Elections are simply a snapshot of the
mood at any particular moment in time, but they can reveal a lot about
the real underlying processes taking place in society. That was the case
with the May local elections, which marked the first anniversary in
power of the Coalition government and from which we can draw important
lessons.
Elections are simply a snapshot of the
mood at any particular moment in time, but they can reveal a lot about
the real underlying processes taking place in society. That was the case
with the May local elections, which marked the first anniversary in
power of the Coalition government and from which we can draw important
lessons.
media sought to play down the big gains made by Labour in England and
Wales, while at the same time, given the advance of the SNP, raising the
spectre of an independent Scotland. This was intended to spread
confusion about what had happened. Some even went so far as to suggest,
with the overwhelming rejection of AV, that it was Cameron and the
Tories who were the big winners in these elections.
“The Tories
emerged as the decisive winners in the local elections on Friday”,
explained the normally sober Financial Times. The Sun, Daily Mail and
Daily Telegraph were all crowing. While maintaining these distortions,
what they were unable to hide was the utter humiliation of the Liberal
Democrats, which took the brunt of the hostility towards the Tory-led
Coalition. The Financial Times editorial put it more honestly: “This
[the electoral pummelling] amounts to a crisis not just for the party
but for the government of which it is a part.” (7/5/11)
As we
explained, the Coalition government was the least bad option for the
ruling class. What was needed, from their point of view, was a strong
single-minded government that would carry through, without wavering, the
austerity programme that was required. However, they could only patch
together a weak and shaky coalition with the Liberal Democrats, the
first time since the 1930s.
The fragility of this deal was quickly
revealed in the national backlash over the increase in tuition fees,
which the Lib Dems had originally opposed. Now they were in government,
they supported the move, to the anger of millions of voters who had
voted for the party in the general election. They were regarded as
traitors and unprincipled charlatans, who got into bed with the Tories
for sake of their ministerial careers. They fell over themselves,
starting with Nick Clegg, to collect their thirty pieces of silver and
play the role allotted to them.
Clegg told his party to “embrace”
the Coalition and its cuts. It had to be all or nothing. The austerity
programme was the decisive issue. As a party pledged to capitalism,
urgent measures were needed in the “national interest” to cut some £81bn
in public spending. This austerity programme, despite all the denials,
would fall on the weakest and most vulnerable sections of society. Even
Clegg acknowledged that these cuts would be “spine chilling”. This
revealed the party’s real colours and represented a betrayal of the
trust millions of voters had placed in the Lib Dems.
“Judas” Liberal Democrats
“Judas” Liberal Democrats, therefore, took the worst of the hatred
towards the Coalition government, losing over 700 council seats, a third
of their councillors seeking re-election, and practically wiping out
their support in working class towns and cities in Scotland, Wales and
the north of England. They knew it was going to be bad, but they didn’t
realise it was going to be this bad. All the support they had slowly
built up over the decades in the northern areas was destroyed overnight.
They lost their position to Labour in “strongholds” such as Sheffield,
where Nick Clegg was elected MP, Hull, Newcastle, Stockport, Liverpool
and Bristol. They are now in charge of only one large unitary authority.
Their share of the vote slumped from 24% last year to 15% today. The
Lib Dem presence in Scotland, meanwhile, has been reduced to a rump of
just two parliamentary constituencies and three regional list MSPs.
Labour in contrast won nearly 900 seats, as Labour’s core vote turned
out and those who voted Liberal Democrat in the general election,
looking for change, swung over to Labour. In Scotland and Wales, as
elsewhere, the voters reserved their serious anger for the Lib Dems.
They had become, once again, a party of the shires and the suburbs. It
was their worst election result since the formation of the party.
In
the north, the Lib Dems’ identification with the Tories proved toxic.
When voters heard the label “Liberal Democrat”, they associated it with
“Conservative” and “austerity”. “It’s the toxic nature of the Tory name
in the north of England going back to the days of Margaret Thatcher,”
said David Faulkner, the Lib Dem’s Newcastle leader, who was toppled in a
10.8% swing to Labour. The image of Clegg slapping Osborne on the back
after his budget speech, and the Tories’ shouts for “more”, are
impressed on peoples’ consciousness. The Liberals’ former “radical”
image has been completely undermined over the last 12 months.
Ironically,
the Tories picked up about 80 seats in the local elections, mainly at
the expense of the Lib Dems. We should not, however, be surprised. Those
who voted Tory in the general election got what they wanted, i.e. a
Tory government, carrying out Tory policies. They turned out again to
support the Tories in the May local elections. Also those Tory voters
who voted the Lib Dems in the general election swung back to the Tories,
the genuine article.
The Liberal Democrats were always the second
party of capitalism, after the Conservatives. However, ever since the
rise of the Labour Party, based on the working class, they were pushed
to the sidelines. To rebuild their electoral support, they
opportunistically looked both ways, depending on the areas in which they
were standing. In the Tory areas, they projected their traditional
image. In Labour areas, they attempted to put on a “radical” image to
the left of Labour in an attempt to appeal to discontented Labour
voters. This was certainly the case in the northern cities, where they
attacked the corrupt out-of-touch “establishment” Labour machine. In
this way, projecting a “left” face, they made inroads into Labour areas.
That
has now not only been thrown into reverse, but the Lib Dems are on the
road to oblivion. Their fate is firmly tied to the fate of the
Tory-dominated Coalition, which, in the storms ahead, is heading for the
rocks. Clegg’s fate is tied to Cameron’s. There will be no revival in
their political fortunes. Given the class pressures on them, they can
split asunder, as they did before the war. At that time, the party split
occurred – ironically – over the Liberals’ entry into the National
government in 1931. Lloyd George and his supporters remained outside,
hoping to gain from the National Government’s eventual unpopularity.
Those Liberals who remained in government were completely swallowed up
by the Tories. The Lib Dems, or at least a big section, can face a
similar fate.
collapse of the Lib Dems and the relative success of the Tories have
heightened divisions within the Coalition. The defeat of the AV
referendum campaign has only added to this antagonism. Even before the
vote in May, there were already open and bitter arguments, even at
Cabinet level, over the antics of the “No” AV campaign, which was backed
by the Tories and Cameron. The Lib Dems were outraged by the Tory
tactics in the contest, including the personal attacks on Nick Clegg.
But all is fair in love and war. Yet such was the bitterness, Lib Dem
Minister Chris Huhne even threatened to sue other Cabinet ministers
unless they withdrew their lies. Cameron was accused of releasing the
dogs of war on Clegg, despite a gentlemen’s agreement. He had to appease
the Tory party’s right wing, who were growing very uneasy and disturbed
about the concessions made to the Lib Dems.
The defeat of the AV
referendum by a margin of 70–30 and on a turnout of over 40% was a
humiliating blow to the Lib Dems and Nick Clegg. The referendum was a
cherished dream and one of the key factors in their entering the
Coalition. The dream has been shattered. Electoral reform has hit the
dust and, to the dismay of the Liberals, will not be revived for a very
long time. This will add grist to the mill.
A year ago, they hoped
the “New Politics” coalition would break the two-party mould. Instead,
it has broken the back of the Lib Dems. The profound discontent and
disillusionment in many quarters of the party has also led to
recriminations and calls for Nick Clegg to stand down as leader.
The
crisis has provoked a rethink in the leadership of the Liberal
Democrats. Apparently, they now believe relations between the Coalition
partners must be more “transparent” and more “transactional”. The Lib
Dems must be more formal in the Coalition. “We need to work harder to
avoid an impression of chumminess”, stated one ally of the deputy prime
minister. First signs of this, despite their initial endorsement, will
be the demand for watering down the NHS “reforms” of Andrew Lansley.
The
attempts by the Lib Dem ministers to distance themselves from their
Tory counter-parts will simply make the Coalition more unstable and
divided. This will be highly dangerous strategy as the Coalition enters
its most difficult period of actually implementing the austerity
measures in face of mass opposition.
Similarly, new pressures are
mounting within the Tory party from the opposite end. The Tory “success”
in the AV referendum and the local elections has emboldened the party’s
right wing. They are demanding that Cameron makes no concessions to the
Liberals. They only tolerate the Coalition. “Cameron had better not
come before the 1922 [backbench committee] and say he will be giving
little away while secretly negotiating with Clegg a dumbing down of
public sector reform”, said one right-winger. Rumours of leading Tories
urging the PM to ditch the Lib Dems are an indication of such pressures.
But it is too early for that. “I hate the Liberals – we all do,” said
one Tory MP. “We should go to the country in the autumn but of course we
won’t.” The fortunes of the Coalition are tied to the economy. In the
period opening up, they will need to hang together or they will
certainly hang separately.
How can the Liberal Democrats hope to
rebuild their electoral support when they are despised in the urban
areas and have made no gains at the Tories’ expense in the south? In
other words, in Coalition-friendly areas, the party failed to win over
new support. “We have been punished for things that we have had to adapt
to on coalition policy and, as it happens, we haven’t gained the
benefits for the things [on which] the Tories had to adapt to us”,
explained Simon Hughes. In reality, their fate is sealed. The party is
in historical decline and in danger of splitting in the period opening
up.
Labour vote
On the other hand, there has been a
deliberate attempt in the media to downplay Labour’s success in May’s
local elections by pointing to Scotland. The ruling class is determined
to bolster the Coalition. In fact, Labour nationally did very well,
taking 37% of the vote, up 10 points. With the Tory vote holding up,
what this really means is that a polarisation of British politics to the
left and right is taking place, reflecting the growing class
antagonisms within British society.
Wales, the party scored a magnificent result, winning 30 out of the 60
seats in the Assembly, but tantalisingly short of an absolute majority.
They pushed Plaid Cymru, the nationalists, into third place behind the
Tories. The Liberal vote also declined, but the Tories made some very
small gains, winning two seats, but losing their leader, once again
reflecting a polarisation. Labour won back Blaenau Gwent, Llanelli, as
well as overturning a large Lib Dem majority to seize Cardiff Central.
It also took Cardiff North, formally held by the Tories. It was a
success story for Labour.
In these elections, the working class
areas turned out solidly for the Labour Party. It was a solid class vote
for Labour in Wales, as in England. In the constituencies vote, Labour
got 42.3% of the vote, an increase of 10.1% since the last election. In
the regional vote, Labour scored 36.9%, an increase of 7.2%.
As
an aside, we should also recognise the electoral rout of the BNP, which
lost all of its five council seats in Stoke-on-Trent and lost 11 seats
in total. As we explained, while they were an irritant, as soon as the
working class expressed itself, the BNP would be swept aside. That had
already taken place last year in Barking and Dagenham, where the 12
sitting BNP councillors were defeated by the Labour Party. This election
simply continued the process, creating a massive crisis within its
ranks and debts of over half a million pounds.
Scottish vote
In
Scotland, for the first time, the Scottish nationalists won an overall
majority at Holyrood. Above all, unlike in England and Wales, it was the
SNP and not Labour which benefited from the backlash against the Lib
Dems. With the shift to the right of the Labour Party in recent years,
the SNP has always been seen as a more left-wing alternative. This,
however, is false. The SNP is a bourgeois nationalist party. In this
election, the Labour Party completely failed to challenge the
nationalists by waging a largely negative campaign and not addressing
the concerns of the working class.
The SNP won 69 seats, a gain of
23. The Tories won 15, losing 5. Labour won 37, losing 7 seats.
However, the Lib Dems won only 5 seats and lost 12. Despite the loss of 7
seats by Labour, the vote for the party largely held up. In the
constituencies vote, Labour’s fell by 0.5%. In the regional vote, it
went down 2.9%. We should also take into consideration that in last
year’s general election, Scotland was the only part of the UK where
Labour increased its share of the vote, winning 41 of Scotland’s 59
seats at Westminster. Labour support turned out to keep the Tories out
of power. That factor did not enter into the election for Holyrood,
where the Tories were also given a bloody nose.
course, Labour should have done much better than this, even nationally.
The lacklustre campaign of Miliband, who promised cuts, but at a slower
pace, did not inspire the electorate. The same was true of the Scottish
leader, Iain Gray, who was grey by name and grey by nature.
Now
that the nationalists have been handed power in Scotland and promises
all sorts of things to the electorate, they will be under pressure to
deliver, free from being in a minority administration. Firstly, Alex
Salmond has ruled out an immediate referendum on independency until
later in the parliament, as, with the current opinion polls showing only
30% in favour, he would lose. Secondly, the administration is facing
big cuts in its budget of some £3.5bn.
“There is a tsunami coming
down the track – a financial tsunami, and how is the new government
going to deal with that, especially given the very serious and committed
promises that have been made?” explained Professor Tom Devine, a
specialist in Scottish history.
“The next few years in Scottish
politics are going to be very interesting – not simply for the potential
availability of a vote on independence, but actually how this nation is
going to deal with a huge contraction in its public services.”
The
nationalists will be put to the test and found wanting. They will
attempt to blame London for their problems, but they will be caught
between a rock and a hard place.
Failure of the ultra-left
What
these elections clearly prove is what the Marxists have said all along,
that at the decisive moment, despite everything, the working class
always turns towards its traditional organisations. This is something
those on the ultra-left have never understood. Once again, these small
groups have attempted to challenge Labour in the elections, but have
failed miserably.
All sorts of groups, the Socialist Labour Party,
the Scottish Socialist Party, Solidarity, Respect, Trade Unionists and
Socialists Against the Cuts, and a few more besides, stood in these
elections, hoping to make significant inroads into Labour’s vote and win
at least a few seats. While within the ranks of these groups there are
many very sincere and good militant workers, they have proven once again
that that is not enough to displace Labour. Labour remains the
traditional mass political organisation of the British workers, in spite
of all the rotten policies it has carried out in office.
What
better conditions could these left groups ask for to accomplish their
aims? We have had the biggest crisis of capitalism since the 1930s, 13
years of New Labour government, and one year of a Lib Dem-Tory Coalition
intent on carrying through draconian cuts, which has provoked a
movement of tens of thousands of students and led to the March 26
demonstration of at least half a million wo0rkers on the streets of
London. And yet, despite all these advantages, their electoral results
were the worst ever.
In Scotland, where in the past the SSP was
able to elect six MSPs to Holyrood, they have suffered the biggest
decline. In the west of Scotland, in 2003, the SSP got 18,500 votes.
Today, they polled 1,800 votes, 10% of their vote eight years ago.
Solidarity, which split from the SSP, polled 4,500 votes in 2007. This
time round, they got 450 votes, again 10% of their previous vote.
George
Galloway, the former Respect MP, stood in the west of Scotland under
the banner of the Coalition Against the Cuts list. They polled 6,335
votes and failed to win any seats. In contrast, the Scottish Senior
Citizens Party did better, polling 10,557 votes. In England, Respect
lost its two council seats, which were taken by Labour.
The Trade
Unionists and Socialists Against the Cuts, which was mainly backed by
the Socialist Party and the RMT, claimed a total vote nationally of
25,523 for the 173 candidates it stood in 166 wards, (only 144 stood
under the TUSC name).
Of the 173 candidates, only 13 polled over
10% of the vote, mainly those who had been sitting councillors, but who
now lost their seats. In the 30 wards where TUSC challenged the BNP,
they were outpolled by the BNP in 24 of them. In the 84 wards where they
challenged the Greens, the Greens did better in 81 of the wards. In the
46 seats they challenged UKIP, TUSC was beaten in 42 of the contests.
In
Coventry, the TUSC candidates stood in all 18 wards under the banner of
Socialist Alternative and none were elected. In all but one ward they
were the worst performing electoral grouping. In the ward where they
achieved over 30% of the vote, St. Michaels, Dave Nellist already sits
as their one and only councillor. The candidate this time was Rob
Windsor, who had previously been an SP councillor in this ward, but had
been defeated by the Labour candidate last year. The reason given for
this last was the high turnout given the General Election. This time,
the turnout in this ward was the lowest in the city at 26.7%, but he
failed to get elected, polling 30% of the vote, while the Labour
candidate got 58%. Meanwhile, Labour gained five seats in Coventry, all
from the Tories, giving them 35 out of 54.
In the Assembly
Election Regional vote for Cardiff, Vale of Glamorgan, Pontypridd,
Rhonda, Cynon Valley the results were as follows: Socialist Labour
Party;4690; Trade Unions and Socialists Against Cuts. (SP) 830; CPB 516;
Christian Party 1873; Monster Raving Lonny Party etc. 1237; Labour
85445. If you leave aside the SLP which has a following among former
miners in the valleys, the various small left groups (SP and CPB) came
behind an odd religious group and only just in front of the Monster
Raving Loony Party! The result for the groups standing to the left of
Labour was summed up by one blogger in the phrase, “It has to be the
worst collapse of the far left project ever.”
The sad fact about
these figures is that despite being very sincere, dedicated and
committed, these comrades fail to understand the relationship between
the working class and their mass party, the Labour Party. Despite
everything, the working class remains loyal to its mass organisations.
No amount of effort from the outside will break this link. These small
groups on the fringes will never offer an alternative, no matter how
much they try.
Testing times ahead
The period opening up
will be a testing time for the Coalition. The cuts have not started to
bite yet. When they do, all hell will break lose. This will be the
darkest period for the Coalition, a time of maximum political and
economic pain.
With the economy stagnant and real living standards
falling, and the cuts begin to bite, the support for the government
will fall like a stone. A new economic slump is also on the horizon,
possibly coinciding with the next election in 2015. However, given the
mounting opposition, as reflected by the TUC demonstration in March, and
the pending industrial action over pensions, there is even a question
mark over whether the government can last its full term.
We have
entered a stormy period in British politics. The working class will not
take the Coalition cuts lying down. Massive class battles are on the
cards. Discontent with the government will turn to hatred. Such is the
combustible situation that the idea of a general strike is implicit in
the situation. The period opening up will be more akin to the 1920s or
the 1970s, the stormiest periods in British history. On the basis of
capitalism, there is no way out. The working class will firstly fight on
the industrial front, which means a battle within the trade unions for a
fighting leadership will open up. But after that they will swing onto
the political front, as workers realise that trade union protest alone
is not enough. This will inevitably feed into the ranks of the Labour
Party itself. This means that the mass organisations will be turned
upside down.
In this process the need for a fighting militant
leadership will become very clear. The Labour Party will be put to the
test under the immense pressure of the ongoing crisis of capitalism.
Even those who today may consider themselves “moderate” will be enraged
by what the future holds. In the process the ranks will turn against the
present leadership, looking for a real alternative. On this basis, the
perspective will open of a polarisation within the trade unions and the
Labour Party and the ideas of genuine socialism will start to get an
echo. There is no shortcut past this process. Our task is to patiently
explain the ideas of Marxism within the movement and build up a Marxist
tendency rooted in the mass organisations of the working class.