socialist standard                                      october 2006
Page 8
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Bored with politics?

Politics is not just about the antics of career politicians - or at least doesnt have to be.

If you ask people what is a party? they are likely to reply something along the lines of a group of people who want to get elected. If you then ask them why they think these people want to get elected, the reply, if theyre feeling charitable, will be to do things for the country or to help other people. If theyre not feeling charitable, theyll say to help themselves or that theyre just in for what they can get.


The truth - both as to what people think and what politicians want - will be something in between. Since up to 70 percent of people turn out to vote at elections and vote for politicians and their parties, they cant really think that all that politicians want to do is to line their own pockets or further their own careers. They must be giving them some credit for wanting to do more, otherwise theyd be exposing themselves as fools for voting for them. And some politicians can show that they genuinely want to help other people, while at the same time of course making a career and some money for themselves.


Being a politician is a sort of profession, like a lawyer or a doctor. A politicians trade is to get into parliament or the local council to run the administrative side of capitalism. To do this, they must get elected and, to get elected, they must promise to do things for people; they must find out whats worrying people and then promise to do something about it.


This is why parties dont need principles. Or, put another way, they only need one principle (if it can be called that) and thats get elected. In the past some parties, the Labour Party for instance, used to campaign to try to win people over to their point of view. Not any more. Today politicians just promise people what they want to hear.


Although Blair, Mandelson and New Labour earned themselves a reputation for cynicism by the way they raised this to a fine art, actually the best practitioners of this have been the Lib-Dems, whove long had focus groups to tell them what to promise people in some area theyve targeted. Now the Tories under Cameron are practising this in a more serious way too.


This kind of politics - which is dominant today - rests on a number of assumptions and has a number of consequences.


1. It accepts the status quo. It accepts capitalism and seeks merely to work within it. Politics becomes a question of choosing the best capitalism-management team from amongst competing groups of politicians.


2. Politics becomes a profession. You vote for a politician to do something for you and you reward them for the service by voting for them.


3. Politics becomes an activity in which only a minority - the professional politicians - participate. Most peoples only involvement in politics is, literally, once every few years when they go and put an X on a ballot paper. Then they go home and let the person elected get on with the job.


4. Elections become more and more a sort of referendum, a plebiscite on the record of the outgoing government or council. Peoples participation in politics becomes simply giving a thumbs up or a thumbs down to the outgoing administration. If they dont mind what theyve done, they vote them in again. If theyre not happy then they vote in some other lot.

 
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