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Left
and right
The
terms 'Left' and 'Right' as political designations emerged
innocuously out of the seating arrangements in the Legislative
Assembly of Revolutionary France in 1791, when the royalist
Feuillants sat on the right side of the chamber and the radical
Montagnards occupied the seats on the left. This almost incidental
occurrence was to bring the terms 'left' and 'right' into the lexicon
of politics, where inevitably their wide generality would make them
universally both an instrument of confusion and often a means of
deliberate obfuscation.
By
the middle of the 19th century the expression of political
conservatism was regarded as 'right wing' while their liberal
opponents were designated 'left wing'. It was not solely, however as
labels for political parties that the terms were to bedevil political
consciousness but increasingly the most irrelevant matters that could
be construed as having political moment found description within the
spectrum of Left and Right.
So
when the German and French socialist movements tactically retained
programmes of 'immediate demands' - reformist strategies intended to
bring about what they hoped would be the piecemeal evolution of
capitalism into socialism - they inevitably became the political
Left. The British Labour Party when it was formed in 1906, unlike its
continental cousins, did not choose reformism as a tactic but was
founded on a strategy that held that inevitably and gradually
capitalism could be reformed into socialism. It became the principal
focus of the Left in Britain, lingering long after the Labour Party's
pathetic failure to exercise any real influence in government when it
first got the opportunity to do so in 1923.
Inter-Left
enmity
For
decades Labour and Social Democratic parties throughout the world
have contended for political office and the power of government on
the claim that they were acting as bona-fide socialists. The
multiplicity of left-wing groups, 'tendencies' and parties, like the
various Trotskyist organisations and the fragmented periphery of 'the
left', have traditionally supported the main Labour or
social-democratic parties in general elections only to become
implacably opposed to their policies when they formed governments.
The
basis of this inter-left enmity is always related not to socialism
but to aspects of capitalism and is based on the chastening reality
of political power. In fact politics within the left is similar to
politics outside the left: it is all about capitalism and its endemic
problems. Not only that but right across the entire spectrum of
politics from so-called Left to Right and through Centre the basic
ideas that are perceived as representing Left and Right have been
adopted and abandoned by parties of differing political complexions.
British
politics currently illustrates this point: the Blair government is
pursuing viciously authoritarian policies and backing the aggressive
expansionism of a particularly vicious United States establishment.
Judged by the absurd yardstick for determining positions on the
swingometer of Left and Right such policies would be seen as
extremely right-wing. Conversely, the new Tory leader, David Cameron,
is trying to lead his party back to favour with the electorate with
gestures of sympathy for the poor, the oppressed and the
intellectually deprived which he believes might fool people into the
belief that the Tories really do care. In fact policies wrongly seen
by the pundits to be essential parts of Labour's political
stock-in-trade.
Historically,
all three of the big political parties in Britain have advocated or
used nationalisation -- once the sacred cow of the British Left -
when economic circumstances have shown a need for such a policy.
Again, all three parties accepted the economic thinking underwriting
the welfare state and all three have accepted the Keynesian economic
philosophy when it was wrongly believed to be the panacea for the
intractable ills of the system and especially the problem of managing
economic demand.
Winning
elections
The
reality of politics today is that political parties represent the
corporate face of organised groups of
career-orientated politicians
whose cushy, well-paid jobs are dependent on selling old and failed
political formulae dressed in worthless verbiage to a gullible
electorate. It is not a question of honesty, sincerity or sagacity;
wise and sincere people elected to government may indeed be able to
soften some of the nasty features that capitalism
throws up, but a
government endowed with a surfeit of wisdom and sincerity could not
make a system of economic anarchy and competition Ð a system
predicated on the exploitation of the many by the few Ð run in
the common interest.
Mere
poverty and absolute destitution, the gigantic organisation of mass
murder, which is war, homelessness, crime, social alienation and all
the other features of the capitalist way of life are not caused by
stupid, brutal or insincere politicians; they are endemic to
capitalism. That is the demonstrable assumption on which the case for
socialism - our case - is based; that is why we say it is social and
economic system that has got to be changed and not its political
functionaries.
RICHARD
MONTAGUE
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