Reproduced from the Red Action Bulletin Volume 4
Reactions
to Oldham and Bradford Riots
Volume 4, Issue 12, July / Aug '01
Consequences of the Lefts focus on 'minority rights'
Volume 4, Issue 11, May / June '01
Labours Reforms Of The Legal System
Volume 4, Issue 10, March / April '01
Marxism And Immigration Controls
Volume 4, Issue 9, November/December '00
Red Action And The LSA
Strengthening The Centre
Volume 4, Issue 8, September/October '00
London Socialist Alliance Election Results For Greater
London Assembly
It's Official: We're All Middle
Class Now
Volume 4, Issue 7, June/July '00
The current state of the Peace Process, and the British
Lefts response to it
Volume 4, Issue 6, April/May '00
Liberal
Responses to Racism in Football
Making History
Volume 4, Issue 5, Feb/March '00
The conservative Left's continuing support for Labour
Vol 4, Issue 4, Dec '99/Jan '00
Dover Attacks
Vol 4, Issue 3, Oct/Nov '99
BNP
Euro election campaign
Sinn Fein local election successes
Vol 4, Issue 2, Aug/Sept '99
London nail bombings
Vol 4, Issue 1, June/July '99
Volume
3 editorials
Reactions to Oldham and Bradford Riots
What is still arguably the most intriguing aspect about the initial riots
in Oldham, and in Bradford - first time round - is the great difficulty
in finding out, what had gone on. Even months afterward, events in Bradford
remain clouded in allegation and counter allegation.
Was it really 'outside agitators' who sparked the trouble? Or once the
torch paper was lit, did Muslim youth exploit the opportunity to exact
retribution on ancient Hindu rivals? Typically the Left maintain that
Asian youth were merely 'fighting back'. But against whom? The inference
is that the aggressors were not only white, but were also 'National Front
supporters'. Was it NF supporters who burned the eight cars outside the
pub hosting a Hindu wedding, or did they own them?
The reason for asking these question is not rhetorical. Remarkably as
in Oldham, despite the apparent media absorption, it is still far from
clear who, or what, sparked the trouble.
Safe to say this smearing of the lens can hardly be accidental, and rather
strongly indicates certain interests see political advantage in the whole
truth not coming out. Obviously for the more conservative elements on
the Left, that an institutionally racist police colluded with 'fascists'
by not responding early enough to the swaggering aggression of the NF/C18/BNP
(take your pick) is axiomatic. Fine, it is one explanation, but hardly
the whole story, which is possibly the most damaging feature of the whole
affair. Simply put, it is patently obvious to everyone that entirely for
partisan reasons, the word of the Left simply cannot be trusted. If anything,
it is as likely to lie as the is the far-right. Indeed for reasons we
will go into, the left is now far more likely to do so. For instance,
after the Bradford riots in July, the ANL line was that "Nazis had
rampaged"!
Slightly less surreal was their role in the row following the attack
on the Oldham pensioner Walter Chamberlain. Within a day, the BNP had
adopted him as their 'poster boy'. Here was proof they said that 'no-go
areas' existed. Whites were the primary victims of race attacks in Oldham,
and something needed to be done about it, the BNP insisted. Not so, countered
the Left. The attack on Walter Chamberlain was an 'isolated case'. It
was in addition not even properly 'racist'. And any talk of 'no go' areas
was a myth being peddled by an 'irresponsible media'. Motivated by hatred
of the Macpherson report, police simply invented race attack statistics
as back-up. A compelling theory, but as a chain of evidence, it is entirely
bogus.
Atypically, even Republican News, was suckered by the seductive choreography.
Challenged in the letters pages by AFA on the all important chronology
of events, Fern Lane, the RN journalist in question insisted, without
any attempt to quote sources, that the sequence of events peddled by the
ANL/SA was accurate, and went as far as to question AFA's motivations
in suggesting otherwise. Had she done her own research, she would have
discovered that statistical evidence of racially motivated Asian attacks
on whites was substantial. Neither is it a recent development, as available
statistics stretch back as far as - 1993. The attack on the pensioner
happened on April 21, days after the 'no go' allegations, (by Asian youth
incidentally), were made to BBC's Radio Four. In other words it was the
PC view of events she regurgitated, not the police figures, which had
been doctored.
'Spin' apart, it is hugely instructive to note, that liberals generally
struggle to find ways to express regret, much less condemnation for the
attacks by minorities on whites, even when the victim is a pensioner,
even as in Dover, when a twelve year old girl was slashed by a refugee,
or even when, as in the case of Richard Everitt in 1993, the attack ended
in the the murder of a schoolboy.
In contrast to the BNP, who strategically have no difficulty in condemning
all race attacks these days, the SWP just cannot bring themselves to do
so. Partly because it would be an admission that possibly anti-racism
was not working, and partly from the rather quaint belief that only 'black
people can be the victims of racism'. So regardless of any actuality,
this 'greater truth' is the story the SWP is determined to tell. This
is in stark contrast to the situation in the 1970's. Then it was anti-
fascism that invariably stuck to objective reality and it was the NF who
felt obliged to rigidly adhere to doctrinal orthodoxy. Not that the BNP
are any more honourable than their predecessors. Hardly. It is just that
if they lie less these days, it is because they don't have to.
A primary reason they rarely over-reach, is that 'race is everywhere'.
A little over a week, following the best vote for the far-right post war,
banner headlines in The Guardian and The Independent wrestled with each
other to prove which section of the public sector would next wear the
'institutionally racist' label. One forecast it would be the CPS, while
the other the NHS. Within the week, London Mayor Ken Livingstone's race
adviser Lee Jasper insisted the entire school system too, was irredeemably
bigoted. 'Black only' schools were the answer he announced. An echo of
an earlier call from the head of an advisory housing body who had sought
to justify 'black only housing'.
And despite displaying a certain degree of alarm, liberals when challenged,
remain insistent calls by blacks for segregation are 'qualatively different'
from identical demands made by the BNP. So when Nick Griffin calls for
a 'peace line' in Oldham, the left feign outrage. Meanwhile the spokesperson
for the CRE Chris Myant, can welcome the news that race is topping the
agenda as a "positive development", while at the same time as
former CRE chairman Herman Oueseley comments on the "brittleness
of race relations in Britain".
But even in the midst of such manifest muddle, should AFA, say, pose
the questions: 'Is anti-racism working?' or 'Can the LSA beat the BNP?'
the uniform response is to close ranks, while calls to stone the messenger
receive a sympathetic hearing.
In the same vein, when the Oldham Chronicle, correctly took the ANL to
task for "effectively doing the NF's work for it - winning it publicity
without out it needing to do anything itself", the ANL, in the interests
of a free press, denounced it for "pandering to Nazis" and launched
a campaign against the paper. But when Oldham MP Phil Wollas alarmed by
BNP influence, argues that "the traditional tactic of the anti-racist
movement must change" he is largely ignored. Traditionalists presumably
assumed his analysis is purely geographical. 'Oldham' rather than multiculturalism
is the problem they reassured each other. But that was before Burnley
blew up. And before Bradford exploded for the second time. And are race
relations so much better in neighbouring Rochdale, Keighley, Halifax?
All of them towns, where AFA was required to physically beat the BNP into
submission in the early 1990's. On one notable occasion in 1993, following
running battles with AFA in the town centre in the run-up to an election,
a BNP candidate got a total of nine votes - even his sponsors didn't turn
out.
What has changed in Burnley and nationally, is that in the seven years
since the 'no marches, meetings, punch-ups' capitulation in 1994, the
BNP climb from the fringes has been relentless. From 1992 to1997 their
national vote went up five fold. In the Euro-elections in 1999 it tripled
again. In 2002, support in London leapt again, with a four fold increase
bringing it up to 80,000 votes. In all of this it is most important to
remember, that the Socialist Worker/Searchlight stance has been to deny,
deny, deny. Both have worked tirelessly, even up to the point of fiddling
results to sedate its own membership and anti-fascism in general, at every
juncture. (In recent weeks, the SSP leader Tommy Sheridan has gone on
record in the Weekly Worker as saying that the BNP's vote actually dropped
at the last election!) Characteristically, when Weekly Worker addresses
the Wollas warning it scrapes out the kernel 'change' and takes issue
with the authoritarian husk'', and even gives credence to Michael Meachers'
claim that of the almost twelve thousand BNP votes in Oldham no more than
a 'dozen or more are racist'. What has so far also been totally ignored,
is that unlike the 70's, 80's and 1990's instead of the clashes being
between left and right, they are now inter- communal and inter-racial.
Prior to the election, the SWP was insisting it was 'not always wrong
to follow a liberal bourgeois agenda'. Tacitly many on the left agree.
But what is painfully manifest since the election, is that the entire
Left also endorses a liberal bourgeois analysis.
With the BNP, already recognised as the 'radical alternative', by the
media at least, and will we must now assume, confirm this with council
seats next May, how much longer can we wait for the Damascene conversion?
In the interim what choice there is for the conservative left is unavoidably
bleak. As we have repeatedly pointed out, it can conform to the European
pattern and stick with a liberal agenda, deliberately stripped clean of
class content, or it can - break with it. Given that much the same left
were absent when the fight was physical, any real optimism it will respond
with any greater courage when the challenge is political is practically
non-existent.
What is more, the Socialist Alliance is politically stale. As an 'alliance',
it is repeatedly shown to be utterly devoid of imagination, integrity
and intelligence. It is conspicuously failing, and deserves to do so.
Not only is failure, even by its own terms, seemingly assured, but for
radical prospects apparently necessary. Unreconstructed socialism would
like us to believe it's time has come, when in actuality, it's - time
is very nearly up.
Reproduced from RA Bulletin Volume 4, Issue
12, July/Aug '01

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Consequences
of the Lefts focus on 'minority rights'
Sometime earlier in the year, a
Dr Les May from Rochdale in a letter to The Observer, wrote: Forty years
ago the British Left was concerned with economic and social justice for
the mass of ordinary people. Finding this too difficult a task, the Left
fell under the spell of the politics of 'gender', 'sexuality' and 'ethnicity'.
The payoff for the Left was that it gained the endorsement of the so-called
liberal elite. This paved the way first, to having a hearing in the media,
and then to power. The great triumph of this alliance has been to convince
so many people that making sure a few more women, homosexuals and non-whites
get cosy, well paid jobs 'at the top', is a major contribution to producing
a more equitable society. It isn't."
When precisely the Left lost the
plot is a matter of conjecture. What is undeniable, is that for all the
brouhaha about minority rights since, a more equitable society it ain't.
While it is true there have been
concessions to the gender/sexual/ethnic lobbies, these advances have been
allowed only when any perception of threat to the status quo has been
extinguished.
So while their may be gays in the
military and in the US a black Secretary of State, (who proved a safe
pair of hands, by covering up Mai Lai) anything approaching social or
political much less economic equity is long past. Mainstream gains by
'minorities' have not been in addition to a general working class advance
on all fronts but - but instead of them.
Accordingly what we are witnessing
today are the governing classes bustling about, recovering what was conceded
to the spectre of communism in economic reforms in the previous hundred
and fifty years. What in stark economic terms this redistribution amounts
to is staggering. In America, the land of the free, statistics reveal
that "Between 1979 and 2000... the wealthiest one per cent of Americans
saw their share of the country's assets double, from a fifth to approaching
half." (The Guardian, 13.1.01)
So as their share of the loot
is increasing, it is not rocket science to figure out who is losing out.
Now, many on the Left would have
you believe that the American working class, as a labour aristocracy par
excellence, have been largely immune to the corroding power of capital.
"Yet it is a fact that between 1973 and 1998, in spite of a period
of economic nirvana for many, the hourly wage of the average worker fell
by nine per cent. Adjusted for inflation it remained roughly the same
as in 1967." Needless to say, as with the share of the country's
general assets, the rise in the hourly rate the American worker might
normally have expected, went of course to someone else.
As Jeremy Campbell reported in
the London Evening Standard: "While wages went nowhere, economic
inequality increased. In 1974 the richest five per cent of American families
earned about 15 per cent of the total US income. By the end of the century,
that share had risen to 21 per cent." (21.2.01)
But far from being sated, the new
President Bush appears determined to increase the yawning disparity even
further. 'It's conservative to cut taxes' says Bush, 'it's compassionate
to let people keep more of their money.' But who is to 'keep more of their
money?'
For a clue, contrast the federal
tax system with that of former Governor Bush's Texas. At a federal level,
an American family in the bottom fifth income level, pays less than nine
per cent in tax; the top one per cent give 37 per cent of their income
to the government. In Texas the tax burden actually drops as income rises:
the poorest pay 13 per cent tax while the top one per cent pay 5 per cent.
Now Bush has declared that he intends to bring the Texas tax model to
Washington as, wait for it, a 'priority'.
And again, of the '$1.8 trillion
tax cut planned, the top one per cent have been promised a 43 per cent
share'. As might be expected, 'reforms to social security' the most drastic
since the New Deal in the Thirties, will pay for the windfall.
In Britain too, the gap between
the richest and the poorest, already 'the largest since records began'
when New Labour came to power, is actually increasing. In 1999 the wealthiest
5 per cent owned 44 per cent of the UK's wealth, compared with 36 per
cent in 1981. Between 1979 and 1998 the number of pensioners with less
than half the average income doubled, while the total of all kinds of
people in the same kind of poverty trebled. "Our child poverty",
Observer columnist Neal Ascherson writes, "is the third highest of
25 nations. It is far higher than in Hungary and Spain, outstripped only
by Russia and by our free-market paradigm, the United States." The
only possible conclusion to be drawn from the new Breadline Europe study
of the free-market economy is that "neo-liberalism is now creating
poverty which is not only shallow and widespread but deepening into permanence.
It [Breadline Europe] warns that the new prosperity of the few goes with
the degradation of the many. It shows that a nations' economy can be glorified
as successful when the living standards of its people are falling... A
century ago, nice, caring people talked anxiously about the 'the problem
of poverty'. How was it possible that the massive increase of wealth was
accompanied by an equally massive increase in destitution? Could it be
- frightful thought - that the growth of wealth actually depended on that
growth of poverty".(11.3.01)
But what does that matter so long
as the liberal Left have 'frontline women troops', 'racial equality in
prisons' (the emphasis on minorities in the context, a surely threadbare
tactic to camouflage and minimise the depth and scale of the deplorable
conditions which exist for prisoners of all colours) and that final barrier
to the sexual revolution, the 'age of consent scrapped' as a pay-off?
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 11, May/June
'01

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Labours
Reforms Of The Legal System
In the run-up to Christmas Tory
leader William Hague was widely hammered in the media for linking the
deaths of Steven Lawrence and Damilola Taylor to police incompetence
and Labour cuts in police numbers respec-tively. By general consent Hague
was attempting to play the race card out of political opportunism borne
of desperation.
Linking the decline in stop and search and the consequent
rise in street crime to the Macpherson report saw him lambasted by what
he refers to disparagingly as the feign outrage of the liberal elite.
Imagine the furore had he further demanded the abolition of jury trial
for certain people for certain offences - and given that a racial spin?
Exactly. Hagues chagrin that jack Straw is allowed to do so, and
come up smelling of roses is therefore perhaps understandable.
Straw wants to get rid of jury trial, for certain offences - for certain
people. jury trial is expensive. Many people opt for jury trial because
the chance of conviction there hovers around 50%, where as in the magistrates,
or, as they were once commonly called police courts, the conviction
rate can be somewhere in the 90% and upward bracket. So Jack Straws
initiative having already been rejected by the House of Lords and seen
a rebellion by Labour MPs is not a widely popular move with civil
liberties groups, influential sections of the legal profession and nor,
despite his protestations to the contrary, is there any significant public
backing either. Understandably, given the weight of opinion what was needed,
jack decided, was to wrong-foot his opponents, and in the process make
himself fireproof on the issue.
What jack needed was some of that old Millbank spin. And what better
way currently to protect himself and his legislation, than stamp the Lawrence
logo on it. Hence his rationale that the Lawrence case was the defining
case of the 90s; the political equiva-lent of the score
or more of Irish citizens incarcerated by a lazy incompetent and bigoted
police force in the 70s and 80s.The principle difference with
Lawrence being, that rather than fit a victim up, the system just as controversially
let a victim down. Or as he put it is his own words: "the issue was
not someone who was innocent and found guilty, but the opposite failing:
the systems failure to secure a conviction in respect of whoever
it was who murdered a black teenager."
But unfortunately for Straw apologists it is not the opposite failing,
but the same one. It is the same lazy, incompetent and bigoted police
force responsible whatever the scenario. A police force the Macpherson
inquiry decided, are moreover institutionally racist, which
is to say they were prone to decisions that led to discriminatory conclusions.
And if the police are institutionally racist, is it not a fair bet their
courts might be as well? No inquiries planned there though, in effect
greater powers instead. One amendment Straw proposed was that only those
with a reputation to protect would be entitled to opt for
jury trial. On what criteria someones reputation was
to be assessed has never been made entirely clear. Moreover if in assessing
whether or not the defen-dant was sufficiently respectable, in that a
conviction for say, theft, would unduly damage his reputation; the defendants
current social standing (ie whether upper middle or lower class) would
undoubtedly be a consideration.
Whether of good character or the other. Good character being
based on whether the defendant had form or was, as the saying
goes, known to the police. Now obviously if someone on a shop-lifting
charge had a string of previous convic-tions for a similar offence then
is unlikely his or her reputation would be unduly damaged by a further
conviction. A sort of common sense analogy Straw himself might have employed
to reassure his doubters, but for the fact it would have let the cat out
of the bag. For whether de facto or de jure it underlines the need for
a magistrate to have access to a defendants record prior to hearing the
evidence.
Consequently, in sitting as judge and jury to speak, it would require
of the magistrate in Diplock court fashion to remind
himself once having been convinced of the defen-dants guilt, to
set aside any preconception or prejudices, in handing down out a sentence.
Quite clearly, under such a system any defendant with a record, once charged
would, faced with the inherent presumption of guilt, understand the need
to prove his innocence. Many would also quickly come to understand, that
even when innocent, copping a guilty plea might be preferable to pleading
not guilty and subsequently incurring the possible wrath a vengeful magistrate.
The then arbitrary nature of British justice, would not be lost on the
bobby on the beat either, Any arrest where actual evidence
other than the word of an officer(s) was absent, could result not only
in a charge, but would also practically guarantee a verdict of guilty.
Wary of allegations of discrimination Straw nonetheless proposes to extend
that logic to include jury trials as well. But if, as Straw insists, the
police are institutionally racist on what precise sectors
of society does the caring Mr Straw imagine his anti-racist reforms
will have the greatest negative impact?
Any removal of jury rights aligned to prior disclosure, will certainly
guarantee for Straw the fast track American style justice he so craves,
but only by turning the law on its head. America, so admired in certain
liberal/left circles for its overt affir-mative action policies, implemented
such measures some years back, it now has more people, and more working
class black people in jail, one million and counting, than other country
in the world.
Allowing for the reality of class rather than race being ultimately the
defining factor, the hypocrisy bridging anti-racist rhetoric and reality
is surely unsustainable. In the meantime for scoundrels everywhere anti-racism
has displaced patriotism, as the body armour of choice.
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 10, March/April
'01

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Marxism
And Immigration Controls
Brutal candour has been a feature of Red Action
analysis from the very outset. Subject matter apart, it is usually the
no prisoner conclusions that cause so many on the left to recoil. Of late,
a number of organisations have opened up public discussions on where the
fault line in Marxist thinking lies. ‘There is a break somewhere and I
am not clear where. All of us would say - Marx, Engels, Lenin.Then what?’
As Red Action instigated a search for ‘the break’ over a decade ago, when
the entire left united in denying there was a problem, any thawing in
dogma is welcome.
That is not to say that qualifications with regard to the efforts of this
batch of pioneers is unwarranted. For as is openly stated the latest ‘search’
is to be conducted within firmly proscribed boundaries. Thereby insuring
that the investigation will not reach politically unpalatable conclusions.
A conclusion that undermined their own reason for being would never do.
Unburdened by such ideological baggage, and with absolutely no concern
for the maintaining of reputations, the Red Action approach was entirely
objective. After much discussion, much of it conducted in public, it concluded
the decisive theoretical ‘break’ had taken ‘concrete’ form in Russia as
early as 1918.This was a date that thoroughly implicated Trotsky, but
also placed Lenin, an even bigger Bolshevik icon, firmly in the frame.
Indeed as was made clear, the ‘break’ did not happen after Lenin - it
began with him.
As far as Red Action were concerned the choice thereafter was between the
methods of Marx or Lenin. Outraged at such revisionism various groups,
otherwise bitter rivals found common cause. Workers
Power, The Leninist, Open Polemic among others, rushed to the defence
of their idol, all visibly eager to claim a renegade scalp. Too eager
as it turned Out.
To their chagrin, Red Action they found, were well dug in. Confronted with
an analysis, firmly grounded in historical and theoretical fact, it was
all too clearly they, and not Red Action, who had not done their homework.
Horribly embarrassed they retreated with indecent haste. Possibly, some
face-saving agreement was reached between them, for all of a sudden the
matter was dropped.
Now brutal candour is again on the agenda. and again brickbats abound.
As before in an effort to disavow logic there has been a concerted effort
to demonise Red Action instead.
But with no evidence of Red Action wilting, the knockout-blow has, (unwisely
as it turns out), been sought in the writings of Marx himself. Reminiscent
of the debate of a decade ago generalities have since been flourished,
with uncertain authority, by it must be admitted, (if lack of integrity
is any consideration) some of the least serious protagonists.
For some time Red Action has been warning that the alarming growth of the
Right in Europe is not attributable purely to their own efforts. On the
contrary the fault lies with a multicultural ideology which has successfully
supplanted ‘class’ in favour of ‘ethnic minority’ in the public mind.
This has created the basis for the right to ‘return the serve’ by successfully
campaigning for privileges for an ‘ethnic majority’.
It is imperative, Red Action has been arguing, for the Left to step outside
the limits of this ‘minority versus majority’ logic, and set about reclaiming
the initiative by displacing race with class, and thus shifting the burden
of justification back on to the other side.
From a progressive perspective hard to argue with, you might have thought?
But far from it. As if the political or social consequence were of no
mind, ‘opposition to all immigration controls’ is to continue to be championed
‘as a bed-rock of Socialist Alliance policy’ we are told, on the basis
that ‘where capital enjoys unrestricted freedom of movement it seems inescapable
that labour must demand the same freedom’. Who this freedom is to be demanded
of is not made clear? From capital? Which has just won for itself unrestricted
freedom?
Further disregarding the current balance of forces, ‘economic migration’
is in future to be championed as a human right’, while the ‘welcoming’
of infinite numbers of ‘immigrants’ regardless of political or social
repercussions is hailed as ‘a communist principle’.
Is it not odd that the upholding of a principle of communism is directly
responsible for the rebirth of its political opposite? Or that Marx, who
knew a thing or two, seems never to have heard of if? In fact, he was
it appears, distinctly less evangelical on the subject of ‘economic migration’
than those who would claim to be his followers.
In 1866 for instance, he reported on the attempts to bring down wages in
the tailoring industry in Scotland through the recruitment by master tailors,
mostly 'big capitalists' of migrant labour from Germany. Writing on behalf
of the Central Council of the International Working Men’s Association,
Marx said:
“The purpose of this importation is the same as that of the importation
of Indian coolies to Jamaica, namely the perpetuation of slavery. If the
masters succeeded through the import of German labour, in nullifying the
concessions they had already made, it would inevitably lead to repercussions
in England.”
“No one would suffer more than the German Workers themselves,
who constitute in Great Britain a larger number than the workers of all
the other Continental nations. And the newly-imported workers being completely
helpless in a strange land would soon sink to the level of pariah’s. Furthermore
it is a point of honour with the German workers to prove to other countries
that they like their brothers in France, Belgium and Switzerland know
how to defend common interests of the class and will not become obedient
mercenaries of capital in its struggle against labour.”
The efforts of the International in warning the Germans against migrating
under such conditions was as Marx recorded “a great success”. A success
not only in it’s own right, but with the practical benefits of the International
on display, the English sections rushed to affiliate. What would have
been the consequences for the Scottish, German and English workers, and
the International itself had Marx, in response to a call for advice and
support, mumbled something from the Manifesto about ‘internationalism’,
and instructed them, as the LSA recommend “to move fast with cards and
a welcome party” instead?
Currently, Labour is thinking about scrapping the 1971 Immigration Act
in order to recruit skilled workers from India. The motivation is undoubtedly
to drive down wages and conditions in the burgeoning computer industry.
As things stand, even if the Left had leverage in India, it would not
be exercised. As far as it goes all ‘obedient mercenaries of capital’
are deemed welcome. It is afterall their human right.
As the whole thing is a mess, it is entirely consistent Red Action and
fellow travellers should be too deemed ‘pariah’ for saying so. But as
hinted at, the current controversy and the previous debate are not unrelated.
Back then, a staunch Leninist in danger of partially succumbing to the
Red Action logic on some point or other, was publicly rebuked by a colleague
who outlined his priorities as follows: “Of course, you realise comrade,
that if Red Action are right, then we are wrong.” This time the equation
is even more straightforward. Indeed it is perfectly simple. ‘Either we
are right or the BNP are’. Your call ‘comrades’
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 9, November/December
'00

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Red Action
And The LSA
On the heels of Red Action’s application to join the London Socialist
Alliance, ‘just what are they up to’ has clearly been the question on
many lips. More than once the accusation has been made that we are simply
jumping on a bandwagon. And a successful one at that.
But
few eyebrows will raise on realisation that the rationale, is a mite more
complex than that. Particularly as the support of one and a half per cent
of Londoners, is hardly the stuff to set the pulses racing.
What
is of genuine interest however, regardless of the motivation of the sponsors
themselves, is what the emergence of the LSA signifies. Here at last,
is the entire Left (almost) collectively attempting to ‘re-invent itself’.
Judged objectively, that has to be regarded in a positive light.
A
tacit though untheorised admission that ‘the era of the sect is over’
must also be judged progressive. In such circumstances, if Red Action
is to remain true to it’s own politics, it is duty bound to seek to maximise
it’s influence within the new formation.
All
who voted at the RA conference, including those that moved the motion
(particularly them), recognised that even at its most productive, the
most the orientation to the LSA offers is - possibilities.
Of
the many possibilities, perhaps the vital one, is the opportunity it provides
for the entire Left to take stock: to politically re-group. And while
the LSA is not itself a real movement of the class, it is for the first
time in more than 30 years undeniably a real movement of the Left, the
simultaneous movement of the class away from Labour and the rich potential/danger
offered up, by the otherwise almost unrelated desertions coinciding, is
key to understanding the Red Action attraction.
Given
Red Action’s history, it will be no surprise that we are keeping at least
one wary eye on the far-right. Already the BNP look more than capable
of pulling away from the LSA in London. Barring an implosion, the BNP
currently has the potential to repeat the trick in the general election,
and thus lay claim to the radical alternative slot nationally. As has
been pointed out before, there is no proven antidote to Euro-nationalism.
In
short, what the far-right renaissance, not just here but across Europe,
heralds (though many on the Left seem unaware of it) is a new phase of
struggle. A new phase of struggle always means change. Immense change
certainly, over a relatively short time for the more conservative of the
left. First, and especially, for the conservative wing of the LSA.
Accordingly
a central part of the RA remit within the LSA will be the stress on the
need for new thinking, new strategies, new tactics and even new language,
if that is -working class hegemony remains the unchanging goal.
An
acknowledgement on that issue, and there is a real possibility of the
LSA being transformed into something of genuine value. At present the
Left may not appear to have changed all that much, but exterior conditions
have. Accordingly the dynamic for political change both inside and out
is - not - under the control of the Left.
On
the contrary, they are, as the pace of their own development shows, controlled
by it. They are not changing the course of history as they might imagine,
or make out - but adapting to it.
That
cherished straplines like ‘Rebuild the Fourth International!’ ‘General
Strike Now!’ ‘Vote Labour without illusions!’ now appear cretinous - even
to them - is proof of the changing landscape. The day of reckoning between
loyalty to antiquated theories and political survival, also beckons.
Currently
the LSA meets the immediate needs of the left when the real task is to
meet the immediate needs of the class. That is the Red Action objective.
Red Action has joined the LSA with honest intentions. It is in short,
our intention to revolutionise it from within.
Strengthening The Centre
Over the last few months a disturbing trend has begun
to emerge. In France there are attempts to impose sanctions against the
internet company Yahoo! on political grounds.
In
Germany there is call for the banning of political parties. In Britain
there is support for jailing political opponents without charge. Now none
of this is new. Such calls for censorship have been a feature of political
life in most countries, particularly at times of political crisis. What
is novel today is that these demands are almost uniformly coming from
the left. They are moreover being made in the name of anti-fascism. In
Germany there is wide support among the Greens for the banning of the
far-right NPD and others. Antiracists in France want Yahoo!
closed down because an American client is trading in Nazi memorabilia.
In Britain, not only does the ANL want the state “to jail all the Nazis”,
but Searchlight’s Gerry Gable feels comfortable in describing, live on
television, the deputy head of the anti-terrorist squad as “a colleague”.
Meanwhile, the Racial and Violent Crime Task Force on which Gable serves
as ‘a lay member’ openly admits that it targets “extremists on the right..,
and on the left”.
In
an even more bizarre departure from anti-fascist custom and practice,
the ANL sought to extend the ‘no platform principle’ to a democratic debate,
where the legacy of the Holocaust was being discussed - in front of an
audience made up overwhelmingly of Jews
A
notable feature of this stridency, and the almost complete loss of a sense
of priorities, is that in the real world, the far-right go about their
business practically unmolested. One gets the impression that in parts
of Germany the far-right, control the streets in what they refer to as
‘liberated zones’. In France successive surveys find that the majority,
as much as 60% of the population, reject anti-racist perspectives. In
Leicester a gay rights march attacked by a small number of NF and forced
to be diverted by police, is still hailed as a ‘victory’ by the ANL, the
Socialist Party, and even elements on the periphery of AFA.
Consistent
with this is that Bexley, Tipton and Burnley where the BNP have recently
polled over 20% are all studiously ignored by these largely bogus dot.com
anti-fascists. Just as comically, fraternisation with Searchlight,
a self-confessed conduit to the state/from the state, continues to
be defended on the grounds of ‘information’ requirements by these same
elements Under these twin pressures something called ‘anti-fascism’ is
not only becoming embourgeoisfied, but is gradually being totally assimilated
into a state strategy of anti-extremism.
Thus
to strengthen the centre against extremes is merely to strengthen the
state against one’s self. Those unable to understand the implications,
will more and more come across those happy to make the distinction for
them.
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 8, September/October
'00

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London Socialist
Alliance Election Results For Greater London Assembly
“If you look at the statistics
and ignore the emotion this was not such a bad result”
Louis Van Gaal commented after losing in the Champions
League semi-final to Valencia on May 10. For the London Socialist Alliance
who had contested the Greater London Assembly elections a week earlier,
it is the exact opposite. In the LSA case: ‘if you ignore the emotion,
and look at the statistics’, calling it ‘not such a good result’ is to
be frank, putting a gloss on it.
However to listen to the SWP one would have imagined
the Left had won by a landslide. In the real world, of the one in three
who bothered to vote, 98% of them did not vote LSA. “Their one-point-something
percentage hailed as an ‘extra ordinary’ breakthrough by SWP spin-doctors
pretty much scotches the idea that the Left” in the opinion of Guardian
pundit Charlotte Raven “will be the ultimate beneficiaries of the
current disillusionment with Blair”. Evidently ‘emotional’, sports writer
Mike Marquese testily insisted the LSA showing was “exceptional by any
historic measure”. Exceptional certainly. Socialism cannot hardly have
had a worse result this century. 150 years after the drawing up of the
Communist Manifesto for unreconstructed socialists to regard 2.8% of their
combined vote as a triumph, is tragic, bordering on the comic. But then
for some time now looking only on the bright side can be habit forming.
When for instance the SLP attracted 70,000 votes nationally
in the general election in l997, Arthur Scargill vaingloriously announced
that the SLP were now the “fourth biggest party” in the country. And even
when only two years later, the same SLP polled only 0.68% across Wales,
though “exhausted and shell shocked” a full three months later, an activist
felt justified “in gloating just a little that our efforts had been worthwhile”.
Thereafter “enquiries poured in” we were assured, leading
to “new Constituency Parties being set up” and the SLP generally moving
“forward steadily” and so on. Shortly prior to the GLA elections where
the once ‘fourth biggest party’ received exactly half the LSA stipend
on the Top Up List, the total membership in its London heartland was estimated
at around - twenty - almost to a man incidentally hardline Uncle Joe devotees.
For Scargill the general election of 1997, his first, proved to be the
beginning of the end, rather than as he imagined, the end of the beginning.
There can be no doubt a similar fate awaits his triumphalist
Trot counterparts, unless a serious reality check is enforced. And this
time it will be no laughing matter. For if a united Left are not to prove
the ‘ultimate beneficiaries of the disillusionment’ with New Labour is
does not require a rocket scientist to figure out who will.
It's Official : We're All Middle Class Now
There are 59 million
people in Britain. For the first time in over twenty years official government
statistics examining the wealth differential between social classes, were
published in The Guardian on May 11.
The report shows
the distribution of wealth - as opposed to income - has altered little
in the past 20 years. In 1996 over half the total wealth was owned by
10% of the population. In the same year the wealthiest 50% owned almost
all the wealth -93%. In 1997-98 about 30% of households said they had
no savings, and over half had savings of less than £1,500.
Only 14% of households
had savings of more than £20,000. In 1976 the death rate for babies born
to families of “unskilled” workers was more than twice that for babies
born to those with “professional” jobs.
By 1997 the infant
mortality rate for children of unskilled workers had fallen to just under
twice that of the professional groups.
So half of the
populations households have savings of less than £1,500 and the mortality
rate for working class babies has advanced from just over, to just under,
twice that of the offspring of those in professional jobs. Oh Yeah. ‘We’re
all middle class-now’.
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 7, June/July
'00
Related Articles :
Not Waving...
- Commentary and analysis of the antics of the British Left.

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The current state of the Peace Process and the British Lefts
response to it
At the onset of the peace process “IRA CALLTHE SHOTS!’
ran the Red Action headline. Back in August 1994 many scoffed.
Then and since the standard line of Republican dissidents and the British
Left was that the entire process was designed to emasculate Republican
resistance, and for Sinn Fein to even countenance participation was effectively
‘surrender’, and an objective ‘betrayal’ of Republican ideals and nationalist
interests.
At every stage of the process, the squeal of ‘Sell-out” is repeated. By
far the loudest bawlers in this respect are the same organisations who
for over twenty-five years just as stridently denounced armed struggle
as immoral. It takes considerable dissembling of reality to be wrong on
both sides of a war and peace argument but the British Left have managed
it somehow.
When, as now, the wheels are threatening to come off, and when in response
Republicans have done precisely the opposite of what was predicted for
them, trapped in their own dogma, the Left invariably opt to ride out
the contradictory storm.
Of course the kind of thinking that led to the unilateral suspension by
Peter Mandelson of the institutions set up under the Good Friday Agreement,
continues to be hard for anyone to fathom. Ostensibly it was to save David
Trimble, and with him the Agreement, from the ‘No men’ of Unionism. But
rather than strengthening his leadership, every concession served instead,
as was predicted, to further weaken his personal position. ‘Moderate Unionism’
so called, which steadfastly refused to prepare its own constituency for
change, has inherited the lame duck leader it deserves. With the IRA withdrawing
from even cursory contact with the De Chastelain decommissioning body,
and the May 22 ‘deadline’ steadily looming, the inability to rationalise,
much less rectify, such a palpably anti-Machiavellian strategy, all too
visibly now extends to the British administration and Mandelson himself.
That for a time there was consternation in Republican circles at such apparently
aberrant British behaviour is understandable. But whatever its impact
on Republican’s analysis of ultimate British intentions, the theme of
‘betrayal and surrender’ propounded by the spooks, dissidents and their
Trotskyist bedfellows, much like the Good Friday Agreement itself, lies
in tatters. In simple terms if ‘IRA sell-out’ was what happened in 1994,
why six years later have they still not ‘sold out’? If the peace process
was the British strategic victory painted, can someone please explain
why the institutions designed, we are told, to ‘enshrine partition, imperialism
and the New World Order’ were unceremoniously torn down by the British
Secretary of State? In truth, of all the players in the peace process,
it is SF, whose agenda the peace process is, who alone have made any intelligent
effort to save a it.
Only recently Adams admitted that his party’s strenuous efforts in this
regard saw SF go beyond their obligations. This he concedes ‘might have
been a mistake’, as it relied on others to show equal commitment.
But if tactical ‘mistake’ it was, it is one unlikely in the short term
to be repeated. For even in advance of the successful wounding of Trimble,
SF were already ‘moving forward on the basis that a new phase of struggle
is now opening up’. In so doing they were turning their backs on the possibility
of serious negotiations under present conditions. Instead they will be
concentrating on strengthening their own hand, in line with, as was predicted
in these pages nine months ago, the inevitable emergence of a ‘Republican
plan B’.
In ‘opening up this new phase of struggle Adams predicts that “at some
time in the future a
new agreement will be negotiated. We will have to ensure that Sinn Fein
is there in a better position to negotiate a better agreement than the
one which is now in tatters”, and added with emphasis “we will only get
as much freedom as we can take”,
As things stand Republican potential and ambition to do so, is both vast
and impressive in equal measure. Never better in fact.
While supplanting an ageing SDLP in the Six Counties is probable rather
than possible, and sooner rather than later, SF’s unmistakable ambition
is to ‘get in amongst’ the gombeen politicians in the 26 counties. “Officially,
local politicians from other parties play down the threat they pose at
the next general election”, according to the latest edition of current
affairs magazine Mogul, “but privately they admire their
application and are bracing themselves for big changes in the political
landscape”. As SF is the only party that operates on a 32 county basis,
‘big changes in the political landscape’ carry with them an inescapable
32 county flavour. And as night follows day, with it too de facto, and
undeniable, if not quite yet de jure, abolition of political partition.
Prisoner releases and other ‘concessions’ not withstanding, prospects
all round appear to be none too bad for a largely working class movement
sections of the right-wing British establishment and the entire British
Left, prepared eager obituaries for in August 1994. As the SF trajectory
suggests, there appears to be some immutable law, which ordains that the
British Left like a flawed compass, must always get everything horribly
wrong. Whatever the cunning in the plan, in the opposite direction lies
‘Nirvana’.
Now the same Left, under the banner of the London Socialist Alliance, are
feverishly preparing to put their collective theories to the electorate
in a unified way for the first time. Though many of the participants,
notably the SWP, were dragged into the electoral arena kicking and screaming,
an almost triumphalist air, not dissimilar to the type of optimism that
greeted the launch in 1995 of the now semi-defunct SLP is once again apparent.
The London Assembly elections are on May 4. Given the accuracy of the
‘flawed compass’ thus far, it will be interesting to see, who precisely
is in position to ‘call the shots’ come May 5?
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 6, April/May
'00
Related Articles:
Ireland - Articles on Irish
Republicanism and the Peace Process.

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Liberal responses to racism in football
Something,
somewhere, is very, very, wrong. According to a recent report by the Sir
Norman Chester centre for football research at Leicester University, Celtic
fans are among the most racist in Britain. Celtic came a close third behind
Everton and Rangers “in the league table for making the largest number
of racist comments heard” reported The
Guardian (7.1.00).
Most
curious. Particularly as, despite allegedly questioning 33,000 fans, not
one team outside of the Premiership even rates a mention, And yet it is
in places like Oldham, Scunthorpe and Carlisle where many believe terrace
racism proportionally, remains at its most overt. Not only that, but it
was Leicester and Coventry that witnessed the only mass examples of outright
and unrestrained bigotry in recent years. Leicester are placed eighth
in the league table of shame, but on this occasion in question it was
the 3,000 away fans who were the source of it. Similarly at Coventry where
a spokesman for the guilty party, ruefully admitted that most of the ‘4000
away crowd seemed to have been involved’. The considerable embarrassment
of Kevin Miles was understandable, as his club Newcastle are flagged up
as one the two major state sponsored anti-racist success stories within
the game.
The
other notable pilot scheme at Leeds, who are allotted an almost relegation
and therefore respectable place in ‘the league of shame’, were the visitors
who gave mass vent to their feelings about ‘Pakis’ in Leicester. Something
similar had also happened only a couple of months earlier when Leeds were
away to Blackburn. After the Leicester game in January 1999 the ‘Leeds
Fans Against Racism’ website made at least some effort to explain it.
But
when Leeds fans rampaged in Glasgow during a pre season friendly at the
beginning of this season, targeting Irish/republican pubs in particular,
an event, which drew banner headlines in Scotland, the silence south of
the border, and within the anti-racist world generally was deafening.
Neither ‘Kick it Out!’, ‘Give Racism the Red Card!’, nor Searchlight,
who regularly eulogise the so-called Leeds blue-print had anything to
say. Socialist Party inspiration Tommy Sheridan, who had publicly recommended
the Newcastle model to Celtic fans (albeit before the Coventry match)
was equally and unusually tight-lipped. Coincidentally the only paper,
which saw fit to investigate the incident at Coventry v Newcastle, was
not the liberal Guardian, but
the Irish Times.
Up
until the survey it was very much ‘the curious case of the dog that did
not bark’. But with the arrest of Leeds players Bowyer and Woodgate following
a serious attack on an Asian youth in Leeds city centre, the affair is
given an added twist. Both Bowyer and Woodgate had, it appears, featured
in a ‘Kick it Out!’ poster campaign.
Unsurprisingly
national coordinator Piara Powar concedes that even without a conviction
the credibility of his campaign has already been ‘damaged’. Yet the self
restraint displayed by him and other state linked bodies is again marked.
And apparently so confident was Leeds chairman Peter Risdale, of his self-muzzling
pet, he confidently declared, in advance of anybody even being charged,
that “the suggestion of this being a racially motivated attack is without
foundation” (Sunday Telegraph 22. 1 .00). Contradictions and red faces
all round when a few days later the South Yorkshire police, who as a rule,
state sponsored bodies insist should have ‘institutionally racist’ enamelled
on their helmets, announced a contrary conclusion.
For
state sponsored anti-racism to determinedly turn a blind eye to the one
club in Britain whose supporters are routinely targeted in murderous attacks
simply for wearing the club’s colours is to say the least unprincipled.
To then allow the same Celtic fans to be labelled racist, again without
comment, is little short of contemptible.
Taken
as whole, it merely confirms what many anti-fascists have come to suspect.
Not only is the race relations industry blinkered, incompetent, wrong
headed, increasingly self-fulfiling, self serving, and self-defeating,
but in all probability corrupt.
Related Articles :
Liberal Anti-Fascism
- Articles examining the role of organisations such as Searchlight and
the Anti-Nazi League.
MAKING HISTORY
In 1988 a couple of reporters were commissioned by
BLITZ magazine to do a feature on Red Action. As part of their research
they approached various sections of the Left for comment.
Most, when not openly hostile, simply refused ‘for one reason or another’
to be quoted. One group ARAFA (Anti-Racist Anti-Fascist Action) went a
step further, and to the astonishment of the hacks attempted to censor/edit
the project themselves! “The outcome of the meeting” was, the stunned
reporters recorded, “a statement put together on the spot and endorsed
by the group as a whole”. It read: “Islington ARAFA disassociates itself
from any article primarily focused on Red Action. The focus of any article
should be on the positive aspects of the anti-racist, anti-fascist movement
with no more than a small mention of Red Action (ie one paragraph)”.
The ‘ignore them and they will go away’ followed by the slightly more progressive
‘damned by faint praise’ approach is not restricted to Red Action only.
‘One paragraph’, is precisely what AFA is allowed in Searchlight’s recent
account of anti-fascist resistance in the 1980’s. (It does not figure
at all in the account of the 1990’s). As for the SWP, any public acknowledgment
of AFA’s existence, no matter how grudging would in itself be a bombshell.
Traditionally, outfits who serve their time at the coal-face, such as the
paramilitary 43 and 62 Groups are invariably more concerned with making
history, than making propaganda. Up until recently this was also true
of AFA. Until it realised that if it didn’t take responsibility for writing
it’s own history, others were only too happy to write them out of it.
Consequently a new pamphlet on the history of militant anti-fascism between
1985-2000 with anecdotal evidence from the fighters themselves is currently
in production. To the chagrin of the ‘one paragraph more than enough’
revisionists, a new entirely independent publication irredeemably undermines
any future attempt at militant anti-fascist emasculation.
Anti-Fascism in Britain by Nigel
Copsey (printed by Macmillan) is the first and only academic study of
the tactics and strategies of anti-fascism in it’s own right. It’s overreaching
feature, being an examination, from 1923 up to the present day of the
“historic divide between radical anti-fascism with its emphasis on physical
confrontation - and legal forms of anti-fascism”. Despite the occasional
intrusion of the liberal, not to say naive personal politics of the author,
it is nonetheless an honest exploration of motivations, strategies and
tactics. And because of Copsey’s blatant objectivity, rather than being
cast, if at all, as either peripheral, or mere auxiliaries to liberalism,
militant anti-fascism in each generation strides centre stage as of right.
Hence the real value of Copsey’s endeavour is not the level of research,
the quality of the writing (though crisp) or the veracity of conclusion,
instead the quiet satisfaction in the AFA camp, despite the staggering
£49 price tag, is the actual existence of the book itself.
Related Articles:
Anti-fascism - Articles on
both liberal and militant anti-fascism.
Reproduced from RA Bulletin Volume 4,
Issue 5, Feb/March '00

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The Conservative
Left's Continuing Support for Labour
Labour,
whose victory was wildly celebrated by the conservative Left, is now
roughly half way through its first term. In an effort to cover their
embarrassment at how things have turned out, these unwanted, unloved,
but ever so loyal supporters, are obliged to continue to insist Blair
remains the ‘lesser evil’.
All
despite Blair, rather pointedly, never making the slightest effort to
conceal that he sees his party’s future on the centre Right, or (with
plans to cut jury trials, mandatory drug testing for offenders and ‘anti-terrorism’
extended to include all ‘direct actions’) arguably right of Centre.
Historically the longer Labour is in office the further it moves to
the Right. Given that it is guaranteed a second term (something that
it has previously not managed) it is amusing to consider what political
criteria the conservative Left (those still afloat) will be forced to
employ in order to justify New Labour as the ‘lesser evil’ in five years
time?
One
thing’s for certain, they certainly have not tired of New Labour yet.
It only takes a half plausible cause, or a candidate such as Ken Livingstone
to tug at the old loyalty and have them up and running. Even a paper
that railed against what it describes as the conservative Left’s ‘auto-Labourism’
on practically a weekly basis is now seen to gush that “even if Livingstone
ends up as the official Labour candidate - in the teeth of an all out
pro-Dobson Millbank campaign - we [working class revolutionaries] should
still mobilise for his candidacy, but against New Labour”. Which is
to say ‘we mobilise for the New Labour candidate - against New Labour!’
This
very process of resowing old illusions in New Labour, just as the mass
of the working class are breaking with Labour can “create the possibility
of a mass working class movement, independent of Labour” we are told.
(Weekly Worker 11.11.99) At a point when working
class communities are increasingly standing their own candidates (albeit
tentatively) the self-styled collective leadership advises they ‘remain
Labour’s tail’. Or as Weekly Worker previously put it “it has been an
enormous strength of bourgeois politics that the left wing of social
democracy has been able to divert proletarian anger and aspirations
for change into the safe channels of the Labour Party.” So from that
point of view, why now the evangelical zeal to re-anchor the working
class to Labour? Because it has fallen to Livingstone to displace Blair
from the mantle of ‘the lesser evil’, and “so to stand back for offering
strong support would be a profound mistake”.
There
is little doubt that the shenanigans surrounding the selection of the
Labour candidate is a source of huge personal chagrin for Blair. If
indeed as the W.W. over optimistically forecasts the whole affair results
in ‘mass defections from Labour in London and a realignment of forces
on the left’, all to the good. But just because you envisage some advantage,
does not mean you pitch in on the one side or the other. Much less because
you deem it ‘progressive’ does it mean you are obliged in principle,
as working class militants, to formally offer political support. This
is after all, a falling out amongst those inside the enemy camp, is
it not?
‘Class
politics’ is after all about picking sides. At no time this century
can the choice have been more straightforward. And once set, that base
orientation is decisive, governing all else. Everyone knows this. All
the breast beating in the world thereafter cannot conceal the reality
of the Left continuing to operate unashamedly, day in day out, in the
interests of one or other enemy faction. After an unbroken pattern lasting
the entire century is it too outrageous to conclude that here is where
their hopes, aspirations, and ultimately loyalties lie? Which is why,
increasingly, for those of us looking on purely from a working class
perspective, it is no longer what they think they are doing, but only
what they are actually doing that counts.
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 4, Dec
'99/Jan '00
Related Articles :
Not
Waving... - Commentary and analysis of the antics of the British
Left.

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Dover Attacks
Initially the slashing incidents in Dover
in August were put down to "refugees", denomination uncertain. Whether
they be Kurds or Kosovans appeared to be largely a matter of indifference.
No one, not least the media, seemed particularly bothered about the facts,
much less securing any agreement on the identity of the guilty party.
With battle lines drawn on the basis of the editorial line being either
in the pro or anti immigrant camp, truth rather inevitably was the first
casualty.
Playing fast and loose was certainly the Guardian style with this interpretation
of events: "The violent scenes, as local knife wielding thugs clashed
with asylum seekers leaving 11 people wounded gave a nightmare glimpse
of the future that may face those who arrive in Britain each year to claim
refugee status" (24.8.99). "Local" in this context, presumably meaning
white. Socialist Worker was a trifle less gung ho. While denying "lurid
pictures" of refugee violence as "filthy lies" it tacitly accepted some
refugee culpability in the affair. In mitigation adding that the community
had been provoked beyond endurance, and "in the face of racist taunts
one asylum seeker had gone for local youths with a knife... allegedly".
Whatever the damage done, (of which there is no reference) this was 'a
lone nut' for which no one else should be held to account was the SW spin.
Complaining that the Dover Express, which last year described refugees
as "human sewage" and this time round under a title "blood bath at funfair"
illustrated the piece with "a graphic picture of a slashed Kent youth",
the Observer expressed outrage that the papers coverage seemed so "completely
one sided". "The paper does not" fumed the Observer "highlight that at
least one Kosovan had his face slashed" (Observer 22.8.99). Curiously
neither, when presented with the opportunity, did the Observer.
In any case having nailed its colours so firmly to the mast last year,
being 'one sided' is hardly a charge the Dover Express is likely to refute.
But what of the Guardian, Socialist Worker and the Observer itself? It
would be hard to imagine the Observer absolving anyone else of blame,
regardless of provocation, if for instance on a ratio of ten to one, the
victims had (a) not been white and (b) not been working class. Here as
with the race killing of Richard Everitt, the liberal press allowed itself
to appear entirely neutral. There are of course two sides to every story,
but their reticence speaks volumes. When in the liberal mind such things,
the slashing of a couple of ten year old girls, or even a racist murder
is ignored, dismissed as 'hype', presented as understandable, or if done
in the right cause even meritorious, it is easy to see the danger signs.
Promoting a minority over majority, policy regardless, is reverse nationalism,
not anti-racism. Automatically, from this stand-point, the interests of
refugees or other minorities are counterpoised to the interests of, as
the Guardian described them, the "locals". And with the white working
class cast as the enemy designate, 'round up the usual suspects' is the
watchword. Quite simply liberals wants to abolish 'the abuses of society
on the basis of the same principles that gave rise to those abuses', so
the entire race question is approached from a moral stand-point - only.
Nasty 'locals' versus 'nice' refugees and vice versa. Talk of extra funding
to 'grease' proper integration is considered impossibly vulgar. Thus in
the competition for dwindling resources the most impoverished are set
against each other. Politicians and the media merely choose sides. "In
Oxford a racist gang took its cue from the right wing press" according
to SW " [and] with iron bars, axes and bottles attacked a house where
Kosovan refugees lived." Local papers in Oxford however presented a very
different account. Again, somebody, somewhere was telling porkies.
Obviously when the media take sides on the basis of race, without regard
to objective truth, it makes it harder and harder for everybody else to
discover what is actually happening. The general uncertainty as to what
is really going on only makes it easier to for a fundamentalist agenda
to find favour. Truth might be the first casualty but in a war of half
truths the 'big lie' will always be victor. And we all know who has the
pedigree in that department.
Ascribing to refugees a host of virtues highly prized in middle class
culture but assumed to be absent in the host community (usually the toughest
of neighbourhoods incidentally) is self defeating. Particularly when not
true. Particularly when impossible to live up to. A compound error being
to lie, when as in Dover, the unpalatable happens.
By contrast authentic anti-racism is to recognise that when you really
get down to it 'refugees are as bad as the rest of us'. So for anti-fascism
'no better, no worse' remains the anchor. To attempt to 'improve' reality
for some imagined political advantage stumbles, perhaps unwittingly, into
the camp of those for whom racial preference is second nature.
Just recently Anti-Fascist Action was denounced as "racist" in the letters
pages of a weekly left-wing paper for questioning the efficacy of liberal
anti-racism. But 'Refugees welcome here!' is not a strategy, but a proclamation.
And those who bawl it loudest, mostly hide, rather stand behind it. They
hide from reality in other ways too. Not least the notion that they, as
sterling defenders of the status quo, are at one and the same time, attacking
militant anti-fascism from the left.
Ultimately the extent to which a positive outcome is possible depends
entirely on how refugees interests can be shown to be a defence, not of
narrow sectional interests merely, but of needs which are accepted by
working class communities as universal.
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue
3, Oct/Nov '99
Related Articles :
Race and Class - Articles
on multi-culturalism, its origins and its effects.

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"The British National Party" according
to the July issue of Searchlight "polled a smaller share of the vote
than it did in the 1997 general election. In total it gained 102,647 votes,
a miserly 1% share of the votes cast.
This compares poorly with the 1997 general election when the party stood
56 candidates gaining 1.43 % of the vote". Got that? Seems clear enough.
More people voted BNP in 1997 than they did in 1999. Encouraging, you might
think? Except it's not true.
In fact, the numbers of people actually voting BNP almost tripled, from
35,000 in 1997 to over 100,000 in 1999. True, they stood 23 more candidates
in the Euro election. But surely the ability to do so is merely evidence
of a strengthening of infrastructure than anything else. Additionally, these
electoral gains were off the back of a new post-war low of less than one
in four of those eligible actually voting. When you take into account that
from the outset the election campaign was designed to recruit, raise the
BNP profile nationally, and break out of the protest group slot, "failure,"
"disastrous," much less a "fiasco" are just a little
misleading.
In order to justify the tabloid type reporting, the 1% in 1999 is judged
unfavourably against the BNP percentage in 1997 by dividing the total vote
accrued by the BNP amongst the BNP 's own candidates rather than against
a percentage of the total numbers of votes cast. Comparing like with like,
the real 1997 percentage of "votes cast" is revealed as a mere
0.13%. So not only did the fascists almost triple it's number of voters
from 35,000 to 102,000 in two years, but also increased it 's percentage
share of the vote seven fold. As a side dish the champions of the socialist
Left in the form of the SLP were roundly beaten in seven out of the nine
English regions.
Without taking off his socks any fascist that was numerate could work this
out for himself. So, the Searchlight spin cannot be explained away as an
attempt to demoralise the Far Right, when the people they are really mugging
off are at the other end of the spectrum.
For entirely opportunist reasons it would appear the BNP Euro campaign was
written up as calamity simply so Searchlight could justify it 's existence
by claiming as a "success" it 's "repeated exposes"
in the lead up to the election. Searchlight co-editor Nick Lowles, responsible
for the sleight of hand, was exposed in July 1997 after a protracted AFA
internal inquiry as a mole who ruthlessly manipulated the anti-fascist movement
in general and AFA in particular to further Searchlight 's sectional agenda.
Two entire AFA branches who had fallen under the Searchlight spell were
reluctantly purged. And judging by reports it was not for his 'steadiness
under fire ' against a violent Far Right that Lowles earned his spurs. Rather
as a result of his efforts in Yorkshire it was militant anti-fascism rather
than militant nationalism that was fatally undermined. Less subtly, in Germany
recently Searchlight agents attempted to prevent, with accompanying threats
of violence, militant anti-fascists from presenting their analysis to a
large political rally. Not that any of this will give Gerry Gable any sleepless
nights. The 'end justifies the means ' is a motto, had it not existed, Gable
would have been required to invent. But given that Gable has publicly 'come
out ' as a member of John Grieve 's State-sponsored 'Racial and Violent
Crimes Task Force ', what is increasingly puzzling militant anti-fascism
across Europe is no longer the dubious means - but what from a Searchlight
perspective is the desired end? A battle cry of 'Never Again! ', combined
with an 11 million strong, Europe-wide, fascist vote, in tandem with a Searchlight
headline reading "Far Right set back," simply doesn't compute.
I don 't know who they think they 're fooling, but they 're not fooling
us.
Related Articles:
Anti-fascism - Articles on both
liberal and militant anti-fascism.
STAMINA, AMBITION,
ORIENTATION
"It's a story of neglect. Of poor housing, no facilities or community
centres for young people or old, of unemployment, of big money unjustly
distributed, of queues for hospital beds, of withdrawal of medical services.
It is a story of neglect and injustice. It is also a political story of
apathy, of hopelessness, of corruption, of political parties scrabbling
for votes against each other, and between party running mates, of political
want-to-be's, blowing into areas for votes and blowing out again, passing
the parcel between them on councils, taking elections as an accolade not
an obligation".
All an all it is a familiar story throughout much of Europe. Conditions
ready made you would have thought for a breakthrough by a dynamic progressive
working class party. Yet in the last fifteen years we have become conditioned
to accept that in the unlikely event the mold is broken, it will inevitably
be by the extreme-Right.
However in local elections in the 26 counties in June, Sinn Fein trebled
its representation on city and county councils, taking in total 62 local
authority seats. Quite apart from it 's success on the other side of the
border, SF is now the fourth largest party in the 26 Counties. And yet
as republicans are only too happy to admit there is no secret to their
success.
"The vote represents all the work which has been done by Sinn Fein
down the years, every week, going out talking to people, putting newsletters
out to over 10,000 houses, letting people know what we are doing, being
actively involved in the community campaigns around the issues that concern
people".
Expanding on the point another local activist pointed out that "people
know we are not afraid. We 're from the community, we live here, not like
the other candidates who park their car a mile away. We 've lived here
all our lives. Sinn Fein lives in and is part of the community".
Overall SF 's success is "a testament" according to An Phoblact/Republican
News "to arduous patient work without glamour on the ground amongst
the people." Simple as that.
As well as being an inspiration to those of us pursuing a similar strategy,
what a devastating rebuke to the 30 year investment in entryism, opportunism,
middle class student recruitment, sectarianism, paper selling and demos
practiced by the now collapsing European Left.
Politics has always been the art of the possible not the improbable. It
is essentially a collection of successful recipes. Orientation, stamina
and ambition being the critical ingredients. Once the political objective
is agreed, the course of least resistance is decided. Any serious or prolonged
deviation from this course of action comes under the category of hobby.
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 2, Aug/Sept
'99
Related Articles:
Ireland - Articles on Irish
Republicanism and the Peace Process.
Communities Of Resistance
- Articles on progressive working-class organisation.

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Allowing for the diverse array of 'experts'
given air time after the recent London bombings it is amazing how many
were on message. All including Searchlight and the ANL were agreed that
the bombs, were 'acts of desperation'. A natural consequence of the frustration
among the Far-Right from being in a continuous decline since the 1970's.
A spin on events summed up by soundbite from the Prime Minister who declared
racists to be the 'real outcasts'.
Having established the context, the arrest of a suspect led to high fives
all round. Particularly, as the police were quick to point out, he was
not 'connected to any group'. And if indeed he was not connected, then
the bombings were not deemed politically motivated. If the perpetrator
was a lone homicidal maniac, then a fundamental review of anti-racist
strategies, as proposed by AFA to the steering group of the National Civil
Rights Movement recently, was unnecessary. No need to fix something that
wasn't broken. Such was the evident relief, that any who departed from
this consensus, became instant outcasts themselves. Including Cardinal
Hume, who a day prior to the arrest had the temerity to suggest the bombings
reflected some 'underlying sickness in society'. A London Evening Standard
editorial attacked him for being 'hysterical and foolish' simply on grounds
of the bombings now being known to be the work of a lone wolf, rather
than a wolf pack. A pack as a product of society might have required some
soul-searching, but a nutter was an aberration, for which nobody in an
otherwise tolerant multi-cultural society need be held to account. An
entirely rational response if true. Except that very same day Cabinet
Minister Nick Raynsford announced plans to raise the threshold needed
to secure a seat in the London Assembly elections next May, specifically,
in order to prevent the Far-Right 'gaining a foothold on the democratic
ladder'.
Then less than a week later, on May 10, a tenfold increase in race crimes
in London in the last year, from 250 to over 2,000, caused Deputy Assistant
Commissioner John Grieve to remark: 'There is something poisonous in London
which is now bubbling to the surface'. On May 26 a Daily Mirror exclusive
putting the bomber and Tyndall together only eighteen months earlier was
entirely ignored by the same press, which had taken such succour from
the 'lone wolf' theory. Reminiscent of the town council in the film Jaws,
now that the scare was over, the media including the Evening Standard
(who take a keen interest in such matters) didn't want to know.
Meanwhile on Searchlight instigation, the Mirror announced that that of
the 81 candidates put up by the BNP for the Euro elections, 8 had given
false addresses. This led 50 MP's from all parties to demand a investigation
into electoral fraud and a media debate on the probity of banning electoral
broadcasts by parties 'like' the BNP.
During one such discussion, a journalist from the Mirror suggested that
only those whom a 'tolerant society found acceptable' should be allowed
to publicly express their views. Of course these days groups 'like' the
BNP, no longer means simply parties of the Far-Right but anyone deemed
extremist by 'reasonable people'. (A point underlined by the police who
zeroed in on AFA leafletters at a May Day Rally, the day after the Soho
bombing, demanding names and addresses for "intelligence purposes".)
The catch-all term 'extremist' now includes tenants fighting against council
privatisation, those opposed to cabinet style local government, or indeed
anyone involved in politics outside of the mainstream parties. Local initiatives
by the IWCA in the Midlands are instantly branded 'NF' by Labour, or 'exposed'
to non-plussed working class communities as 'subversive by Special Branch.
For over quarter of century British rule in the North of Ireland has facilitated
the promotion of 'reasonable people' to positions of quasi-power, and
has been facilitated in turn by the pretence that such men and women represented
both their communities and a viable future. Naturally the media encouraged
this trend, by promoting the views of the right sort of people who sat
on quangos and discussion panels. The 'soft unionist' views of the Alliance
Party were matched by the 'soft nationalist views' of the SDLP. In short
the two governments wanted people they thought might think like them.
It was a dictatorship of the centre that never quite convinced working
class communities in the same way. The demonisation of Irish republicans
in particular has rebounded so spectacularly, that Sinn Fein leaders like
Adams and McGuinness are regarded by working class kids on both sides
of the border as 'film stars' rather than politicians. Proving that legislation
can delay but never prevent political ideas, if genuinely representative,
taking root.
The current strategy of demonisation promoted by Searchlight, the ANL
and sections of the media will ultimately not only fail, but risks glamourising
fascism in the process for the same reason: they insist on addressing
a symptom rather than a cause. In that the policy of 'race first' of which
they approve, ie. the constant racialisation of every issue from policing,
to education, to football, invites everybody to identify with their own
tribe only. A conscious promotion of division responsible for a balkanisation
that allows the 'centre' a political rule untroubled by either radical
or sustained opposition.
Moreover in the wider political process, the government makes it perfectly
clear in its promotion of policies at a national and local level that
it is not the 'racists' who are outcast but the working class as a whole.
This is not likely to change even if Labour was so minded. Because unless
it continues to bribe and flatter middle class sensibilities, old class
loyalties will reassert themselves and Labour will lose a host of southland
seats again.
Meanwhile the combination of racialising every social issue, at the same
time as treating the working class as just another minority, and an abandoned
one at that, risks driving those desperate for change toward the Far-Right
almost forcibly. A further round of restrictive legislation in order to
avoid (in reality put off) the crisis of the vast reactionary reservoir
the 'reasonable people' have created, being reflected electorally is then
called for. That the demonisation of the Far-Right results in the camouflaged
criminalisation of working class activists is, they would claim, evidence
of even-handedness. Even-handed maybe, but anti-fascism it ain't. Fascism
can be fought only by extending the class struggle, by extending democracy,
not shelving it. The centre is still holding, but you sense, only just.
Reproduced from RA vol 4, Issue 1, June/July '99
Related Articles :
Liberal Anti-Fascism
- Articles examining the role of organisations such as Searchlight and
the Anti-Nazi League.

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