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Goodbye
To Bambi
Enfeebled
by their thrashing at the polls in 1997, the most damaging comment
the Tories could think of about Tony Blair was to liken him to a
political Bambi – a young, doe-eyed
innocent deficient in any ambition or ability to control the wild
beasts in his party and their scheming to bring back Clause Four.
Those who were closer to the New Labour heart knew differently. Even
before all the results were in on that night in May 1997, an iron
discipline was being imposed on Bambi’s
party. Jonathan Freedland, a Guardian reporter and a Labour
supporter, was unable to celebrate Blair’s
victory because he was brusquely ejected from the Hall as he was in a “forbidden zone”
there. Three years later another Guardian writer, Andrew
Rawnsley, recalled the situation: “Power
within the party had been concentrated at the top. Discipline was
everything. Dissenters were ruthlessly smothered and marginalized”.
According
to Blair (and to most other politicians) “The
only purpose of being in politics is to make things happen” – which leads to the
questions of
what
are the “things”
and whether it is worthwhile, in terms of human interests, that they
should “happen”.
Naturally, Blair is quite clear in the matter. In his farewell speech
to the party members in his Sedgefield constituency he congratulated
himself on what he had made happen during his ten years in Number
Ten: “As for my own leadership,
throughout these ten years…one thing was clear to me –
without the Labour party allowing me to lead it, nothing could ever
have been done” and in more detail: “…more jobs, fewer unemployed, better
health
and education results, lower crime, and economic growth in every
quarter…The British are special, the world knows it, in our
innermost thoughts we know it…This is the greatest nation on
Earth”.
These
extravagant claims are based on a number of minor changes in working
class conditions which some people –
Labour politicians – may choose to
interpret as improvements but which, compared to the everyday
grinding problems of capitalism, are insignificant. For example we
were invited to vote for Blair’s party
because they legislated for an increase in paid maternity leave from
18 to 29 weeks; because there has been a rise in rate of employment
of lone parents, so that the poverty of people with children may be
just a little less severe; because during Blair’s
ten years at the helm recorded crime fell, after the passage of no
less than 53 criminal justice bills, some of which have created a
crisis of overcrowding in the prison service while alarmingly eroding
some civil liberties.
At
the same time the number of children officially assessed as living in
relative poverty rose by 100,000 to 2.8 million, making nonsense of
Labour’s stated objective of cutting this
figure by half by 2010. Then there has been the matter of
governmental sleaze, in which Labour assured us they would be a
refreshing improvement after the Tories but which began with the
Bernie Ecclestone affair and which was exposed in the recent scandal
of the award of honours to anyone rich enough to “lend”
the party large sums of money. And of course there has been Iraq,
which deserves to be the event by which Blair is best remembered –
the war which he secretly agreed with Bush to support, which he
attempted to justify with lies about the existence of powerful
weapons and which has now plunged that hapless country into a chaos
of murder and destruction.
Blair
began his time as prime minister with high hopes from an electorate
deceived by the Labour Party’s propaganda
machine that here was a new, fresh leader to usher us into a secure
future. It took some years to expose him as a typically ruthless and
manipulative, if highly skilled, practitioner of the cynical art of
capitalism’s politics. He will not be
missed.
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Socialist Party |
Introducing the Socialist
Party
The Socialist Party is like no other political party in Britain. It is
made up of people who have joined together because we want to get rid
of the profi t system
and establish real socialism.
Our aim is to persuade others to become socialist and act for
themselves, organising democratically and without leaders, to bring
about the kind of society that we are advocating in this journal. We
are solely concerned with building a movement of socialists for
socialism. We are not a reformist party with a programme of policies to
patch up capitalism.
We use every possible opportunity to make new socialists. We
publish pamphlets and books, as well as CDs, DVDs and various other
informative material.
We also give talks and take part in debates; attend rallies, meetings
and demos; run educational conferences; host internet discussion
forums, make fi lms
presenting our ideas, and contest elections when practical. Socialist
literature
is available in Arabic, Bengali, Dutch, Esperanto, French, German,
Italian, Polish,
Spanish, Swedish and Turkish as well as English.
The more of you who join the Socialist Party the more we will be
able to get our ideas across, the more experiences we will be able to
draw on and
greater will be the new ideas for building the movement which you will
be able to bring
us.
The Socialist Party is an organisation of equals. There is no
leader and there are no followers. So, if you are going to join we want
you to be sure that
you agree fully with what we stand for and that we are satisfied that
you
understand the case for socialism.
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Socialist Party
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