A
left of Labour Candidate
by Liam
MacUaid - 5th February 2008
The absence of a clearly identified left of Labour candidate in
the London mayoral elections will disenfranchise all those who can
no longer support the three major pro-capitalist parties. This is
a significant constituency which comprises many of those who have
dropped out of Labour Party membership in the last decade, Labour
voters who can no longer give political support to a right-wing,
pro-war, pro neo-liberal programme, large numbers of anti-war protestors,
younger people who are starting to radicalise due to climate change
and increasingly sections of public sector workers on whom Gordon
Brown is imposing pay cuts.
The
timing of the election is lucky for those of us trying to create
a class struggle, socialist party. Northern Rock, Société
Générale, rising food and energy prices, sub-prime
mortgages in the United States and the lack of social housing provision
in London are all strong agitational issues on which to fight a
left of Labour campaign. With the right candidate and the right
sort of approach it is possible to run a campaign which serves as
a pole of attraction in working class communities and organisations
for those who are starting to suffer the effects of inflation, pay
freezes and financial insecurity.
No
left of Labour candidate is going to win such an election. At this
stage that is not the point in standing. Without an explicitly socialist
candidate, one who supports workers’ struggles and self-activity,
there will be nothing to slow the move to the right in London’s
politics. Livingstone’s anti-imperialism sets him apart from
most prominent Labour Party figures. But that sort of rhetoric does
not cost him anything politically these days. There is nothing in
anything either Johnson or Livingstone has said recently to suggest
that they will support restrictions on police powers, roll back
the pervasive surveillance of London or commit to build the necessary
numbers of social housing stock. A solution to London’s housing
shortage requires precisely the sort of class-based attack on property
developers that neither candidate has the stomach for. As for the
police, Livingstone’s defence of Ian Blair shows where he
stands. Even this thumbnail sketch of Livingstone’s current
positions indicates how the absence of a countervailing pressure
from the left will free him to shift ever closer to the New Labour
mainstream.
Is
it possible, as several supporters of Respect Renewal maintain,
to call for support for Livingstone while arguing the need for an
independent presence on the Assembly which will be able to back
Livingstone against the Tories and Lib Dems when he is right, and
put pressure on him from the left when he is wrong?
Declaring
that your organisation is unwilling to stand against him because
he is the only alternative to the Tories is an admission of your
own redundancy. Unless an organisation is willing to take an independent
stand, even when it is in a minority, a figure like Livingstone
will always be able to use the Tory demon as a reason for not disagreeing
with him. As an option for building an independent left of Labour
Party that is a strategy with serious flaws.
Livingstone
is not so much its weakest link as New Labour’s strongest
electoral card in London. If the party stood any other mainstream
Labour figure identified with the its largely neo-liberal programme
the Tories would definitely win. Whose responsibility is that? This
goes some way to explaining why, as Andy has pointed out, a minority
of Respect’s 61 371 first preference voters actually did give
a second preference for Livingstone in 2004.
Most
of the arguments in favour of supporting Livingstone could be used
in the United States to justify voting for the Democrats. They are
marginally less vile than the Republicans. They are supported by
the overwhelming majority of progressive opinion and the represent
the political consciousness of much of the trade union movement
and the working class electorate. The result is that the Democrats
are the major obstacle to a working class party in the US.
There
is a process of political recomposition taking place in Britain
at the moment. Respect Renewal is its most recent development. By
abdicating the right to stand a credible candidate opposed to those
of the three pro-capitalist parties, even one with as contradictory
a record as Livingstone, we would immediately be putting limits
on Respect Renewal’s development. If the Labour candidate
were someone with a real commitment to class struggle, like John
McDonnell the issue would be completely different.
In
the real world the question is whether or not a credible left of
Labour candidate exists. According to her website “Lindsey
German, the convenor of the Stop the War Coalition, was selected
last year at a meeting attended by over 300 London Respect members
to stand as Respect candidate for London Mayor. She will be battling
the mainstream parties once more to establish a London wide left
wing alternative.” Credibility can be a little bit tricky
to define but you usually know it when you see it. Lindsey German’s
credibility as an election candidate rests more on her leading role
in the anti-war movement than on any laurels earned in Respect.
For those of us who are keen to see a serious socialist challenge
to Livingstone’s New Labour politics comrade German’s
campaign will have to quickly establish itself as being one which
is inclusive, actively seeking to build alliances on the left and
with working class organisations and which can persuade those who
want to vote for her that it wants to be more than a three month
bout of hyperactivity. An obvious first step is to start assembling
a range of supporters and endorsements from outside the rather narrow
field it currently appears to have.
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