Euro elections 2009
Challenging big business and the
far-right
In this year’s European elections working-class
people have a positive alternative to vote for. A new electoral
alliance, No2EU-Yes to Democracy has been launched to oppose the EU’s
big-business agenda. It will also mount a challenge to the divisive,
anti-working class, far-right BNP which has, in the past, benefitted
from the protest votes in Euro-elections. HANNAH SELL reports on this
important initiative.
THE NATIONAL UNION
of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) has initiated an electoral
alliance for the European elections that will be contesting all of the
seats in England, Wales and Scotland in the elections on 4 June. This is
a temporary platform for the European elections, entitled No2EU-Yes to
Democracy, with initial support from the RMT, the Socialist Party,
Solidarity–Scotland’s Socialist Movement, the Indian Workers’
Association, the Communist Party of Britain (CPB), the Morning Star
newspaper, and others.
It is the first
time since the formation of the Labour Party that a trade union has
taken an electoral initiative on an all-Britain scale. The
transformation of the Labour Party from a workers’ party at base –
albeit with a capitalist leadership – into an unalloyed party of big
business has left the working class without a mass party for well over a
decade. The absence of such a party has been a central factor in holding
back the confidence of workers to struggle in defence of their pay and
conditions. The fact that the RMT has taken this step, however
tentative, is therefore enormously positive.
The programme of
No2EU-Yes to Democracy is very limited. Nevertheless, it seeks to oppose
the European Union (EU) from a working-class, non-nationalist
standpoint. The programme is more limited, for example, than the
People’s Charter, which is itself very far from being a rounded-out
socialist programme. The charter sets out a broad programme for dealing
with the current economic crisis and ‘putting people first’. Signed by a
number of union leaders, MPs and prominent lefts, it aims to collect a
million signatures, a faint echo of the People’s Charter of the 19th
century Chartists. Nonetheless, the fact that No2EU-Yes to Democracy is
taking a step towards solving the crisis of working class
representation, whereas the People’s Charter deliberately avoids the
issue, makes the former far more significant.
The candidates for
No2EU-Yes to Democracy include leaders of the Lindsey oil refinery
construction workers who went on strike in January and of the Visteon
car components workers currently blockading their factories. Bob Crow,
general secretary of the RMT, will be heading the list in London, and
other RMT executive council members will be standing around the country.
The Socialist Party councillor Dave Nellist, the former Labour MP for
Coventry South East from 1983 to 1992, heads the list in the West
Midlands. In the North West, the regional UNISON NEC representative and
Socialist Party member, Roger Bannister, is heading the list. In
Scotland, the former member of the Scottish parliament, Tommy Sheridan,
is standing. Other candidates include car workers fighting job losses,
postal workers resisting privatisation, health workers, teachers,
fire-fighters and other public-sector workers. This list offers an
alternative to the pro-capitalist parties, and its candidate lists are
dominated by some of the most combative sections of the working class in
Britain today.
There are one or
two exceptions, notably Steve Radford, a councillor for the small
Liberal Party, which refused to join the Liberal Democrats when the
Liberals merged with the Social Democratic Party in 1988. He is on the
list in the North West, having been proposed by the CPB. Clearly, the
Liberal Party is not a workers’ party and, in the past, Radford attacked
the Liverpool 47, the Labour councillors, led by Militant supporters,
who defied Margaret Thatcher’s Tory government from 1983-87. However,
all electoral blocs require some compromises. Some, of course, would be
unacceptable and would lead to a break-up of the bloc. This, however, is
an acceptable compromise. In the recent period Steve Radford has taken a
more radical stand, coming out against the war in Iraq, for example, and
has been involved in anti-BNP campaigning. He has also agreed to the
programme of the No2EU initiative against the EU’s pro-privatisation and
anti-trade union agenda.
No2EU-Yes to
Democracy is partially motivated by an understanding of the urgent need
to provide an alternative to the far-right racist British National Party
(BNP). There is a real danger that the BNP could capitalise on the anger
with New Labour and succeed in winning one or more MEPs in this
election. The BNP will never be cut across by bland campaigns pleading
with people not to vote for racists. The implication of such campaigns
is that workers should vote for the pro-capitalist parties in order to
stop the BNP. Only the development of a genuine working-class
alternative, combined with a serious campaign against the BNP, will be
able to effectively undermine them. This electoral initiative is taking
an important step in that direction by offering a left, anti-EU
alternative.
Some suggest that
the Greens can play that role, particularly in the European elections,
as they have two MEPs. However, the Greens are not a workers’ party, do
not have a programme to represent the interests of the working class,
and are not capable of appealing to the section of disillusioned and
angry workers who could consider voting for the BNP. (See Who are the
Euro-Greens? on page 14)
Programme
OF COURSE, WHILE
No2EU’s motivations and candidate lists are, overall, very impressive,
when deciding whether to support an electoral initiative it is essential
that socialists look not only at who is behind it, but also what
programme it is standing on. The programme of No2EU-Yes to Democracy
consists of a few demands, centring on issues relating directly to the
European Union. These are:
Reject the Lisbon
treaty.
No to EU directives
that privatise our public services.
Defend and develop
manufacturing, agriculture and fishing industries in Britain.
Repeal anti-trade
union European Court of Justice rulings and EU rules exploiting workers.
No to racism and
fascism, yes to international solidarity of working people.
No to EU
militarisation and an EU army.
Repatriate
democratic powers to EU member states.
Replace unequal EU
trade deals with fair trade that benefits developing nations.
Scrap EU rules
designed to stop member states from implementing independent economic
policies.
Keep Britain out of
the eurozone.
The EU has not been
central in most workers’ minds up to the present time. However, recent
developments have made it more of an issue, at least amongst those
workers who have been directly affected, and perhaps increasingly
amongst a wider layer. It was central to the Lindsey construction
workers’ strike. It was under the EU Posted Workers Directive and
subsequent European Court of Justice (ECJ) rulings that the
Italian-registered company, IREM, was able to employ workers not covered
by the union-enforced national construction industry agreements.
No2EU’s programme
takes up the different aspects of the EU’s neo-liberal laws. These laws
arise from the support of this government, and all European governments,
for neo-liberal anti-working class policies. EU laws provide them with
an additional lever with which to drive through their pro-big business
programmes. For example, the EU’s public spending criteria gave New
Labour an excuse to privatise capital projects like new schools and
hospitals, by means of private finance initiatives (PFI) and the
disastrous public-private partnership on London Underground, which
increase the costs of public services and subsidise corporate profits.
The government’s plan for the part-privatisation of Royal Mail, the
first step to its complete sell-off, is linked to the EU’s 2007 Postal
Services Directive to introduce a deregulated postal services market.
A neo-liberal charter
THE LISBON TREATY
is just the latest in a long line of EU treaties that demand
privatisation and other neo-liberal measures. However, it goes further
than its predecessors. It is, in reality, the European constitution,
repackaged after it was rejected by referendums in France and
Netherlands. New Labour promised a referendum on the European
constitution, but then reneged on that promise after the 2005 general
election. The Lisbon treaty has only been put to the vote in one
country, Ireland. When a majority of the population rejected it, the
response of the leaders of Europe was to demand a new vote, to take
place by October 2009, in the hope that the Irish voters would ‘get it
right this time’. Despite the colossal pressure the Irish ruling class
is applying to make sure it gets the result it wants second time around,
it is not certain of success.
In all the
referendums – France, the Netherlands and Ireland – the establishment
argued for a ‘yes’ vote. In all three countries, the ‘no’ vote was
strongest in working-class areas, reflecting deep-seated anger with
Europe’s ruling elites, and an understanding that the treaty is a
neo-liberal charter.
The treaty lays the
basis for further privatisation. It calls for a system in the ‘internal
market’ to ensure ‘that competition is not distorted’ and calls for
uniformity in measures of liberalisation. This is a thinly disguised
code for hiving public services off to the private sector, starting with
the most profitable.
Lisbon would also
further undermine democracy as it gives to the European Commission, an
unelected, appointed body, the task of negotiating trade agreements on a
global basis. The Commission has a consistent record of proposing
privatising public services. The European parliament, the only elected
body, has always been little more than a rubber stamp. Under Lisbon it
will have a few more rights but will still be able to do no more than
act as a check on the Commission.
Individual member
states would no longer have the right of veto on a substantial range of
issues. If there is a dispute between individual member states and the
European Commission it will be the unelected European Court of Justice (ECJ)
that will have to make a decision. The ECJ has repeatedly shown in whose
interests it judges. For example, in the Laval judgement it concluded
that trade union action in Sweden against the Latvian-registered
building company Laval, for employing Latvian workers on €9 an hour
rather than the nationally agreed rate of €16 an hour, had interfered
with the company’s ‘freedom to provide services’. This was a legal
precedent for the idea that trade union action is only legal if it does
not interfere with the freedoms of big business – in other words the
rights of the big corporations trump the rights of workers every time.
It was this, and other similar judgements, that were used against the
Lindsey workers. The EU is making it easier for big business to conduct
a race to the bottom, where employing workers from countries where
labour is cheaper is used as a means to force down wages in countries
with higher wages.
No2EU-Yes to
Democracy is an electoral bloc, bringing together different
organisations and individuals, around a minimum programme for a specific
campaign. As in the nature of any genuine electoral bloc, every
supporting organisation works together to build No2EU-Yes to Democracy,
but is free to put forward its own programme. Our material in support of
No2EU goes much further than the list of demands of the campaign, giving
a clear socialist approach.
While No2EU-Yes to
Democracy is not yet a mass alternative, it involves sizeable forces,
including the RMT, a significant and combative national trade union. It
is motivated by a working-class reaction against the capitalist EU
project. Far from being nationalist, it has ‘yes
to international solidarity of working people’ as one of its
demands. What is more, in his public statements, Bob Crow has had a
clearly internationalist approach, for example saying that "we want a
workers’ Europe, not the bosses’ EU", on the BBC’s Daily Politics show.
This initiative is
a huge step forward. It offers an alternative to the majority of trade
union leaders who continue to cling to the trouser legs of New Labour.
In the Socialist Party we also hope it will be a step towards the
development of a new mass left alternative. It offers a challenge to
those trade union leaders, some even on the left, who have called for
Britain to join the euro currency. They have done so partly because they
were under the illusion that, because neo-liberalism had gone much
further in Britain than in most other European countries, joining the
eurozone would improve the rights of workers in Britain. This was
completely incorrect. In reality the EU and the eurozone have been used
as a tool by the capitalist classes to accelerate the drive to implement
neo-liberal policies, aiming to catch Britain up, or even to overtake
it. Where there were individual EU laws that were more progressive than
British law, such as the maximum 48-hour working week, the British
government simply opted out.
Europe in crisis
THE PRO-EURO trade
union leaders also believed that a united Europe was going to take off.
As has been argued in this magazine, a completely united Europe is
utopian under capitalism. When the world economy was booming integration
was able to go a long way. The capitalist classes of Europe are driven
towards integration in order to create a counterweight to the economic
power of the US, and now the growing strength of China and Asia. It is
this need to establish an economic, political and even military
counterweight to these rival economic blocs that is behind the EU.
Such is the modern
scale of production, technique, investment and management that the
multinationals and transnationals which dominate world trade plan their
operations on a world, never mind a European, scale. This shows the
potential for a democratic socialist plan, on a national, European and
then a world basis, which would liberate the productive forces from the
constraints of capitalism. However, as long as capitalism remains the
big corporations cannot more than partially surmount the barrier of the
nation state. They are, almost without exception, still based in, and
tied to, particular countries.
They are reliant on
the market and the political superstructure of their home nation. An
intrinsic part of that political superstructure is a national
consciousness which the capitalist class exploits in order, for example,
to win support for its wars, but which is not, obviously, entirely under
its control. At the same time, an international class consciousness also
exists amongst the working class and labour movement. This is not
static, either, but increases at times of heightened class struggle. In
the past, this was shown by the huge international workers’ support for
the miners’ strike in Britain in 1984-85, and has recently been shown by
the support amongst Italian trade unionists for the Lindsey strike.
Although EU
integration has gone some way, one indication of its limits is shown in
the way it is still seen by voters. While this varies from country to
country there is nowhere where the European parliament is considered to
be anything more than an extremely poor second, in terms of its
importance, to national parliaments. According to the EU parliament’s
own website, 54% of people across the EU say they are not interested in
the European elections, while only 34% say they are likely to vote!
Europe, like the
rest of the world, is now engulfed in the worst economic crisis since
the great depression of the 1930s. Some countries outside the eurozone
might hope that joining would ameliorate their economic crisis. The
International Monetary Fund, for example, has been suggesting that
Hungary, Latvia and other Central and Eastern European states should be
allowed to join as ‘quasi members’. The European Central Bank, of
course, quickly ruled out taking any responsibility for these states.
However, while some
governments might hope that the eurozone would provide them with a
refuge, the countries inside are trapped in a prison. The Irish economy
is in freefall, expected to contract by 7% this year. No readjustment
through currency devaluation is possible so long as Ireland remains
within the eurozone. Italy’s exchange rate, to give another example,
taking into account inflation, is estimated to be one third higher than
required by the terrible economic position facing the country. This
economic crisis could shatter the eurozone, if the poorest states have
no choice but to escape from its prison. Another possibility is that the
richest countries, particularly Germany, which is reluctant to bail out
the poorest nations, could refuse to pay in to ensure the continuation
of the euro.
Even if the
eurozone survives this crisis intact, an escalation of the already
increased national tensions between the different member states of the
EU is inevitable. As we warned, there will be a recoil from the
capitalists’ attempts to create a united Europe with all the dangers of
increased nationalism that this will bring.
No2EU–Yes to
Democracy has a vital role to play in offering an alternative to
nationalism. In one sense, it is more developed than many of the anti-EU
or Common Market (formed in 1957, the precursor to the EU, set up in
1993) campaigns of the past because, far from blocking with the
capitalist anti-EU parties, it is an attempt to provide a left
alternative to them. It is not a coincidence that most of the same
organisations that dismiss No2EU as nationalist also made the
fundamental mistake of opposing the Lindsey oil construction workers’
action, an all-out unofficial strike which won a tremendous victory, on
the completely false grounds that it was nationalist.
Splits at the top
IT IS UTTERLY
utopian to suggest, as Labour MP John Cruddas has recently done, that it
is now possible, as a result of the economic crisis, to reforge the EU
as a social democratic project. Cruddas argues that "the mandate of the
European Central Bank must be broadened to include social objectives and
the prevention of unemployment". He goes on to suggest that, if this
takes place, the chances of Britain joining the euro would increase.
The ruling classes
of Europe are divided on what path EU institutions should take in the
next period. Just as New Labour’s increased state intervention has been,
as the Financial Times put it, "not to bury capitalism but to rescue
it", so will any changed policy by the bodies of the EU be tailored to
the needs of big business. At this stage, however, the EU is acting as
the last defender of crude neo-liberalism. For example, EU finance
ministers are demanding massive public spending cuts from a whole number
of countries including Britain, which has been given six months to come
up with plans to cut £35 billion to meet the Stability and Growth Pact
finance rules.
They hope that by
forcing through the Lisbon treaty they will be able to guarantee the
continuation of untrammelled neo-liberalism. This is nonsense, of
course, and they are already being forced to alter their approach in the
face of reality. The European Commission treaty, article 87, for
example, prohibits state aid. Yet European governments have pledged at
least €1,873 billion to bail out their financial sectors, including €360
billion by the French government, €500 billion in Germany and €515
billion in Britain. Faced with a devastating economic crisis the various
national ruling classes brushed aside the EU rules, treating them for
what they are, words written on a piece of paper. The EU rules then had
to be adapted to the actions of individual governments. Whereas the
European Commission objected to the nationalisation of Northern Rock, it
has since accepted a whole number of full and partial nationalisations,
including Bradford and Bingley in Britain and the Anglo Irish Bank in
Ireland. This is justified on the ground that these are emergency
measures, but it gives an indication of how far the neo-liberal norms
are breaking down in the face of crisis.
This in itself
shows the limits of the power of the EU. Governments are happy to submit
to its rulings as ‘unbreakable’ when it suits them to do so but are also
prepared to ignore them when they do not suit the interests of
capitalism in their country. Some of the supporters of No2EU-Yes to
Democracy do not always fully recognise this and suggest that it is EU
diktats that are responsible for neo-liberal measures. This goes too
far. In fact, of course, New Labour has been the most neo-liberal in a
host of neo-liberal governments, and has introduced EU diktats with
enthusiasm, because it has suited its purposes to do so. But it has been
equally prepared to brush them aside in defence of the banking system.
No model democracy
THERE IS ALSO a
danger that, while correctly attacking the lack of democracy in the EU,
some supporters of the campaign can fall into giving the impression that
the UK parliament is the alternative. A constitutional monarchy with an
unelected second chamber, Britain is no model of democracy. Neither the
House of Lords nor the monarchy is just a harmless tradition – like
Morris dancing or playing conkers. Just witness the way that Peter
Mandelson recently sent the bill to part-privatise Royal Mail to the
House of Lords for its first reading, rather than the House of Commons
as is customary, in the hope of giving it an easy passage. The monarchy
still has formal power to dismiss a prime minister and the government.
This was last used in 1975, not in Britain but in Australia, when Sir
John Kerr, the Governor-General appointed by the Queen, dismissed the
Labour government. Although the monarchy today has far less social
weight than it did in 1975, in the future, a desperate ruling class
would be prepared to use its reserve powers.
Appearing to
present the British parliament as democratic is one of the possible
potential pitfalls of the position of the campaign that victorious
candidates would only nominally hold their seats and would not sit in
the European parliament. A discussion on how to proceed on this would be
made by a national convention of the forces involved in the campaign, if
candidates are elected. However, the Socialist Party argued against the
current position, putting the case that, while no capitalist parliament
is genuinely democratic, it is better for workers’ representatives to
sit in them both in order to use them as a platform from which they can
gain publicity for their programme, and also to take whatever measures
are possible to defend the interests of the working class. The
possibilities for the latter are extremely limited in the European
parliament, which can largely do no more than act as a check on the
European Commission, and has no right to propose legislation.
Nonetheless, even there, left MEPs have occasionally been able to have
some effect. For example, an MEP from the Socialist Party in the
Netherlands – a broad left reformist party – in 2007 was able to
successfully move an amendment which blocked the requirement that all
local and regional public transport be put out to tender to the private
sector.
One of the main
reasons for the campaign’s position is the fact that the European
parliament is accurately seen as a gravy train – MEPs will be earning
nearly £80,000 a year after the June elections. Therefore, No2EU-Yes to
Democracy has rightly made it clear that no successful candidate will
make any financial gain as a result. This points to the most effective
means to deal with the issue, that is, to make it clear that anyone
elected would only take a worker’s wage, as Dave Nellist, Terry Fields
and Pat Wall did when they were Labour MPs and supporters of the
Militant Tendency (now the Socialist Party), in the 1980s. Instead of
the bloated parliamentary salaries, they accepted the wage of a skilled
worker in their constituencies, donating the rest to the workers’
movement. Their expenses and accounts were circulated to local Labour
Party and trade union bodies for scrutiny.
However, while we
argued against the campaign’s position to only nominally take any seats,
nonetheless, as long as it is explained well, it will be understood by
many workers. Bob Crow has responded to questions on the issue by asking
‘can anyone name five MEPs?’ This hits the spot because, in as far as
most workers think about the European parliament at all, they consider
it an irrelevant gravy train. Dave Nellist has responded by explaining
about the convention the campaign would hold to discuss the way forward,
but adding that, when he was an MP, while assiduously attending to his
constituents’ interests, he spent most of his time campaigning outside
of Westminster, speaking at 1,500 public meetings, and that he would do
the same if elected as an MEP, concentrating on building a movement in
Britain and in Europe against the EU’s neo-liberal agenda. He has added
that at least when he went to Westminster there was the possibility of
moving bills, but that this does not exist in the European parliament.
A first step
ELECTORAL PROSPECTS
FOR the European elections are very difficult to predict. No2EU-Yes to
Democracy has been launched late in the day, and has limited financial
resources. However, regardless of the number of votes it receives, it is
a very important break in the situation. A certain comparison can be
drawn with the launch in 2004 of the WASG (Electoral Alternative for
Work and Social Justice) in Germany, which came initially from a layer
of middle-ranking trade union officials and protests against attacks on
living standards and workers’ rights.
It was not
initially clear how far the WASG would develop, however it was
absolutely correct for Sozialistische Alternative (SAV – CWI Germany) to
enthusiastically work to maximise its potential. The WASG led to the
setting up of Die Linke (The Left party) which received four million
votes in the 2005 general election. The development of Die Linke has not
been straightforward, with the leadership moving to the right and
leading members of SAV excluded from membership. Nonetheless, it is a
step towards independent representation for the working class in
Germany.
In Britain we do
not yet have a new mass left party – or a significant step towards one
such as exists in Germany, France and Greece. However, we are faced with
an important beginning. We have the leadership of a militant trade union
that is prepared to take the responsibility for initiating the
development of a political voice for working people – at least in the
European elections – that will oppose all the capitalist parties and
provide an alternative to the far-right, racist BNP . They will
undoubtedly face attack from the capitalist media for daring to stand
up. Marxists and socialists have a duty to offer every assistance in
ensuring the campaign is a success.