To go from a country like Britain
where politics is a source of profound cynicism to one where it is a cause for hope: well,
it is chastening.
Outside the Greek finance ministry are cleaners who used to
work there, until 16 months ago – like so many Greeks – they lost their jobs. “We were just numbers, not human beings,” one tells me.
Ever since, they’ve
camped outside, battled riot police, and become iconic figureheads of the
struggle against austerity.
Plastered around their camp are defiant posters: a
clenched fist in a kitchen glove, a cleaner sweeping away Greece’s discredited,
despised political elite.
“We hope to take back our lives, our jobs,” I’m told.
“After so many years, to be happy again.”
But here’s the thing. Middle-aged working-class women
have hardly had much of a political voice in Greece, or most other western
societies for that matter.
Yet rather than become victims, they have organised
and demanded to be heard. There is a real sense that maybe – just maybe – the
likes of these sacked middle-aged cleaners could be the new masters now.
Greece is a society that has been progressively
dismantled by EU-dictated austerity.
Outside one polling station, I speak to
Georgia, who works at a hospital clinic manned by volunteers which caters for
the impoverished.
For unemployed Greeks denied access to the public healthcare
system, such clinics are lifelines.
Georgia has one clear ambition – that after
a year or two of a Syriza-led government, her clinic will no longer be needed
and will close.
Syriza supporters speak often more as though they are in a
disaster zone than competing in an election. Dealing with the “humanitarian
crisis” is described as the new government’s number one priority.
This was not just an election victory: this was a
historic watershed.
From the late 1980s onwards, the Soviet totalitarian
satellite states began to collapse.
The end of the cold war was cleverly spun
into the final, absolute victory of not just capitalism, but its most
undiluted, rapacious form: “The End of History” – the sense that even the most
democratic left project was somehow buried in the rubble of the Berlin Wall.
Deprived of any organised ideological counterweight, capitalism was liberated
to chip away at all the constraints that had been placed upon it: like
nationalisation, progressive taxation, workers’ rights, social security and
regulation.
The culmination of this hubris was the financial collapse, as
triumphant free-market capitalism went into meltdown.
But the left did not
exist as a viable mass political force in the west: its battered remnants could
get together a few placards complaining about the bankers, but it had no
Syriza’s victory is the biggest challenge to the era of
“There Is No Alternative” yet.
Syriza are presented as “far left”, while those
they replace are presumably “moderates”.
It is a fascinating insight into what
the western media regard as moderation: plunging over half of young people into
unemployment, almost doubling child poverty, stripping away basic social
protections.
The politics of despair peddled by elites mean you are supposed to
regard such injustices as inevitable, irresistible, impossible to overcome.
But
the re-emergence of the left as a political force – at least offering the
possibility of a different sort of society – represents a substantial punch in
the face to an economic order that has prevailed for a generation.
No wonder so many leftists – from Britain, Spain, France,
Italy, and all over Europe – travelled to Athens for this moment.
For many of
them, neoliberalist triumphalism is all they have ever known.
The stripping
away of hard-won social rights and the ever-growing dominance of the market are
things they have almost taken for granted.
Some looked rather dazed as the
victorious Alexis Tsipras took to the stage, because they have grown accustomed
to losing.
Syriza is not about to build a new socialist society.
It
has assembled a coalition with a rightwing party; it faces the determined
opposition of EU leaders and powerful interests within Greece itself.
It will
be battered by the markets, and will compromise in a way that will undoubtedly
alienate many of its own supporters, both in Greece and abroad.
Nonetheless, a left that was no
longer supposed to exist has returned. Neoliberalism is no longer without
formidable enemies.
In Spain, Podemos – which has closely aligned itself to
Syriza – is surging in the polls, and
similar forces may gain traction in other European countries too.
Neoliberal
hegemony is – gradually and unevenly – being chipped away.
It is still hard to
see a world free of it.
But it is no longer impossible.
We had hope once in UK politics. It lasted for a few moments in 1997. I remember it well.
ReplyDeleteOh, I never put any faith in that. Most Labour voters in 1997 didn't. We were the people who would had voted for John Smith or Bryan Gould, and merely had to make do with Tony Blair. There were always far more of us.
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