Page 10
Socialist Standard
May 2005
2005 General Election

VOTE EFFECTIVE -
VOTE ALTERNATIVE



“The bottom line is
that if there is no
profit there is no
employment”



If you agree with this aim, then  In May 2005, this is the most important general election ever.Or was that in 2001? Or in 1997? Or 1987?
The big political parties want to convince us about this because we may then be persuaded to vote for one or other of them, under the
impression that by choosing between them we are making a difference to this social system. Vote for this party and our future is
secure; vote for the other party and we put everything at risk. Here, for example, is Neil Kinnock in 1987:
"Every election is a time of decision. But this General Election … faces the British people with choices more sharp
than at any time in the past fifty years". To which the "British people" sharply responded by emphatically rejecting Kinnock and his party.

Here is John Major in 1997: "British people now have the opportunity of a prosperous future. But that prosperity cannot be taken for granted…
 If we relax for one moment, our hard won success will slip away again". By "relaxing" Major meant voting for the Labour Party, which was what the
"British people" did, ensuring that Major himself slipped away into well-merited obscurity. Finally, here is Blair in 2001:
"This general election is in many ways even more important than the last…Now is the chance to build the future properly…"
Blair did not say why, after four years of Labour government, the future had still not been built "properly" but he obviously
did not need to elaborate in that way because the electorate returned his party to power by a hefty margin. So how are things
now, after the threats and the promises? Whether in gratitude or fear, the workers will vote for capitalism again with the
only uncertainty the pattern of their voting.

Blair and Howard
One factor which is likely to affect that pattern is the developing awareness that there is no significantdifference between the Labour Party
and the Tories. Because of this, solid Labour supporters who helped elect Blair in 1997 and 2001 now feel themselves
disfranchised. Another factor is that, like so many of his predecessors, Blair has been exposed as a trickster and a liar, so that he
is no longer the easeful vote harvester he once was.
On the other side, Michael Howard is looking more and more like a man who is desperately trying to throw off his past; for
example wearing his customary oily smirk he urged us on TV to "Let the sunshine break through the clouds of disappointment
we all feel". The problem for Howard is that his time as a Tory minister is not remembered for being at all sunny.
 As Home Secretary he was in the habit of using his time at the rostrum in Tory conferences to excite the ugliest of prejudices - and not
just about crime. In this election, as Tory leader he has tried to exploit racist neuroses about immigration by promising to establish
a Border Control Police, forgetting the time in the 1990s when, according to the Public and Commercial Services Union, he
actually hampered immigration controls by slapping on a recruitment freeze. Howard has told a heart-wrenching story about his
mother-in-law dying of an infection she picked up as a hospital patient but during the last Conservative governments all
was not well with hospitals for there was a shortage of nurses and doctors and waiting lists - for anyone unable
to afford anything better - were a problem then as they are now. Schools also suffered, being cut back on their teachers, books and other
equipment. The last Tory government, under John Major, descended into such chaos that when they were defeated in 1997 it was almost
an act of mercy by thevoters.

The economy
However those who voted in the Blair governments have no more cause for satisfaction. There have been Labour Home Secretaries who have
exceeded Howard in their punitive response to those crimes which capitalism places outside the law. A succession of Criminal Justice Acts has
tightened the screw on offenders while nourishing the ambition of those Home Secretaries to become party leader.
Detention - imprisonment - without trial, or even being told the reasons for being in prison, has become established.
Blair's sound bite about being tough on crime and on the causes of crime has been discredited as the causes of crime - poverty,
stress, alienation, social disability - remain. Blair's claims that under his government the British economy has been
in controlled health have been exposed by the collapse of the Rover car company. The company was losing
millions of pounds and cars are not manufactured in order to provide the workers with a wage stable enough for
them to make assumptions about their future. The bottom line - to use an irritating, although apposite, phrase - is that if
there is no profit there is no employment, even if that mean thousands of workers being transferred from a just
tolerable level of poverty to one of abject degradation. That is the basis on which capitalism organises its wealth production
and no government can affect it.

Alternative
Blair's popularity has been seriously eroded by the exposure of his lies over the causes of the war in Iraq. But this was by
no means the only example of a politician lying because none of them could readily admit to their impotence to control the
events of capitalism. For them the only way out is through deception, at times to the extent that they begin to believe their own
lies - as, it is rumoured, is the case with Blair. What this amounts to is that there is a basic unity among the parties which stand
for the continuance of capitalism, which can only be solidified by every vote for those parties. But there is no need to waste the
vote in that way for we have the means of basically changing society so as to eliminate the problems which now disfigure it.
 The Socialist Party is standing alone as a party which aims at the capture of political power by the working class, to abolish capitalism
and replace it with a society based on common ownership of wealth production and distribution and making that wealth
freely available to everyone.
That is Socialism - the only alternative to capitalism and its political parties.

IVAN


Our Candidate's
Manifesto


As is our usual policy, we are standing one token candidate in the general election, in the Vauxhall constituency in South London, to
challenge all the pro-capitalist parties and ensure that the voice of socialism is not entirely lost amidst the recriminations of the professional
politicians about how to run capitalism.

The Socialist Party is contesting this election as a part of our campaign to establish a new system of society: one based on the common
ownership and democratic control of the means and instruments for producing and distributing wealth by and in the interest of the whole community.

That is our sole object. By common ownership we don't mean that everyone should have to share a toothbrush, but that in a
society built upon our mutual effort, we should all benefit and have a say in how it is run.

We currently live in a system of society based on a tiny number of people owning the productive wealth of our world, organised and run by a
handful of bosses for their benefit. Their profits come first, our needs come second.

In Vauxhall nearly half of all workers are employed in  administering business as compared with only a quarter in social services
and looking after ourselves (derived from 2001 Census).

It seems we're so busy taking care of business that we don't have time to take care of ourselves.
Because of this we have endless problems of poverty, poor services and all the issues politicians love to
spend time telling you they can solve, if only given the chance.

We don't believe any politician can solve these problems, as long as the flawed basis of our society
remains intact. In fact, we believe only you and your fellow workers can solve these problems.

We believe that it will take a revolution in how we organise our lives, a fundamental change. We want to see a society based on the fact
that you know how to run your lives, know your needs and have the skills and capacity to organise with your fellows to satisfy them.

You know yourselves and your lives better than a handful of bosses ever can. With democratic control of production we can ensure that looking
after our communities becomes a priority, rather than something we do in our spare time.

We all share fundamental needs, for food, clothing, housing and culture, and we have the capacity to ensure access to these for all, without exception.

If you agree with this aim, then we ask you to get in touch with us, get involved and join in our campaign to bring about this change in society.

Together, we have the capacity to run our world for ourselves. We need to build a movement to effect that change, by organising deliberately to
take control of the political offices which rule our lives, and bring them into our collective democratic control.

Our candidate makes no promises, offers no pat solutions, only to be the means by which you can remake society for the common good.
Danny Lambert
The Socialist Party Candidate

The campaign office is our Head
Office at 52 Clapham High Street, SW4
7UN. This will be open every day and
evening during the election period. So, if
you want to help call in (the nearest
tube station is Clapham North) or phone
0207 622 3811 or email
spgb@worldsocialism.org



If you don't live in Vauxhall and
want to show that you reject the policies
of the profit system and understand and
want the real socialist alternative, the
way to do so is to write "SOCIALISM"
across your ballot paper.




The Socialist Party is also standing
a candidate in the Deneside ward in the
Durham County Council elections also
being held on 5 May. Details and offers
of help to: Steve Colborn, 46 Ivy
Avenue, Seaham, SR7 8NF.