Although (as he more or less says), it must not be left to the likes of the CPB either, Robert Griffiths writes:
Some English and British nationalists tend to oppose the EU because they
fear or resent close relations with foreigners. However, as in the case of Ukip, this antipathy rarely extends into areas
such as Britain's subservient political and military relationship with the
United States.
It is not the principle of foreign relations which angers them. They
understood the value of the British empire and imperialist policies in the
past, as they understand the global role that the US - and Nato, the IMF, the
World Trade Organisation and so on - plays in protecting capitalist interests
and investments today.
Beginning within Europe itself, the EU has spearheaded the global drive for
deregulation and privatisation. For that reason, many Tories and most sections
of big business do not favour British withdrawal from the EU. However, emboldened by three decades of privatisation, deregulation and
anti-trade union laws in Britain, they strongly believe that the EU need not
grant any concessions to the working class in Britain and elsewhere in the name
of "social partnership" or a "social Europe."
Furthermore, they reject attempts to create an equal playing field across
Europe at the expense of finance capital's almost total freedom in the City of
London, or at the expense of Britain's especially harsh anti-trade union and
"flexible" labour market laws. That is why the Tories want to renegotiate relations between Britain and the
EU, while stopping short of withdrawal.
Ukip, on the other hand, believes that an even more right-wing government in
Britain should be free in future to undercut social and economic provisions in
western Europe, finish off trade unionism, ignore global warming and snuggle up
still closer to US imperialist power. This division represents a clash of views and interests within the British
ruling class, although at this stage those who favour full withdrawal remain in
the minority.
Neither side has the interests of the mass of people in Britain at heart.
They are arguing about how best to perpetuate super-exploitation, deregulation,
privilege and inequality. However, both the Euro-separatists and the Eurosceptics attack the EU or
aspects of it, playing upon a reactionary patriotism and xenophobia to garner
support and conceal their class motivations.
There is a third section of ruling-class opinion, the Euro-fanatics, who see
the others as jeopardising Britain's position within the neoliberal, big
business European Union. Still under the anti-Thatcher spell of former EU Commission president
Jacques Delors and his mythical "European chapter," substantial
sections of the British trade union movement and Labour Party continue to align
themselves with this third camp.
This becomes all the more incomprehensible as the EU Commission and the
European Central Bank, armed with the Lisbon and Amsterdam treaties, impose
austerity, privatisation and mass unemployment policies on the peoples of one
EU member state after another.
Solidarity with the workers of Ireland, Greece, Cyprus, Spain, Portugal and
elsewhere should mean opposing the anti-democratic and neoliberal treaties of
the EU - not defending them, or merely attacking their right-wing critics.
Britain's trade unions should be exposing the anti-working class policies
and institutions of the European Union, not confusing the European Court and
Convention on Human Rights with the anti-labour EU Court of Justice or
brandishing the feeble working time directive as a fig-leaf for the EU of austerity,
privatisation, mass impoverishment and despair.
Britain's labour movement should be defending all workers, whatever their
country of origin, against EU-backed super-exploitation. That includes migrant
workers in Britain and local workers who fear being undercut. All workers need to be unionised and protected by collective agreements that
apply equally.
The labour movement response should be to reject all three camps of British
monopoly capitalism in favour of popular sovereignty and an independent foreign
policy for the nations of Britain. That means opposing all steps towards a united states of Europe, which in
present conditions would only be dominated by the interests of monopoly
capital.
The left and Labour should be leading the fight against the corrupt, big
business EU - not leaving it to Ukip charlatans, who ride the EU gravy train
and whose main interest is to defend the corrupt, big business City of London. The basic treaties and structures of the EU cannot be reformed as part of a
strategy for a progressive or socialist Europe - and it is fundamentally
deluded or dishonest to pretend otherwise.
The British, Scottish and Welsh governments should take back powers to
intervene in the economy in the interests of working people. The labour movement should be campaigning for the policies in the People's
Charter for public ownership, economic sustainability, progressive taxation and
peace - against the Tory-led regime, Ukip, the EU, the US and Nato.
This will show people that there is a real alternative to the common big
business agenda of the Euro-separatists, the Eurosceptics and the
Euro-fanatics. Failure to do so will see the forces of the right - whether the Tories, Ukip
or their supporters in the mass media - consolidate their domination of
political debate in Britain while the Labour Party continues to flounder on the
touchline, too timid to don its own jersey and join the fray.
No comments:
Post a Comment