is "going through the experience of a Labour government". They think that this will teach workers that Labour is rotten. They say this time and time again, even though we have experienced Labour in power nationally before and continue to experience it locally today! This attitude reveals the contempt that the SWP and the rest of the left has for working class people and their ability to change society. It also means that they end up as little more than a far left electoral fig leaf for Labour, fostering all the illusions they claim they want to get rid of.

    Other left wing groups share this view to a greater or lesser extent. Some hold the view that a return of Labour would mean more chance for class struggle. This rests on the illusion that Labour is basically on the side of the workers and anyway ignores the reality that Labour is usually elected at times of rising class struggle - but is elected with the purpose of containing that struggle!

    The time has come to give up on the pretence and ditch any hopes that remain for Labour. To successfully change society the working class will have to do away with all capitalist parties and institutions. This inevitably means that they will have to do away with the Labour Party and its left wing hangers-on as part of the process.

    Is there an alternative?

    All the lies, cheating and manipulation of Labour and its left wing hangers on would be laughable if the issues at stake weren"t so vital. The fact is that capitalism is a disgusting social system. This century over 115 million people have been killed in capitalism"s wars and countless hundreds of millions more have died from preventable disease, starvation and poverty. This toll of human life and misery has had the sole purpose of keeping a tiny minority of the population in wealth and privilege. It is towards the maintenance of this system that all of Labour"s efforts have gone. Experience has shown that for all their fine talk of wanting to make the system fairer, that the system has ended up changing them.

    All the time Labour and their friends in other countries have been tring to run capitalism there has been another struggle going on. This has been the class struggle between the world"s rich and the world"s working class. This struggle has taken many forms. In Britain we"ve seen strikes small and large, we saw the fight against the Poll Tax, we"ve seen the riots of the early eighties, we see fights against the state"s plans for the places we live and the schools we send our kids to. We"ve seen massive struggles in other countries, like in Poland in 1981, like in South Africa even now (despite the attempts of the ANC to sidetrack the struggle into constitutionalism). What links these struggles the world over is the way that working people are fighting to improve their living standards, the way working class people are trying to get some control over their own lives away from capital.

    What we need to do is to link up these struggles, to build a community of resistance, a community that will take the struggle forward to a fight against the whole of capitalism and its state. It is here that revolutionary groups like Subversion have a role to play. We exist to spread information about struggles, to show where they link up, to show that they inevitably lead to a struggle not just against capitalism, but for communism. As we said in the pamphlet, communism, or socialism, means the common ownership of the means of production and distribution. It means getting rid of the bosses, getting rid of working for a wage or salary, getting rid of the whole rotten buying and selling system. It means that people will freely come together to produce what is needed and will freely take from the abundant products of their labour. It will involve the abolition not only of the ruling class, but also their state.

    We exist not as something separate from the working class, not as some leadership for others to follow, but as part of the class working for our own liberation. If you agree with what we have to say and want to be part of the struggle, why not join with us to hasten the day of capitalism"s destruction?
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  22. #13
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    The self-described socialist parties won more votes but still pretty minor (the largest of this type got 11,000 votes).

    Their support would undoubtedly be much higher if so many committed left-wing people stopped supporting New Labour.
    I think the far left's best electoral performance was in 2001; Scottish Socialist, Socialist Alliance and Socialist Labour parties add up to 187,357 votes, but I don't know how far left these parties are. Socialist Labour is Arthur Scargill and his supporters. by comparison, The Greens got 166, 477 votes in their own right- which was 0.6% of the vote. So historically this was a 'good' performance by the far left, but nowhere near enough to achieve relevance.

    I think there are the entryist trotsyists, who continue to be grouped around the'socialist appeal' publication within the labour party, (Wikipedia says they have around '250 supporters'). But honestly how many people who vote labour would vote green or far left I don't know- it would be quite a shake-up to achieve that.

    Will have to read the second article "Labouring in vain" when I have the time. Some really good stuff in there.
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    I think the far left's best electoral performance was in 2001; Scottish Socialist, Socialist Alliance and Socialist Labour parties add up to 187,357 votes, but I don't know how far left these parties are.
    I don't know how much their policies have changed since 2001, but a quick look at the Scottish Socialist websites shows that they are more social democratic than socialist ; they support trade unions, a strong welfare state, progressive taxes, and state ownership of the utilities.

    The Socialist Alliance go further. Their 2001 manifesto talks about "extending public ownership to key sections of the economy, including the major transport, construction, and manufacturing industries, as well as banking and finance".

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't the Scottish Socialists the only self-described Socialist party to be elected to a parliament or assembly in recent times? The only other representation Socialists have had are a handful of council seats.

    In the 20s to 50s, the Communist party of GB had MPs in West Fife, Mile end (East London), and Lanarkshire.
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    Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't the Scottish Socialists the only self-described Socialist party to be elected to a parliament or assembly in recent times? The only other representation Socialists have had are a handful of council seats.
    Think so, but honestly, it's a guess...

    Actually, I forgot George Galloway- The Respect Party MP. He's currently an MP for bradford west I think- there was a surprise by-election victory. but I really don't know how left-wing the Respect party is. I think it's democratic socialist at most.
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    Think so, but honestly, it's a guess...

    Actually, I forgot George Galloway- The Respect Party MP. He's currently an MP for bradford west I think- there was a surprise by-election victory. but I really don't know how left-wing the Respect party is. I think it's democratic socialist at most.
    It has pretensions of being socialist but it's just another Labour-esque beast beating the same 'nationalise this and that' drum and gaining lots of support among Muslims by being vehemently anti-Israel.
    Isms and schisms, the tendency to look for division
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    I live near Bradford and honestly, George Galloway stands for George Galloway. The social-democratic party he stands for is just window dressing IMO.

    All he cares about is attaining power and stirring up controversy.
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    Originally Posted by Red Son
    It has pretensions of being socialist but it's just another Labour-esque beast beating the same 'nationalise this and that' drum and gaining lots of support among Muslims by being vehemently anti-Israel.
    I live near Bradford and honestly, George Galloway stands for George Galloway. The social-democratic party he stands for is just window dressing IMO.

    All he cares about is attaining power and stirring up controversy.
    Well, that sucks.
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    Lab has adopted the vindictive Tory narrative that higher benefits discourage people from pursuing work.

    Ed Miliband will set out Labour's first plans for cuts to the welfare system, ending out-of-work benefits for roughly 100,000 18-to-21-year-olds and replacing them with a less costly means-tested payment dependent on training.
    - Guardian
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    Another concession Labour has made to the Tory viewpoint is that "austerity" cuts are needed and nessecary. Infact Lab has promised to make even deeper cuts after 2015 than if this current government was reelected.

    Ed Miliband would “cut spending” if he wins the next election and he has issued a stark warning describing continued austerity under a Labour government.

    Mr Miliband said Labour will have to show it “can do more with less” as he delivered a keynote speech setting out the party’s plans for the public finances.
    - Scotsman

    Ed Balls has said much the same.

    A Revolutionary Communist analysis:

    The Labour Party is a racist, imperialist, anti-working class party. It always has been, and always will be.* Its purpose is to defend the interests of the British ruling class, an entirely parasitic layer whose enormous wealth is obtained through the ruthless robbery of the rest of the world engineered by the City of London. Labour represents the interests not only of the ruling class but also of better-off sections of the working class, a labour aristocracy which in the past was made up of skilled manual workers but now consists predominantly of degree-educated public sector workers, as well as the trade union bureaucracy.

    A tiny proportion of the proceeds of the ruling class’s global plunder is directed to providing this layer with material privileges to guarantee its allegiance to British imperialism. The labour aristocracy looks to the Labour Party to sustain this system of naked bribery. Robert Clough reports

    No one can seriously dispute that the last Labour government was a government of the ruling class. Unending war, slavish adherence to the needs of the City of London, a legislative programme which introduced over 3,500 new crimes, the continuation of all the anti-trade union laws, persecution of asylum seekers, its record was one of unceasing brutality. This has not changed. It has agreed with the ConDem coalition on the fundamentals of every major issue whether it be the attack on state welfare, privatisation of state services, immigration or foreign policy. With a general election looming in May 2015, however, its supporters are painting Labour in very different colours. Their concern is with their own self-interest, not with the mass of the working class who will be offered continued impoverishment and oppression.

    This explains why Unite the Union general secretary Len McCluskey was prepared to stand reality on its head in telling the union’s conference in June: ‘So let there be no doubt. Unite stands fully behind Labour and Ed Miliband in the increasingly radical agenda he has outlined. It is a people’s agenda and this union will be proud to fight alongside Labour to secure it.’ On the same day, Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls made any future Labour government’s position quite clear: ‘I have said since 2012 there should be pay restraint in the public sector. We have to be committed to fiscal discipline’ (Daily Telegraph, 30 June 2014). Who should we listen to, McCluskey or Balls? Only in April McCluskey had argued that if Labour supported a cautious ‘austerity-lite’ policy, it would lose at the general election and Unite might consider supporting a separate party ‘representing the interests of ordinary people’. This was hot air: the trade unions have proved that they are not prepared to take on the ruling class. Cowering behind the anti-trade union laws, they are not prepared to sacrifice their positions of privilege and influence for the sake of the mass of the working class.

    Defending the ruling class through austerity

    Balls’ position received a ringing endorsement from Labour’s National Policy Forum held on the weekend of 19/20 July 2014. A proposal for Labour to drop its austerity policies was defeated by 125 votes to 14; the party is committed to the ConDem coalition’s spending plans for 2015/16. Balls’ plans are not ‘austerity-lite’. He told the Policy Forum that ‘We will balance the books, deliver a surplus on the current budget and get the national debt falling as soon as possible in the next parliament.’ This will be devastating for the working class: balancing the books means even deeper cuts. Throughout the life of the present government, Labour councils have implemented swingeing cuts in jobs and services and willingly administered attacks on state welfare; not one has challenged the government’s austerity programme. Labour leaders could not bring themselves to support public sector workers when they took strike action on 10 July against an effective 20% pay cut over the past four years.

    The last Labour government acted first and foremost to protect the interests of the banks and the monopolies. Balls will continue this. Boasting that Labour ‘started and supported successive cuts in corporation tax over the last 15 years’, he is now against reducing it from 21% to 20%, but has pledged to keep it the lowest of all G7 countries. The drastic cuts in local government spending – 30% since the ConDem coalition came to office, with the loss of 520,000 jobs – will not be reversed.

    Balls’ slavish devotion to the interests of the City of London is evident in his opposition to renationalising the railways. This was a swiftly-jettisoned pledge of the incoming Labour government of 1997. Ed Balls has dismissed the proposal as ‘ideological’ when there is glaring evidence of the inefficiency and high cost of the current privatised and fragmented system. Since 1997 the government subsidy for the railway system has increased five-fold to £5.2bn per annum, £136 per passenger compared to £67 in France and £101 in Germany. Fares in the UK are 30% higher than in France, Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland. Operating costs are 40% higher because of the fragmentation. Yet railway companies have still been able to extract £6.2bn in profits and dividend payouts. Balls talks deceitfully of the need to develop a ‘long-term investment policy’ when the current franchise bidding system is anything but, as the Department of Transport shows in its current focus on seven-year deals. All that Labour will countenance is the possibility of the government participating in bids for franchises as and when they come up for renewal – the worst of all possible worlds but one which it hopes will keep the monopolies on side.

    A warmongering party

    Labour has always defended the world-wide interests of British imperialism, in pursuit of which it was responsible for four wars between 1997 and 2010 – against Yugoslavia, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan and Iraq. Although Labour leaders attempted to distance themselves from the Iraq war during the leadership election in 2010, their instinct is determinedly militaristic. In 2011, they supported the NATO onslaught on Libya, Miliband telling Parliament ‘it would be quite wrong given what is happening in Libya for us to stand by and do nothing.’ Although Labour voted against unilateral intervention in Syria in August 2013, Miliband made it clear they would support military action if it was endorsed by the UN. He stands full-square behind the ConDem coalition policy over Ukraine and sanctions against Russia. He has backed the current Zionist onslaught on Gaza, telling the Policy Forum ‘I have seen for myself the fear in Israel from the unjustified and appalling rocket attacks from Hamas in Gaza ... I defend Israel’s right to defend itself against rocket attacks.’ There is of course no right of the Palestinian people to defend themselves against illegal occupation, blockade and terror. A future Labour government will be no different from any in the past, or indeed any Tory government.

    Attacking the working class: cutting state welfare ...

    In 2009, Labour planned to slash £70bn from state spending. In early 2010, Labour Chancellor Alistair Darling told the Financial Times that halving the public deficit in four years was ‘non-negotiable’. Once the ConDem coalition announced its own accelerated programme of cuts, Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Douglas Alexander proudly claimed that ‘many of the government’s current [welfare] reforms build on what [Labour] set in train’ (The Guardian, 9 November 2010). Labour, he said, would support cuts in housing benefit, reduced access to disability living allowance, temporary changes to the uprating of some benefits, and testing the availability for work of incapacity benefit claimants.

    Attacking the government’s overall benefit cap of £26,000pa for being insufficiently stringent, Alexander’s replacement Liam Byrne in July 2013 claimed that ‘ministers have bodged the rules so the cap won’t affect Britain’s 4,000 largest families and it does nothing to stop people living a life on welfare.’ 4,000 is a tiny proportion of all families receiving benefits, yet Byrne used them as a rod to beat all claimants. In his determination to be seen as hard on those he calls ‘shirkers’ he echoed the most vindictive and hate-filled attitudes of the tabloid press towards the poor.

    Byrne’s replacement, Rachel Reeves, is no different. She explicitly agrees with the overall benefit cap. In October 2013, days after she became Shadow Secretary of State, she echoed the tabloid prejudice that being on benefits is a lifestyle choice: ‘Nobody should be under any illusions that they are going to be able to live a life on benefits under a Labour government. If you can work you should be working, and under our compulsory jobs guarantee if you refuse that job you forgo your benefits, and that is really important…We would be tougher [than the Conservatives]. If they don’t take it [the offer of a job] they will forfeit their benefit…we will not allow people to linger on benefits’ (The Observer, 12 October 2013).

    But Labour’s solution – the Compulsory Jobs Guarantee – is no more than workfare under a different name. Under-25s will be offered a job after one year of unemployment, over-25s after two years. It will require claimants to work a minimum of 25 hours a week for the minimum wage on pain of losing benefits. They will be worse off since they will have to pay for travel to work, and will lose Council Tax Support. In a further effort to show Labour as tougher than the Tories, Ed Miliband announced in June that a future Labour government would stop JSA for 100,000 18-21-year-olds and replace it with an allowance, means-tested according to parental income. However, a claimant would not be eligible for this allowance unless s/he had achieved a Level 3 qualification – excluding 7 out of 10 in this age range. In addition, Labour will limit eligibility for the higher rate JSA of £71 a week by requiring claimants to have paid National Insurance for five years, instead of the current two.

    As the general election approaches Labour will make much play about its intention to abolish the bedroom tax – if it is still in place as the Lib Dems opportunistically intend to force a vote on it in the autumn. However, on no other significant aspect of the ConDem coalition’s attack on state welfare does Labour have any difference.

    ... the NHS

    Labour is not to be trusted with the National Health Service. It has said that it will repeal the ConDem’s Health and Social Care Act and stop the ‘fast-track privatisation’ of health services. Yet the last Labour government prepared the ground for privatisation through the introduction of the internal market, its determined support for Private Finance Initiative funding of new hospitals, the establishment of Foundation Trusts and the introduction of Independent Sector Treatment Centres. Even as the Health and Social Care Bill wound its way through parliament, Health Secretary Andrew Lansley constantly taunted his Labour opponents that he was only continuing along a path they had set. Labour had no answer: all it could argue was that Lansley was going too far, too fast.

    The critical state of the NHS is revealed in a report by the Nuffield Trust, Into the red? A report on NHS finances which shows that ‘One pound in every five spent by PCTs on community health services in 2012/13 was spent on care provided by independent sector providers, an increase of 34% in one year alone. Similarly, funding for independent sector mental health service providers increased by 15% in real terms between 2011/12 and 2012/13 alone, while funding for NHS-provided mental health services decreased by 1%.’ These are contracts worth £3bn a year which have to be added to the £1.6bn being spent each year on privately-run hospital services. Labour will not give a commitment to terminate these contracts, or to stop new ones being agreed, or to put an end to PFI despite the huge burdens that they place on NHS finances, for fear of upsetting the multinational corporations.

    The Nuffield report is clear that the NHS faces meltdown in the coming years as more and more hospital trusts go into deficit. This is as much the outcome of the £20bn savings plan imposed by the last Labour government as it is a consequence of further privatisations. NHS inflation runs at about 4% per annum – this is what is required to meet the cost of rising need, new drugs and treatment. Over the last three years NHS funding has stood still, further adding to the pressure on the service. Labour has refused to make any commitment to restore lost funding and is only considering the possible of raising National Insurance contributions to cover future increases, the most regressive option.

    And education …

    Wherever we look, the story is the same. The last Labour government started the process of dismantling state education, marketising whatever service could be sold off. It set up the original academies programme which removed schools from the control of local education authorities and allowed them to set pay, terms and conditions for their employees. The programme has been massively expanded by the ConDem coalition, but Labour has reserved its criticism only for controls at some free schools. It is certainly not against the principle: shadow Education Secretary Tristram Hunt has said ‘I am in favour of parent-led academies which are going to be good parent-led academies. And we will keep the good free schools when we get into government.’ (The Guardian 13 October 2013)

    Fewer houses ...

    Even Labour’s much-vaunted promise to build 200,000 houses a year by 2020 turns out to be a damp squib. This is fewer than were built annually between 2004 and 2007. There is no commitment for a minimum number of social housing properties, nor to end the so-called ‘affordable rent’ scheme whereby social landlords can charge up to 80% of local market rents for new properties. In many places this pushes tenants on benefits through the overall benefit cap. As it is, social housing rents rose by 15% between 2010 and 2013 (The Guardian 18 March 2014). Labour’s proposed rent controls policy for privately-rented accommodation allows a six-month probationary period on a tenancy during which landlords can evict tenants if they want to put up the rent. It certainly does not fit the Tory accusation that they would be akin to ‘Venezuelan-type rent controls’.

    A racist party: listening to immigration ‘worries’

    However, in order to win a general election, Labour also has to win back the support of better-off sections of the working class and middle class which it lost in 2010. It is to these layers, ones which are facing proletarianisation as a result of the crisis, that Labour leaders are pitching when they talk about the ‘squeezed middle’ or ‘hard-working families’. It is to these layers that they are pitching abject apologies about past immigration policy – not because of its brutal and ever-widening attacks on asylum seekers when it was in government, but because it let in too many migrant workers from Eastern Europe. It was Gordon Brown who as prime minister spoke about ‘British jobs for British workers’ – allowing David Cameron to say that he had borrowed the slogan from the BNP. It was David Blunkett who accused children of asylum seekers of ‘swamping’ schools, and it was Labour who locked them up in detention centres.

    Now the constant refrain is that Labour was ‘wrong when we dismissed people’s concerns’ on the subject; shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper says the government ‘is right to look at’ so-called benefit tourism – although there is no evidence it exists. Tristram Hunt has blamed the failure of poor British white boys in school on uncontrolled immigration from Eastern Europe – again without a shred of evidence. Labour is prepared to pander to racist prejudice because unless it does this it will not win support from the most politically backward layers of the working class.

    No support for Labour

    Len McCluskey may be spearheading the campaign to promote Labour’s election chances, but he will be joined by many others on the left. His ally in the People’s Assembly, Guardian columnist and Labour Party member Owen Jones frets at Ed Balls’ domination of Labour economic policy. When Balls said in 2012 that Labour would have to keep all the ConDem cuts, Jones wrote ‘Ed Balls’ surrender is a political disaster. It offers vindication for the Tories’ economic strategy, even as it is proven to fail’ (New Statesman 15 January 2012).

    Jones went on to argue that ‘If a broad coalition of Labour activists and trade unions united around a coherent alternative and put concerted pressure on the leadership, this surrender can be stopped in its tracks.’ Two and a half years later that has not happened, and it never could. The outcome of the Policy Forum shows the irrelevance of Jones’ Labour activists to determining policy. The only thing to date that trade unions have stopped in its tracks is serious working class resistance. McCluskey could not bring himself to demand the repeal of the anti-trade union laws in exchange for his support. It leaves Jones wishing pigs will fly: ‘it will be a coherent and inspiring alternative that will deliver Labour electoral victory.’ (The Guardian 30 June 2014). We cannot allow ourselves to be deceived by the wishful thinking of those determined to defend their privileges. Labour remains what it was when it was in government: a racist, imperialist anti-working class party. We have to oppose it.

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