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Vote Chris Talbot in Haltemprice and Howden
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
The Socialist Equality Party is standing in the
Haltemprice and Howden by-election to counter efforts to divert legitimate
hostility to the Labour government and its extension of detention without
charge to 42-days into support for right-wing Conservative David Davis.
Chris Talbot is the only candidate in this election
opposing all the repressive measures passed by the Labour government from the
standpoint of mobilizing an independent political movement of working people,
based on socialist policies.
None of the official parties can genuinely defend
democratic rights. They are all the political representatives of big business,
advancing policies that are hostile to the interests of the majority of working
people.
The government
claims that those opposed to the 42-days extension are guilty of elevating the
rights of terrorists above “national security”. On the basis of such
scaremongering, under Labour, the British state has accrued powers beyond
anything enacted during the Second World War when it faced a genuine threat to
its survival. Yet it attempts to justify the overturning of the historic
foundations of British law by citing a threat which it admits involves a few
hundred individuals at most.
Just as the
claim that Iraq possessed “weapons of mass destruction” provided the false
pretext for defying international law and going to war, so too the “war on terrorism”
provides the rationale for measures abrogating the rights of everyone in Britain.
Forty-two days
detention is only the most draconian of the some 200 items of legislation
enacted by Labour in the name of the “war on terror”, which collectively have
established the apparatus of a police state in Britain.
The cornerstone
of democracy is the safeguarding of the individual citizen from arbitrary
action by the state as the most powerful force in the land. In contrast, the
Labour government has established a new legal principle--guilty on the say-so
of the powers-that-be.
In addition to
overturning habeas corpus--no imprisonment without charge-- the government’s
anti-terror legislation has undermined free speech, freedom of movement and the
right to peaceful protest. So vague is much of the legislation that even the
expression of an opinion deemed unacceptable by the Home Secretary can result
in prosecution. Academics have been detained for simply downloading material
freely available on US government websites, as in the recent arrests of Nottingham
University student Rizwaan Sabir and staff member Hicham Yezza
(who is now threatened with deportation).
Not satisfied
with the fact that Britain currently has the most surveillance cameras in the
world, and the largest DNA database, the government has demanded more powers,
including compulsory ID cards. Yet already, local authorities are routinely using
the anti-terror powers to spy on residents and bug people’s phone calls and
e-mails. In 2007 councils and government departments made 12,494 applications
for “directed surveillance” over often petty issues.
The full
ramifications of the powers enacted under the anti-terror legislation were tragically
demonstrated when plain-clothes police officers pumped 11 bullets at point
blank range into innocent Brazilian Jean Charles de Menezes on the London
Underground in July 2005. His killing revealed that the government had secretly
implemented a shoot-to-kill policy two years before, enabling the police to act
as judge, jury and executioner.
Imperialist war and social inequality
Such a drift towards
authoritarianism can not be explained as merely the whim of an illiberal
government. The question must be asked: Why does the government feel so under
siege that it demands extraordinary powers against its own citizens?
The erosion of
democracy is bound up with the turn towards militarism and colonial wars of
conquest. This is a government that has already plunged Britain into three
major military actions--in the former Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq—and which
is actively conspiring with Washington in its escalating confrontation with
Iran.
The government
knows that the drive to seize control of the world’s major oil deposits and
other vital resources have made Britain a pariah internationally and the focus
of justified hostility amongst millions of oppressed peoples. The fact that the
British people face a terror threat is entirely the result of Labour’s criminal
actions in destabilizing the Middle East and inflaming ethnic and religious
tensions within the UK itself.
The turn to
war finds its reflection in a domestic policy, which is similarly dictated by a
global financial elite whose fabulous wealth is accrued through speculation and
the exploitation of the world’s markets and resources. In return for their
investments, these oligarchs demand of all national governments that they
impose wage cuts, speed-ups, slash corporate taxes and gut public services and
welfare provisions.
That is why the
erosion of civil liberties has occurred in conjunction with the unprecedented
transfer of wealth to the super-rich, which has produced record levels of
social inequality. The government knows that it cannot secure a popular mandate
for such an agenda. Rather the ever-widening gulf between the rich and the poor
in Britain and all over the world demands a turn to police repression and
dictatorial forms of rule.
It is for this
reason that the government’s constant undermining of democratic freedoms enjoys
the support of the highest echelons of the state—from MI5 to Scotland Yard—and
finds its most enthusiastic backer in Rupert Murdoch’s Sun newspaper
whose former editor Kelvin MacKenzie was initially mooted as a de-facto proxy
candidate for Labour.
No confidence
in the parties of big business
Labour’s contempt for any form of democratic
accountability in not even standing a candidate to defend a major plank of
government legislation is of a piece with its decision to support the 2003
US-led invasion of Iraq in the face of popular opposition that brought millions
onto the streets of London and cities around the world.
From the standpoint of working people, the Labour
Party is finished. Having severed any connection with the working class and
repudiated its former reformist policies, all that remains is a politically
corrupt clique interested only in their own self-enrichment.
It is vital that workers and youth reject Labour’s
terror policies and mobilize against the government. But this cannot be done by
lending any support to David Davis and his claim to be the champion of civil
liberties.
With Labour facing electoral meltdown, enormous
efforts have been made to rehabilitate the Conservative Party. But this leopard
has not changed its spots.
If the Tories can pose as a more liberal alternative,
it is only because Labour has moved so far to the right. The attack on
democratic rights began under the Conservative government of Margaret Thatcher,
which pioneered the assault on welfare and social provisions in the name of the
free market.
This is the party of the anti-union laws used to such
devastating effect against the miners in the 1984-85 strike, which saw more
than 10,000 arrested, and of the notorious SUS laws that provoked inner-city
riots. It has no right to lecture anyone on civil liberties.
The assault on habeas corpus did not start with the
powers of six weeks detention. Though the Tories have made a show of opposition
to the government on aspects of its anti-terror policies, the origins of
Labour’s legislation are in measures first drawn up under the Conservative
government of John Major. And it was the Tories who, under the earlier Prevention
of Terrorism Act (PTA), extended the period of detention without charge from 48
hours to seven days. Davis--who along with his party supported the 28-days
extension--has admitted that many Tory MPs were reluctant to oppose 42-days and
that he resigned because he believed they would finally acquiesce as the general
election approached.
Above all the Conservatives share responsibility with
Labour for the disastrous and bloody wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and are
equally committed to policies designed to enrich the major corporations at the
expense of working people.
David Davis can only dare to claim the moral high
ground because not a single Labourite has been prepared to break with the
government on 42-days or any other issue.
Instead, a handful of supposed Labour “lefts”,
together with the Liberal Democrats, are supporting his campaign on the
spurious grounds that this is an issue that stands above politics. The political
worthlessness of the Labour left is epitomized by Tony Benn, who helped launch
Davis’s campaign for re-election. Benn has said he was free to do so because
Labour’s refusal to stand a candidate meant he was not breaking party rules!
Nor have any of Britain’s middle class radical
groupings--such as the Socialist Workers Party or George Galloway’s Respect
organization--indicated they will run an independent challenge against Davis,
no doubt because it would bring them into conflict with the Labour “lefts” to
whom they habitually defer.
Socialism and the fight for democratic rights
Whatever Davis’s intentions in forcing the
by-election, it has only highlighted the decay of all the official political
parties under the weight of social tensions.
This degeneration has taken place in advance of what
all informed forecasters predict will be a world recession without precedent
since the 1930s. Even as millions are hammered by spiralling fuel and food
prices, crippling mortgage payments and personal debt and face the threat of
unemployment, the financial speculators continue to glut themselves while
government bankrolls their nefarious activities with taxpayers’ money.
In the next period, there is no question that
legislation passed in the name of fighting terrorism will be used against those
seeking to defend their livelihoods against the major corporations and the
government. Only this month, the government activated emergency procedures
contained in the Civil Contingencies Act in the face of the Shell lorry
drivers’ dispute.
Davis and his
supporters routinely evoke the Magna Carta of 1215 as if civil liberties were a
timeless and immutable feature of British political life. They do so in order
to conceal the class issues involved in the defence of democratic freedoms.
The extension
of habeas corpus and other democratic rights to working people was only won
after bitter political struggles stretching over hundreds of years.
It was only
when the working class organised as a distinct social and political force that
Britain’s rulers were forced to make concessions. The fight to extend voting
rights began with the Chartist movement in the 1830s and universal suffrage was
only finally secured in the aftermath of the 1917 Russian Revolution. Equally,
the right to organise in trade unions necessitated the defeat of concerted
legal attacks and culminated in a political break with the Liberals and the
formation of the Labour Party in order to secure working class representation
in parliament.
Socialists played
a leading role in all these struggles, because they understood that the genuine
extension of democracy meant the creation of a society free from oppression,
poverty and want.
Utilising the collapse
of the Stalinist regimes in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, a systematic
campaign was mounted to vilify socialism and all measures to secure social
equality. This has provided the crucial ideological framework for the assault
on civil liberties.
The Labour
Party and the trade union bureaucracy have led this offensive, in order to
legitimize their own embrace of Thatcherite economic and social nostrums. It is
the resulting political disenfranchising of the working class that has enabled
the powers-that-be to impose one attack after another.
The defence of democratic rights demands above all
else the building of a new and genuinely socialist party.
The situation cannot continue where the super-rich
enjoy a monopoly over political life. There can be no democracy worthy of the
name while grotesque levels of private wealth are wielded as a weapon against
society; while millions have no say over how their workplaces are run and a
handful of corporate chiefs and city speculators can strip them of their
livelihoods and plunge countries and entire continents into poverty and war.
The Socialist Equality Party advances a programme for
the fundamental reorganization of economic and social life. We call for the
replacement of the profit system and private ownership of the means of
production with public ownership and production to meet the needs of society as
a whole.
Above all the struggle against capitalism is
international and requires the unification of the working class across all
national, religious and ethnic divisions. The SEP is the British section of the
International Committee of the Fourth International, the world party of
socialism. We urge a vote for Chris Talbot in the Haltemprice and Howden
by-election, and call on all those who support our programme to participate in
and help finance our campaign.
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