Neil Clark, of course, writes:
The
2008 financial crash, brought about largely by the greed and recklessness of
very wealthy bankers, ought have been a great opportunity for the political
left.
But instead, as popular opposition to elite-friendly globalization grew,
it was the right, and the far-right in particular, which gained ground in
countries across the Western hemisphere.
Although the book mainly
concerns itself with English society and politics, there's lessons
to be learnt for readers in the US and in the rest
of Europe too.
In fact, I'd go as far to say that if the
Western left don't pay heed to what Winlow et al have to say,
then it could be curtains forever.
The situation really is that
serious.
'The Capitalist Horizon'
The basic problem identified
by the authors, is that the left, which once put the everyday concerns
of working-class people at the very head of its program, has
become liberalized.
As neoliberalism became hegemonic, the main parties
of the left and their representatives turned their attention away
from economic reform and instead begun fighting culture wars.
Public
ownership and a commitment to genuine egalitarianism was out —
identity politics was in.
The talk was of "toleration" and not of
"exploitation."
"The left lost interest in the traditional
field of political economy, and instead opened up new theaters
of conflict on the field of culture. Generally speaking, the
left accepted the capitalist horizon," Winlow et al explain.
Political life
in Britain became sterile as Labour and the Conservatives
converged to promote a pro-capitalist, economically and socially liberal
agenda.
The working-class were excluded from this new, City
of London-approved consensus.
In the 2001 general election,
faced with a choice between Tweedledum Tony Blair and Tweedledee
William Hague, just 59% of people bothered voting.
Compare that level
of engagement to 1950, when turnout was 83.9%. But back then, the
working-class was properly represented.
The authors of The Rise of the Right stress that while
"middle-class liberal domination of working-class thought and
politics is nothing new" — just think of the role the Fabians
played in early Labour Party history — things have got a whole lot
worse in the post social-democratic era.
Former carpenter Eric Heffer, who died in 1991,
is cited as "one of the last honest and confrontational working-class
heavyweights in the Labour Party."
The authors mention how the CIA
played their part too in destroying the genuine socialist left —
as chronicled by H. Wilford's book, The CIA, the British Left and the Cold War:
Calling the Tune? which is referenced in chapter three:
"Central to this was the abandonment
of class and the turn to language, cultural identity and social
movements…
"The American liberal-progressivist habit of demonizing
socialism by placing it in the same breath as fascism was
imported into Europe to provide more attractive and subtle support
to the conservative right's demonization program."
The CIA got exactly what they
wanted.
In the era of hegemonic
neoliberalism, anyone who dares to challenge the liberal-left from a
socialist perspective, can expect to be denounced by Establishment
gatekeepers as a "Stalinist" or even "far-right."
Even
advocating a return to the much fairer economic policies of 1945-79
is regarded as beyond the pale.
The acceptable parameters of debate have become
hopelessly narrowed, with "liberal" media playing a key role
in keeping alternative solutions, which would benefit the majority,
"off-limits."
"The right-liberal and left-liberal media can be
distinguished by their approaches to issues such as welfare,
multiculturalism and taxation, but when faced with even the remotest
chance of the return of anything like real left politics, they
become one voice," the authors declare.
Is it any wonder therefore, that with their voices ignored
by those who once claimed to represent them, the British
working-class has looked for other options?
The second half of The Rise
of the Right includes interviews with working-class men and
women who support far-right political groups like the English Defence
League (EDL).
Here's Steppy, who is 39, on why he doesn't vote Labour:
"Those posh white people… They've taken over the Labour party.
They're taking over everywhere. And look what they're doing.
"First thing
they get their mates top jobs. And then their mates get jobs for their
mates. Your feminists are cut from the same cloth. They talk
about democracy, but there's no democracy. Not in this
country…"
Anti-Muslim prejudice was widespread among the interviewees.
Muslims have become a scapegoat for the anger,
frustration and alienation that many supporters of the EDL and other
far-right groups feel.
But the big problem, as the
authors show, has been the rapacious economic system we live under, which is
inimical to the best interests of the majority.
It's neo-liberalism
that has destroyed entire working-class communities and the spirit
of solidarity that once existed.
It's neo-liberalism that has created so
much loneliness and anxiety.
Tony, like many interviewees, looks back
nostalgically to the Britain of forty years ago:
"Things were better then.. For people like me
it was better. We had a right laugh at school and well, everything just
seemed to work. There was jobs then. Everyone worked. People stuck
together."
Going Back to Square One
Instead of listening
to working-class people like Tony, too many political representatives
of the "left" prefer to take their cue from
"liberal" middle-class media columnists, and focus on issues
which said media columnists believe are of the most pressing concern.
This
has to stop if the rise of the far-right is to be checked.
In chapter eight of their
book, the authors argue that the left "must begin from the beginning
again":
"For us the left today needs to be returned
to the working class.
"It is the working-class that must win the fight
for social and economic justice. Middle-class liberals cannot and will not
win it on their behalf."
The authors say that leftists
need to acknowledge that what they call "hippy
counter-culturalism" was a "colossal error" and then begin
to undo some of the damage it caused.
Culture should not be abandoned,
but "put back in its sub-dominant place."
Economic reform, and
in particular ending the dictatorship of finance capital must be the
priority.
A publicly-owned national investment bank, the re-nationalization
of key industries, and the return of jobs — proper, meaningful,
well-paid, full-time contracted jobs to areas turned into wastelands
has to be right at the top of Labour's agenda.
The rise of the far-right is not inevitable, neither is it irreversible.
But the left is doomed unless it campaigns on bread-and-butter working-class issues and makes a clean break with elite-friendly neoliberalism.
If Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn hasn't ordered a copy of The Rise of the Right yet, then I recommend he does so very quickly.
The rise of the far-right is not inevitable, neither is it irreversible.
But the left is doomed unless it campaigns on bread-and-butter working-class issues and makes a clean break with elite-friendly neoliberalism.
If Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn hasn't ordered a copy of The Rise of the Right yet, then I recommend he does so very quickly.
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