Owen Jones writes:
On the eve of his execution in 1915,
the Swedish-American trade union organiser Joe Hill had a surprisingly
upbeat message to pass to Bill Haywood, a fellow Industrial Workers of the
World activist: "Don't waste any time in mourning. Organise."
It is a statement Tony Benn and Bob Crow would surely have
endorsed after a week that leaves the left grieving for two of its few
remaining political giants. Both figures were demonised in life and are being
patronised in death for the same reason – to dismiss any challenge to the
status quo.
The passing of an era; we will never see their
like again: national sweethearts stripped of any political content who we can
all admire – here is the gist of obituaries that suggest (or hope) that the
left has died with them both.
But, as socialists, both Benn and Crow believed that social change did not hinge on individuals, however much they could inspire and provide direction.
But, as socialists, both Benn and Crow believed that social change did not hinge on individuals, however much they could inspire and provide direction.
Their politics were based on a sense that human
progress is driven by collective action, and that struggles from below force
those with wealth and power to offer concessions. The left, they would be
telling us now, goes on without them.
Although allies, Tony Benn and Bob Crow
represented two sides of a divide on the left that has prevailed for well over
a century.
Benn was a long-standing parliamentarian who
belonged to the Labourite tradition, believing that a party founded by the trade unions to represent
working people was at least a potential vehicle for social change.
Crow, on the other hand, was an ex-Communist who
led a union expelled from Labour a decade ago; he believed
in the need for a new party to offer workers a political voice, and focused on
strike action to improve the conditions of his members.
But both served as examples that the left
is not as rigid and sectarian as it is often portrayed: Benn was a
keen supporter of extra-parliamentary action who happily worked with nearly
anyone on the left; Crow's union had a parliamentary group, exclusively made up
of Labour MPs.
Yet their deaths will fuel anxiety among
Britain's fragmented left.
There is little escaping the fact that the left
has been reeling ever since the high tide of Thatcherism.
There are a host of reasons why: the rise of the
new right; the battering of the trade unions, the traditional backbone of the
left; the shift from an industrial working class to a more atomised service
sector working class; a form of globalisation that limits an elected
government's room for manoeuvre; and the way the collapse of Soviet
totalitarianism was spun to suggest it was "the End of History" and
free-market capitalism had triumphed for ever.
Some thought the crisis of capitalism that began
in 2008 would provoke a renaissance on the left, but it is the neoliberal right
that has thrived.
So where is the left, and what is it?
The first place to start is the British public.
An audacious claim, to be sure, but even some rightwingers recognise that, on
many economic issues, the electorate is to the left of the Labour leadership,
let alone the political establishment.
"Slowly but surely, the public is turning
its back on the free market economy and re-embracing an atavistic version
of socialism," wrote Allister Heath, the editor of London business daily City AM,
late last year, even suggesting that free-marketeers faced being
"annihilated".
It was in response to what he called a
"terrifying" YouGov poll commissioned by the union-backed thinktank
Class, which suggested there was mass support for renationalisation of public
utilities such as energy and rail, and for rent controls.
Other polls show the electorate want taxes hiked
on the rich and a council house building programme. The inevitable retort is
that many of these voters also want a clampdown on immigration and
benefits, but the polls at least point to a huge potential pool of support
for the left – if it can get its act together.
Labour's political complexion is worlds away from
the high-point of Bennism in the early 1980s, but Ed Miliband owed his election
as Labour leader to a promise to draw a line under Blairite orthodoxy. Labour's
leadership has repeatedly disappointed and even angered the left, whether by
backing the public sector pay freeze, accepting George Osborne's spending plans
in the first year of a Labour government, or just not yelling loudly enough
about the crueller consequences of austerity.
But, unlike Tony Blair, Miliband has not tried to
define himself against a wider left, thus preserving party unity and giving
more radical voices space. And at the last election, a surprising number of
leftwing figures were elected as Labour MPs, including charismatic former
miners' leader Ian Lavery, Grahame Morris and Ian Mearns.
Jon Trickett, a thoughtful Yorkshireman
anxious for the next Labour government to be as transformative as Thatcher's
administrations, sits in the shadow cabinet. And shadow ministers such as Wigan's Lisa
Nandy give heart to those wanting a Labour party with an unmistakable
progressive bent.
The more traditional Labour left, though, is in
clear disarray. The Socialist Campaign Group, founded by Benn to co-ordinate
socialist MPs and led by the indomitable John McDonnell,
is a weak echo of what it once was.
Left-leaning sentiments in the Labour party are
largely unorganised, and the "soft left" campaigning group Compass
abandoned its Labour focus after Miliband's election.
The biggest reservoir of leftwing activity
outside the Labour party is the trade unions. Although they have halved in
membership since Thatcher's ascendancy, they remain the country's biggest
democratic movement, with a rank-and-file of around six million. Despite a
hostile environment, they even grew in size last year.
Unite and its Scouser general secretary Len McCluskey
are the most influential, and demand a shift in direction from Labour as well
as unapologetically supporting strikes and civil disobedience. It has led to
the Tories and mainstream media painting them as bogeymen.
The TUC's
new general secretary, Frances O'Grady, is a refreshing break from former
office-holders, who tended to be rather technocratic men in line for
knighthoods.
Since the Cameron-Clegg love-in, most large-scale
dissent on the streets has been driven by unions.
The union-organised March for the Alternative
demonstration in 2011 was the biggest workers' protest for generations, and in
the same year they co-ordinated the largest wave of industrial action since the
1926 general strike.
In an attempt to overcome the left's Judean People's
Front-style sectarianism and build a broad anti-austerity movement, the
unions launched the People's
Assembly with a 4,000-strong rally last June.
Huge meetings have been held across the country –
I've spoken at several – but successfully chipping away at the austerity
consensus remains a daunting challenge.
It is the Greens
who have flourished most as a leftwing alternative to the Labour party, helped
by the election of charismatic, street-fighting politician Caroline Lucas in
Brighton, as well as MEPs and scores of councillors.
But their ambition of becoming a leftwing
equivalent of Ukip
has yet to be realised, and a bitter dispute between Green-run Brighton council
and bin collectors tarnished their brand.
The Respect
party, on the other hand, is in reality little more than a personal vehicle
for George
Galloway, who punched the political establishment in the nose
after his shock election in Bradford's byelection in 2012.
But his past praise for dictators and appalling
comments about rape following allegations against Julian Assange have left him
largely isolated.
North of the border, leftwing, pro-independence
movements such as the Radical
Independence Campaign are agitating for a new progressive Scotland, free of
neoliberal dogma.
The Trotskyist left, meanwhile, is in tatters.
The Socialist
Workers' party and their newspaper sellers have long been
a recognisable, and – to other activists – rather irritating presence at
leftwing events.
For many years, they were Britain's largest
far-left group, serving as the backbone for the Stop the War movement and its two million-strong demonstration against the Iraq war, as well as
for groups such as Unite Against Fascism.
But following allegations that the SWP leadership
covered up rape claims, it has been deserted by many of its
activists and is now a near-pariah on the left.
Their largest rival is the Socialist Party, the
successor to the Militant Tendency, which infiltrated Labour in the 1970s and
1980s.
Its project to form a "new workers'
party", however, has little to boast except a run of catastrophic
election results and lost deposits.
On the other hand, groups that reject the
idea of "leaders" have thrived.
Following the coalition's assumption
of power, UKUncut
orchestrated occupations of businesses and banks in protest at tax avoidance
worth £25bn a year.
They even received favourable coverage in the Daily Mail, and helped force tax
avoidance on to the agenda.
When activists set up tents
outside St Paul's Cathedral in 2011 as part of the global Occupy movement, they
helped popularise the sense of a wealthy "1%" thriving while the
"99%" suffered.
Student protests and occupations in 2010 helped
throw up a new generation of anarchists, hostile to both the established left
and traditional trade unions.
What must surely drive all shades of the left is
a sense of necessity.
The sixth richest country on earth now has half
a million people dependent on food banks;
wages haven't fallen for so long since the Victorian era; the next
generation faces being poorer for the first time in a century.
From the Chartists to the anti-poll tax movement,
there is a long tradition of causes facing apparently insurmountable odds, but
being vindicated in time.
"The flame of anger against injustice
and the flame of hope that you can build a better world" is what drives
social change, Tony Benn said: modern Britain does not lack anger, but the
left's real mission is surely hope.
Charismatic and inspiring leaders will
inevitably be mourned.
But the injustices that drove them don't die, and
so neither will the need to continue their fight.
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