Thursday 25 February 2010

Vote Labour-Vote to have your schools given away to parasites.



The Labour Party, not content with the trillion pound bail out of the bankers, now plans to extend its 'flagship' academy schools program to allow universities and bosses to run the worst performing schools. Academies were originally developed as a way to allow business types to take over a school in the state sector by putting up two million quid, and having the complete control over subsequent budgets, curriculum, and also hiring and firing. Around 200 academies have opened so far and the anti working class Labour Party has consistently promised to speed up the programme in coming years. This has proved very profitable to the social parasites who have leached hundreds of millions from state education over the past decade, but a complete disaster for working class pupils and teachers.

The long term goal has been to allow academies to become selective schools, excluding poorer pupils with learning problems, whilst channelling the 'brighter' pupils (those from middle class and upper working class backgrounds who have stable home lives and the money for computers, learning support etc) into academic streams. Working class pupils are directed to a myriad of pseudo subjects related to media and communication studies, neither of which are recognised as genuine subjects by universities. This would allow better off parents to avoid having to bear the cost of sending their brats private-yet another case of the welfare state being used to support the labour aristocracy and the middle classes!

Even this revanchist goal has proven unachievable under the bosses system. The constant theft of money which should go on pupils, but is funnelled into the pockets of the sponsors, who, incidentally no longer even have to put up any front money, means that academies are failing. Sheffield Park Academy - opened last year by the Duke of York following a £30m redevelopment - will become the third of the academies in South Yorkshire schools to be placed in "special measures". The school replaced a conventional comprehensive which was said to be making "reasonable progress" before shutting. Sheffield Park's sister school, Sheffield Springs Academy, which is also run by the United Learning Trust, a front for the fundamentalists of the Anglican Church, received a critical judgement from Ofsted in June of 2009. Its teaching was said to be inadequate, although Ofsted stopped short of placing it in special measures due to political pressure. Earlier in 2009, the Richard Rose Central Academy in Carlisle was placed in special measures following a protest over poor behaviour and teaching by parents. Its chief executive, who was recruited from the NHS without any teaching experience, subsequently quit. Unity City Academy in Middlesbrough was also placed in special measures, linked to the influence of fundamentalist Christian Richard Vardy, who has sole control of curriculum in the school, one of more than ten schools he has stolen.

This attempt to out do the tories in the run up to an election shows just whose side the Brownites/Blairites and union leaders are on-the bosses and the middle class wannabees of the better off workers. Those who think Labour will somehow become pro working class after defeat are pissing into the wind. Even with 13 years of faithful knee cushion and lip balm service to the lords of humankind in the boss class, Labour feel such fealty to their mates and peers that they have to just keep giving and giving. Lord Harris, who founded Carpetright and already runs several London academies, is included in a list of sponsors who will be allowed to run multiple schools, all of them with state money-that's working class taxes-and outside of any local democratic control. Brown trotted out the usual blandishments regarding ambition, excellence etc in what will prove a failed attempt to stop the Tories from winning the general election in May, stating: "Local authorities will be able to draw on the world-class excellence in these new chains to drive up standards in weaker schools. And primary schools themselves will be able to opt to join a chain. The evidence is clear – schools often work best when they work together. When schools partner with other schools - operating under a common leadership brand, with a shared ethos, and a shared commitment to excellence – standards are raised for all; the stronger schools and the weaker schools." This is regardless of the proven failure of his project to raise standards, even on its own anti working class terms.

For those revolutionaries who think voting Labour, and that telling working and unemployed people to vote Labour is a smart tactic which will 'help organise the resistance', to coin the term of one particularly deluded old labourite in one of the myriad micro sects which despoil the political landscape, a reckoning will await them in the future when workers have to fight tooth and nail against the racist, Imperialist and viciously anti working class Labour Party, as they have had to do, like millions in West Asia and beyond for a decade or more. The question will be raised of those like the SWP who support the Labour Party: 'where were you when my school/hospital/job was being destroyed by the bosses and the Labour Party'? The job of genuine communists is to expose this socialist support for our class enemies whenever and wherever we get the chance. The SWP and their ilk have crossed the Rubicon, as they have many times before, in choosing to support our class enemies.

Thursday 18 February 2010

No support to Jerry Hicks for Unite leader




Jerry Hicks, long time shop steward in the skilled trades, and a member of Respect, plans to contest the election for the General Secretary of the Unite super union this summer. Hicks got almost 40,000 votes against Simpson entirely outside the bureaucratic structures of the union itself and the usual suspects of the SWP and Socialist party backed 'United Left'. The candidacy has mustered all manner of bluster and wondrous imaginings from the permanent labourites of what passes for a Trotskyist left. Gerry downing, of the two man Socialist Fight group has this to say about Hicks candidacy:

"His election would strike a real blow to the bureaucracy and would enable us to begin to develop the basis of a real rank-and-file movemnent in the Buses and in other industries if we go about it the right way. The Manchester Right To Work meeting called for a rank-and-file movement and those of us who know what that should look like - no bureaucrats or union employees voting, workers wage for officials, standing for all electable positions against the bureaucracy answarable to the R+F movement, direct and participatory democratic structures, etc - have an opportunity to start fighting for it in a wider context, The SWP has not yet committed to Hicks, but it is difficult to see them not doing so after Manchester, the SP seems committed to McCluskey (although Jerry says after a meeting with them that he is "hopeful"), the AWL and Workers Power will surely back him so a real fight is in the offing. Sectarians will use the Lindsey excuse to abandon the class yet again....Many of us had difference with Jerry over Lindsey and I am not saying that we put those aside in any way but it would be criminal to allow these differences to balck participation in this campaign rather than fighting them out whenever we think they are holding the campaign back."(mistakes in original)

The capitulation to lesser evilism is strong on the labourite Trot left, and this is only a particularly shameless example. The most obvious absurdity is to base support on the number of votes won in an election. 40k is a drop in the ocean when compared to the vote for Simpson or Woodley, both of whom would trounce Hicks in an election. Secondly, what was this vote based on? Hicks postured a a left supporter of the reactionary Lindsey strikes, giving four square support for the racist verbal attacks and job thefts against international workers, whilst advising that perhaps it was best not to use reactionary slogans in the next round of strikes, which he then supported! He received such a surprise vote because the chauvinist wave, understandable given the reactionary politics of the pro Labour union tops, created an anti leadership mood based on the misguided perception that the union leadership were not doing enough to defend British workers exclusive rights to jobs and bailouts-precisely at the time when their union leaders were signing up to state sponsored and bosses funded campaigns to 'defend British manufacturing'! The bluster from Gerry Downing regarding people using Hicks support for anti working class strikes as 'excuses' for allegedly 'abandoning the class' would carry more weight if they did not come at a time when Downing and his comrade were urging Marxists to call for a vote to the viciously and openly anti working class Labour Party, surely the definition of abandoning the class.

Oh, he may have a dodgy record of backing the labour aristocracy over the class, but he is gonna build a rank and file movement, he even promised to do so at the Right to Work Conference. If Gerry were able to think a point through to the end then he may see the contradiction in that point. A person with a reactionary record standing for the leadership of a union-the arch bureaucrats position-claims he is going to build a grouping which will undermine his own power? Come of it Ger, if Hicks were committed to a rank and file then he would use his position and stable employment as a very skilled worker at Rolls Royce to build such a rank and file.

The Socialist Party are most likely to support the United Left candidate as part of their fealty drive towards the Stalinists who control large swathes of the union structures in Britain, and who are crucial to win the support of in the battle to form a new-old Labour Party. Support for Hicks is a diversion from the struggle against such politics-the politics of class collaboration-which define workers organisations today. Gerry makes no mention of why Hicks would be suspect in this war against class collaboration, the small matter of his membership of George Galloway's Respect Party, a party established to unite the classes, laid out clearly at the founding conference: "The national politicisation of the anti-war movement is now a necessary next stage in our own bloodless war of national liberation. The reality of the movement means that what we create must operate at two levels.‘The first level requires steps towards a mass unifying movement of grassroots radicals to hobble the State, bring it under popular control and complete an unfinished radical democratic revolution. This level will unite Muslims, Christians and Jews, socialists, liberal and conservatives, men, women and the disadvantaged of all types in one movement of democratic liberation.
(http://english.aljazeera.net).

How any consistent Marxist can support such a reactionary and house broken class collaborator is beyond the comprehension of this blogger.

Downing could cling to the concept that this is all just smart tactics and the united front? 'We don't think he will do as he says, but the leading sections of the class do, and for this reason we must expose him'? Except this is not what Gerry and his ilk do. No, they instead take Hicks, paint him red, then pop a cherry on top and call it progress. Gerry actually thinks this popular frontist will do as he says, is progress, and will lead forward the class struggle! He supports Hicks not because he seeks to expose him, after all the layer who support him is small and proven reactionaries.No, Gerry supports Hicks because he views a man who supports reactionary strikes and wishes to continue using union monies to fund the racist and Imperialist Labour Party because he has stagist view of clas struggle. First we support anything/body who is less worse than an alternative; then, later we start the actual class struggle against such half way houses. For now it is best to keep stum and be polite.

This may well be Gerry Downing's approach. It certainly is not Trotskyist tactics. With this in mind it is perhaps advisable that Downing remove the Trotsky quote from his paper, lest he fool anybody with this epigone Marxism.

Wednesday 17 February 2010

Double Dip Recession: we need to organize to fight back!




The bosses are increasingly fearing a double dip recession, that is a return to recession after the small climb out of recession late last year. Companies surveyed for the British Chamber of Commerce want a dual strategy from whoever wins the next election: cut sending and reduce the £178 billion budget deficit, whilst also demanding support in the form of continued state aid to the financial system. Either way, be it through cuts in services, jobs and pay; or in increased taxes to reduce the deficit (with a 1% increase in VAT the choice for most businesses)it is clear that ordinary people are going to be forced to pay.(1)

The collapse of Dubai's financial system late last year put the fear of god into ruling elites that a new contagion was on the way. The relatively mild after effects did cause a brief period of relief, boosted by earnings reports of the major Western Banks. The money banks have been making in recent months is all predicated on state bail outs. The state creates money and lends it at 0.25%. The banks lend it out at 4%, 5% for Mortgages, or even lend it back to the government at above 3%. Meanwhile, though, the banks are compounding things by refusing to lend the money to the mainstreet. The money lent by US and UK banks has fallen every month for the past nine months. The profits of the industrial sector-the real economy-continue to decline, although the boom in China has lessened the fears of major energy and mining corporations.

China to the Rescue?

Figures published on Thursday January 21st showed that Chinese GDP grew by 10.7% year on year in the fourth quarter. Industrial production jumped by 18.5% in the year to December, while retail sales increased by 17.5%, boosted by government subsidies and tax cuts on purchases of cars and appliances. This sounds miraculous, especially when compared to doom laden predictions of year or so ago, with negative growth and mass social unrest viewed as a genuine perspective for China. The ruling bureaucracy of the Chinese Communist Party were slightly smarter than the Western economists whose models have long been proven to be defunct. A massive stimulus package, made all the more effective by the network of state investment banks and state owned infrastructure firms, allowed the Chinese political economy to avoid falling over the cliff. However, this cannot continue indefinitely given the stagnant growth in the Euro-zone and the North American market, together responsible for 70% of Chinese exports, which are themselves responsible for 50% of Chinese GDP. The Chinese economy’s slack is shrinking fast, raising the likelihood of a new crisis of overproduction. The massive expansion of money and credit over the past year could quickly spill into inflation, as it has recently done in Britain-the natural result of massive quantitative easing in a stagnant World economy. The growth in bank credit slowed to 32% in the year to December, but that is still far too fast. The central bank has started to drain liquidity by lifting banks’ reserve requirements, and some banks have been told to reduce their lending.(2) With China slowing once again, the outlook for UK banks which extort large portions of their earnings from Chinese investments, begins to look shaky.

Despite this unstable and diseased outlook, most business leaders, bankers and think tank cronies are calling for a massive reduction in the state budget, tax rises and a return to business as usual. The only thing the ruling class are united on is that workers will pay for a crisis not of their making. As Nouriel Roubini stated on Monday: "For a start, there are risks associated with exit strategies from the massive monetary and fiscal easing: policymakers are damned if they do and damned if they don't. If they take large fiscal deficits seriously and raise taxes, cut spending and mop up excess liquidity soon, they would undermine recovery and tip the economy back into stag-deflation (recession and deflation)...But if they maintain large budget deficits, bond market vigilantes will punish policymakers. Then, inflationary expectations will increase, long-term government bond yields would rise and borrowing rates will go up sharply, leading to stagflation."(3)

Both main parties are lining up to voice their commitment to stand 'strong' and attack the poorest sections of the working classes who use the services they plan to cut. There is absolutely no evidence that Labour are going be nicer than the Tories, especially given how craven the trade union leaders have been in defending their poorer members and the wider class. If the union leaders who now effectively run the Labour Party and fund it almost in total are not going to fight for a pro worker manifesto before the election, i.e. when they have the leverage, why would they be expected to do so after an election, when the refrain from the Parliamentary Labour Party will be: 'look, we are the only party with a hope of winning the next election and defeating the Tories. Don't mess things up with calls for working class reforms', the language of Blair and Brown after 1994.

We need urgently to convene local, regional and national committees of action-based around the Unemployed Workers Union-to prepare to fight back and support workers and unemployed who are fighting against being made to pay for the bosses crisis. This would also be a good forum in which to discuss how we fightback politically.

(1) http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c9524704-180e-11df-91d2-00144feab49a.html?nclick_check=1

(2) http://www.economist.com/businessfinance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15327942

(3) http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/recession/6080523/Nouriel-Roubini-warns-threat-of-double-dip-recession-is-rising.html

Tuesday 16 February 2010

Taliban still gonna win




In a move aimed to pacify US government moaning concerning Pakistan military support for the Taliban, the top Taliban commander to date has been arrested by the Pakistan army, inside Pakistan. Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar was captured in Karachi, South Pakistan, and is apparently 'talking to his interrogators'. The sense of relief in the Imperialist press is palpable, finally 'good news' to report coming as it does after 2009s litany of disasters for the Imperialists, with the Taliban taking control of 80% of Afghanistan, including parts of the capital, Kabul. The capture is also vital to the morale of the troops sent to kill the workers and farmers in Afghanistan on behalf of British and US Imperialism: must be hard to keep fighting when there are only casualties and defeats on your side.

2009 was the deadliest year so far for the occupiers, with over 500 troops dead and thousands more injured. The capture of such a prima facie commander ,second only to Taliban founder Mullah Mohammad Omar in rank, will no doubt be trotted out time and again as evidence that the back of the resistance has been broken. Reality will of course intrude in the form of yet more stunning victories for the anti-Imperialist resistance, already able to boast of recapturing areas of Helmand Province formally held by British troops. Soldiers sardonically refer to their operations as ‘mowing the lawn’ because the anti-occupation forces simply retreat and return. According to the New York Times, Obama will be sending a further 34,000 troops to Afghanistan. 34,000 US troops would mean Obama has more or less come down on the side of General McChrystal, US commander in Afghanistan. McChrystal, an expert in undercover assassination operations, wants an extra 40,000 troops to wage a counter-insurgency campaign to ‘clear, hold and build’ small strategic areas that could then spread and join to create larger areas under their control. Bribery is integral to the spread. It is this system which simply will not work. The local satraps employed by Obama and Co. become hated; the local Taliban (the Taliban has little national structure, being more a loose alliance of resistance groups) begin to look like the only anti occupation game in town; the Imperialists and their flunkey's are forced out of areas they previously shed much blood, most of it Afghan civilian, in capturing.

The capture of one leader of what is a multifarious and grass roots resistance means zip in the grand scheme of the war, almost a decade old now. The Taliban have reconquered the land they lost up to 2007. They are now seen, rightly, as the only force which has consistently fought the occupation. The expulsion of the US from Afghanistan will give a tremendous fillip to the poor peoples of the world, much like the defeat in Vietnam emboldened the anti-colonial movements of Africa and Latin America. The chant of all consistent anti Imperialists and Marxists should be: VICTORY TO THE TALIBAN!

Saturday 13 February 2010

SWP tells us to vote for imperialism, war, racism and repression



originally published by the Revolutionary Communist Group. click title for link to original


Let us be absolutely clear. A vote for Labour is:

a vote for British imperialism and the City of London.
a vote for more wars.
a vote for state racism: attacks on asylum seekers and immigrants, racist policing and racism in prisons.
a vote for more repressive laws to add to the legion the Labour Government has passed since 1997. a vote for more privatisation of the NHS and education at the expense of the quality of provision for working class people and for savage cuts in public spending.


Yet the Socialist Workers’ Party (SWP), which has the nerve to call itself revolutionary, is telling us to vote Labour at the forthcoming general election. Socialist Worker (13 February 2010) reports that the SWP’s National Committee has agreed that ‘we will…vote Labour against the Tories where there is no serious left of Labour candidate.’

The article itself is an exercise in empty sophistry. We are supposed to vote Labour because it ‘came into being to represent trade union leaders in Parliament.’ And so, in a period where trade union leaders have blocked any serious resistance to Labour attacks on the working class, we are asked to support their parliamentary representation! Why? Apparently because Labour is ‘a break from the idea that everything is best left to our “betters”.’ On the one hand there is an ‘idea’, on the other hand, the reality of Labour’s attacks on the working class and oppressed – and the SWP thinks the ‘idea’ is more important! Even worse, Socialist Worker adds to its justification by saying that Labour leaders ‘can exercise influence only by making at least some verbal concessions to working class connections.’ How easily pleased the SWP wants us to be!

Socialist Worker, putting on a radical face, quotes from a speech by Lenin in 1920 (Collected Works Vol 31 pp 257-63) where he describes the Labour Party as a ‘thoroughly bourgeois party.’ However, the article does not quote anything from later on in the talk where Lenin puts this characterisation firmly in the context of his position on imperialism, parasitism and the labour aristocracy, a context the SWP has always rejected. Instead, in a sleight of hand, Socialist Worker asserts that Lenin also describes the Labour Party as a ‘bourgeois workers’ party’ and concludes that ‘the party remains essentially the same’ today. This is utter nonsense. In 1920, communists and their organisations could be members of the Labour Party, which in Lenin’s words, ‘allows sufficient liberty to all the political parties affiliated to it.’ This was before bans and proscriptions on communists, before the General Strike, before the Labour Party had formed any government. To argue that the Labour Party is ‘essentially’ the same after 90 years of reaction is absurd. The thought that Lenin would today call for a vote for Labour is laughable, and it is intellectually dishonest to cherry-pick his views to justify a reactionary standpoint.

The article tells us that the ‘proportion of manual and routine white collar workers in the Labour Party has also fallen’ but that ‘this has not transformed the nature of the party.’ This mealy-mouthed statement is intended to cover up the reality that there are hardly any such members, and that already in 1987, over 20 years ago, an internal Labour Party report concluded that 60% of Labour’s members had a degree or equivalent. Labour Party membership is middle class through and through.

Scratching around desperately for further arguments to support Labour, the article tells us that ‘many workers will feel depressed and less confident to fight’ if the Tories win. This cod psychology is at variance with its earlier declaration that ‘Millions of workers are to the left of all the main parties over such issues as privatisation, ending the war in Afghanistan and making the rich pay for the economic crisis.’ So what the SWP wants to do is to drag these millions of workers to the right, to participate in an electoral fraud where what is on offer is a choice between Tweedledum and Tweedledee. No, the instincts of those workers which might lead them boycott Labour and organise a movement against it are absolutely correct and should be encouraged and supported by honest socialists.

The truth is that there is no crime that Labour can commit which will stop the SWP from supporting it. And the SWP is not alone: virtually all the rest of the spineless British left will be calling for a Labour vote in one way, shape or form:

The recently-formed Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) recognises ‘that there will be Labour and non-Labour candidates who agree with our policies, who share our socialist aspirations and who will be supported by left and labour movement organisations participating in our coalition.’
The Respect Party at its November 2009 conference agreed that ‘The election of a Tory government would be a further setback for those who want to see a fairer Britain…Where there are good Labour MPs who deserve this support, we will back them.’
The Communist Party of Britain says it ‘will also support some other left-wing candidates standing against new Labour types while stressing its overall preference for a Labour victory over the Tories.’ It emphasises that ‘it is vital to ensure that the small number of socialists already in Parliament are backed in their re-election campaigns.’ (Morning Star, 22 January 2010)
After 13 years of Labour government war, racism and oppression, there is not a single socialist remaining in the Labour Party let alone MP or parliamentary candidate. Anyone with an ounce of integrity would have resigned long ago. Those who remain do so because they do not wish to lose their privileged position. Whatever they claim, they are part of the problem, a problem which the TUSC, Respect, CPB and SWP then compound by fostering the illusion that they really are on our side. These left groupings will not advocate a complete break with Labour, they will not mention the imperialist and parasitic character of British capitalism, they are opportunist and reactionary. Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! will not be part of this deceit. We will campaign on the streets against a vote for Labour, and call for the building of anti-imperialist opposition.

Don’t vote, organise!

Sunday 7 February 2010

Yet more scandals from the Eco-mentalists

More Scandals Implicate IPCC Climate Scientists
author of Full Spectrum Dominance: Totalitarian Democracy in the New World Order
by F. William Engdahl
January 22, 2010

click title for original

Only days after the failed Copenhagen Global Warming Summit, yet a new scandal over the scientific accuracy of the UN IPCC 2007 climate report has emerged. Following the major data-manipulation scandals from the UN-tied research center at Britain’s East Anglia University late 2009, the picture emerges of one of the most massive scientific frauds of recent history.

Senior members of the UN climate project, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have been forced to admit a major error in the 2007 IPCC UN report that triggered the recent global campaign for urgent measures to reduce “manmade emissions” of CO2. The IPCC’s 2007 report stated, “glaciers in the Himalayas are receding faster than in any other part of the world.” Given that this is the world’s highest mountain range and meltdown implies a massive flooding of India, China and the entire Asian region, it was a major scare “selling point” for the IPCC agenda. As well, the statement on the glacier melt in the 2007 IPCC report contains other serious errors such as the statement that “Its total area will likely shrink from the present 500,000 to 100,000 square kilometers by the year 2035." There are only 33,000 square kilometers of glaciers in the Himalayas. And a table in the report says that between 1845 and 1965, the Pindari Glacier shrank by 2,840 meters. Then comes a math mistake: It says that's a rate of 135.2 meters a year, when it really is only 23.5 meters a year. Now scientists around the world are scouring the entire IPCC report for indications of similar lack of scientific rigor.

It emerges that the basis of the stark IPCC glacier meltdown statement of 2007 was not even a scientific study of melting data. Rather it was a reference to a newspaper article cited by a pro-global warming ecological advocacy group, WWF.

The original source of the IPCC statement, it turns out, appeared in a 1999 report in the British magazine, New Scientist that was cited in passing by WWF. The New Scientist author, Fred Pierce, wrote then, “The inclusion of this statement has angered many glaciologists, who regard it as unjustified. Vijay Raina, a leading Indian glaciologist, wrote in a paper published by the Indian Government in November that there is no sign of "abnormal" retreat in Himalayan glaciers. India's environment minister, Jairam Ramesh, accused the IPCC of being "alarmist." The IPCC's chairman, Rajendra Pachauri, has hit back, denouncing the Indian government report as "voodoo science" lacking peer review. He adds that "we have a very clear idea of what is happening" in the Himalayas.” 1

The same Pachauri, co-awardee of the Nobel Prize with Al Gore, has recently been under attack for huge conflicts of interest related to his business interests that profit from the CO2 global warming agenda he promotes.2

Pearce notes that the original claim made by Indian glaciologist Syed Hasnain, in a 1999 email interview with Pearce, namely that all the glaciers in the central and eastern Himalayas could disappear by 2035, never was repeated by Hasnain in any peer-reviewed scientific journal, and that Hasnain now says the remark was "speculative".

Despite that lack of scientific validation the 10-year-old claim ended up in the IPCC fourth assessment report published in 2007. Moreover the claim was extrapolated to include all glaciers in the Himalayas.

Since publication of the latest New Scientist article, the IPCC officially has been forced to issue the following statement: “the IPCC said the paragraph "refers to poorly substantiated estimates of rate of recession and date for the disappearance of Himalayan glaciers. In drafting the paragraph in question, the clear and well-established standards of evidence, required by the IPCC procedures, were not applied properly."

The IPCC adds, "The IPCC regrets the poor application of well-established IPCC procedures in this instance." But the statement calls for no action beyond stating a need for absolute adherence to IPCC quality control processes. "We reaffirm our strong commitment to ensuring this level of performance," the statement said.” 3

In an indication of the defensiveness prevailing within the UN’s IPCC, Jean-Pascal van Ypersele, vice-chair of the IPCC, insists that the mistake did nothing to undermine the large body of evidence that showed the climate was warming and that human activity was largely to blame. He told BBC News: "I don't see how one mistake in a 3,000-page report can damage the credibility of the overall report."

Some serious scientists disagree. Georg Kaser, an expert in glaciology with University of Innsbruck in Austria and a lead author for the IPCC, gave a damning different assessment of the implications of the latest scandal affecting the credibility of the IPCC. Kaser says he had warned that the 2035 prediction was clearly wrong in 2006, months before the IPCC report was published. "This [date] is not just a little bit wrong, but far out of any order of magnitude. All the responsible people are aware of this weakness in the fourth assessment. All are aware of the mistakes made. If it had not been the focus of so much public opinion, we would have said 'we will do better next time'. It is clear now that working group II has to be restructured." 4

The chairman of the IPCC, Rajendra Pachauri, has made no personal comment on the glacier claim. It appears he is as well shaken by the wave of recent scandals. He told a conference in Dubai on energy recently, "They can't attack the science so they attack the chairman. But they won't sink me. I am the unsinkable Molly Brown (sic). In fact, I will float much higher," he told the Guardian. His remarks suggest more the ‘spirit of Woodstock’ in 1969 than of what is supposed to be the world’s leading climate authority.

Resources

1 Fred Pearce, Debate heats up over IPCC melting glaciers claim, 11 January 2010, accessed in http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn18363-debate-heats-up-over-ipcc-melting-glaciers-claim.html?DCMP=OTC-rss&nsref=online-news.

2 F. William Engdahl, UN IPCC Climate Change chief in Conflict of Interest Scandal, December 27, 2009.

3 Seth Borenstein, UN climate report riddled with errors on glaciers, AP, January 20, 2010.

4 Ibid.

Copyright © 2010 F. William Engdahl
Editorial Archive

Do we have an aristocracy of labour? and what do we do about it?



The Following blog post is a debate thread concerning whether or not trade unionists in Imperialist countries such as Britain represent an aristocratic and privileged sector of the global working class. Flowing naturally from this is what would this mean for political strategy and tactics for world revolution. The thread is posted (amended to remove repetition by different posters) as it does reveal the rejection of Marx and Engels position on the labour aristocracy, not to mention the position of Lenin in his classic works of the First World War period, see:

"To adopt, as some on the left do, a headline slogan like ‘asylum seekers welcome here’ is a mistake. It will never gain the ear of the vast majority of working-class people in Britain."-Hannah Sell, Socialist Party Deputy General Secretary, http://www.socialismtoday.org/79/asylum.html

This blogger adds:

"AT THE SAME time, it is necessary to work out a more detailed programme in individual communities where there has been a sudden influx of asylum seekers. We always fight to prevent working-class communities having to suffer further over-stretching of limited services. Government policy means that this is the effect of the sudden arrival of new asylum seekers. We have to call for community campaigns to secure extra resources – more teachers, doctors, language support and so on – in some cases, even as a precondition to the arrival of new groups of asylum seekers. In doing so we should always strive to build a united campaign of asylum seekers and local communities."-Hannah Sell, ibid

So a leading Marxist calls for working class communities to make extra funding the basis for allowing refugees to settle-not a united struggle, buit an exclusionist struggle.

'The Socialist Party-translating the method of Marxism into the chauvinism of the better off sections of an Imperialist states working class'-new banner headline for demos?


Steve Revins of Socialist Fight added:

Hannah Sell is "a leading Marxist"? huh i guess she is a leader of the SP and she does "speak for them"....
I agree with what you say here, but have to 'take issue' a bit with this "better off sections of an Imperialist states working class": actually everyone in Britain as every other imperialist State is MUCH "better off" than the majority of the world's population (the majority of which is now for a few years proletarians rather than peasants).
you know 1bil of the 6bil population are currently dying from malnutrition and/or lack of basic things like clean water.....

in an imperialist state, as elsewhere, a worker is exploited and oppressed: as a worker, producing value.... you know about that!
my theory is that the German car-workers, altho higher-paid than the British, are MORE EXPLOITED because they produce more value: so are robbed of more.....
but that theory easily lends itself to 'nationalisms'....i am just trying to get to the bottom of what You are saying, Chris: is it that in some way the "better-off" strata or sections or whatever - it's real people we are talking about, and perhaps i am one of them!.....
that these workers are in some way responsible?

I would definitely say that their position as 'direct' slaves of the imperialists, "at home" means that they have a 'special' responsibilITY, because it's quite obvious that the Revolution has to be in the advanced parts of the world, ie the imperialist countries.
of course i am completely UN-judgemental about the word "advanced"!

Gerry Downing, also of Socialist Fight added:

they (depoendent countries) are objectively unable to do more than slightly alter their terms of trade with world imperialism led by the US, no matter how heroic their revolution. And I speak here of Castro and Chavez and the like who make/made some improvement in response to pressure from below, many of the bourgeois nationalists like Mandela and Lula don’t even do that. But, as has been asserted by Steve, we must kill the beast at its head and to do that we need the metropolitan working class, which does constantly renew itself through immigration and capitalist crisis will always return the revolution here to the agenda. We just have to find out and practice revolutionary intervention and provide revolutionary leadership here or the one billion starving will never have a hope of getting fed


This blogger responded:

No, the bulk of workers do not have the same complicity in the super exploitation of workers abroad as the skilled sections of the working class. Just a few facts and a few figures. The % of workers earning the minimum wage who are unionised is 16%. The 19% of those earning £500-999 is 40%, and the % of those earning over £999 is 20 %. These figures reveal quite starkly just who the trade unionised working class is, and why they are such a conservative and reactionary force on the whole. It is not the case that they are never changing, for example the aristocracy used to be steel workers and miners, these industries died a death and those sections were smashed. The stability of an Imperialist state requires a layer of workers to act as the watch guard of the working class generally. The aristocracy of labour today is perhaps the best kind of aristocracy, with 48% of trade unionists having degrees or equivalents, and the likelihood of you becoming a trade unionist rising as you become a manager or above. Where do the bloated salaries of train drivers or teachers come from? They do not come from any kind of extra value produced by these sectors, no, they come from the subsidy-direct in the case of Rail-appropriated from the Imperialist sections of the bourgeoisie through state taxation. The fact that there is still class conflict means very little, viewed from a context of this struggle being one of how best to redivide the very real exploitation of workers abroad.

Do all workers benefit in some way through Imperialism (remember, the Brit bosses have 5XGDP abroad)? No. Those workers who are indigenous/well settled and have access to things such as the state benefits system, the education and health systems etc do benefit slightly from the super exploitation of our international brothers and sisters-the fact that they do this as unorganised, very low paid workers counters any real benefits they may gain. Those who have the skill premiums and are considered and consider themselves as stable workers suitable for organisation and class collaboration do very well out of Imperialism. It is this layer who do best out of the welfare state, a system ostensibly meant to protect and assist the poorest sections of society the most. A report from Civitas exposed the middle class (which many of the top layers of the trade unions would fall into) benefit most from the NHS and other welfare services. The report argued: 'The government is faced with the dispiriting fact that not only have health inequalities not improved, but they have got worse… Not only are lower socio-economic groups less healthy, but the relative gap is growing … it is becoming increasingly clear that the NHS often does little to combat inequality-and may even make it worse, by providing an inequitable service.' (p.80) http://www.roadtothemiddleclass.com/blog1423_middle_class_benefit_most_from_welfare_state.html

How else do we explain how much worse off workers in the colonial countries are than the better off layers here? The level of struggle? no, if struggle determined living standards then the Indian working class would be living it large. We can explain it only through the prism of a bribed and corrupted top layer of the class, organised in trade unions, collaborating in the exploitation of workers and poor people abroad.

The types of jobs that trade unionists do reflects their higher levels of qualification. 42.1% of trade unionists are now professionals or associate professionals, compared to 26.7% for the working population as a whole and 20.6% who are non-members. In 2005, a mere 8.8% of trade unionists were Process, Plant and Machine operatives. Most tellingly, in 1991, 34% of trade union members were either managers, professional or associate professionals; by 1995 this had risen to 41%. Now, 51.5% of trade unionists fall into these three categories. The more highly skilled the job, the more likely you are to be a trade unionist. You are also more likely to be a trade unionist if you have worked at a place for ten yrs or more like 47% of trade unionists, despite less than one third of workers generally being in that situation of tenure. One third of trade unionists earn in the minimum wage - £499 category, and it is clear from the sort of jobs being attacked through the economic crisis that it is this layer who struggle in a crisis: postal workers, bin men, care workers have all been forced to fight the bosses crisis, although without out much in the way of official leadership or support. Why is this? and why do the lower paid trade unionists, those on the minimum wage like the heroic female and Asian workers at Gate Gourmet get shafted so readily when push comes to shove? because these workers and jobs are transitory, always being destroyed and replaced by similar jobs and grades by the destructive process of capital accumulation. The unions are dominated by the much higher paid and by the much more secure. How else to explain the support for the bureaucracy in the unions for so long? People can either be considered stupid, but even then only for some of the time. The harsh reality of unions being dominated by their top halfs, and as a consequence having no issue with sell outs of the lower paid, the wider class or the counter reformism of the Labour Party. This has even been displayed very recently in the RMT, where we have the leader looking at an old Labour alliance for the elections, whilst the bulk of the membership and the executive could not give a flying f*** and as a result Crow is forced to back the Trade Union and Socialist Coalition an individual.

What to do? well, the fact of trade unions only organising half of the better off third of workers effectively, makes inroads to the bottom third and the unorganised mass of workers, especially the worst off agency/temp and migrant workers all the easier. To organise these layers as a battering ram against the conservative wrecking influence of the current unions is THE task of tasks facing revolutionary communists in the union movement. We will no doubt find allies amongst some layers who are being forced down into the ranks of the low paid, as the most oppressed sections of the class found allies in the heroic miners of 1984-5. The great miners strike was a textbook example of how a section of workers previously very well paid as a result of struggles, remember, before the 1970s the miners were only averagely paid compared to the skilled workers, can become a target for the bosses. It took bringing down a government to secure greater subsidy and henceforth higher wages-wages which came from British capital being able to use some of the loot from abroad to buy a relative social peace at home. This situation could not last. The strike of 1984-5 was essentially about destroying the power of this old section of the class. The rest of the union movement, including the skilled sections of the trade unions, scabbed on the miners. The trade union and Labour Party leaders isolated and abused Scargill as a Dinosaur, which of course he was-out of date for seeking to defend an industry and trade union ear marked for obsolescence by British bosses. This is how the aristocracy and their leadership operate-isolate the fighting sections of the class, wreck their struggles and make clear that fighting comes at a very heavy cost.

Do workers and the oppressed in the bulk of the World need to wait until the labour aristocracy in Britain has somehow committed harikari and become revolutionary?-Let us hope not.

Wednesday 3 February 2010

Watchdogs of Capitalism: The reality of the labour aristocracy



Below are three articles originally published by the Revolutionary Communist Group, clicking the title will take you to the originals. I have reproduced these pieces due to their very high quality, appositeness and for the nuanced and accomplished understanding of the dialectic of party and class, that is; how do we create the space for the revolutionary struggle of the working class to unite with the revolutionary communist party? This is the question of questions facing us today. It will be obvious after reviewing these articles that the basis for this dual process is the capture and renewal of working class organisation from the 'labour Lieutenants of capital'.


from Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! No. 115, October/November 1993
Haunted by the Labour Aristocracy
Part 1: Marx and Engels on the split in the working class


The SWP is obsessed by the concept of the labour aristocracy. Every few months without fail, an article appears in Socialist Worker, Socialist Review or International Socialism, always with the same refrain: there is no such thing as a labour aristocracy, nor has there ever been any kind of privileged stratum of the working class, especially one whose privileges were dependent on the survival of imperialism. ROBERT CLOUGH analyses the latest attempt to revise this theory. Part One examines whether Marx and Engels had a theory of the labour aristocracy.
The latest article by Corr and Brown in International Socialism (Issue No 59, Summer 1993, pp37-74) is a lazy, frequently dishonest production. The tone is set in the introduction, where they condemn a well-known writer on imperialism, Arghiri Emmanuel, for postulating 'a fundamental asymmetry in the system - in one area high wages and low profits, in the other low wages and high profits.' (p38) Their comment? 'This comes very close to the purely national division of the world into "proletarian" and "bourgeois" nations.' To more normal people, it comes 'very close' to Lenin's description of the 'essence of imperialism' - the division between oppressor and oppressed nations.

As we shall see, what is really at issue in the argument is indeed the existence and nature of imperialism, and that far from undermining the concept of the revolutionary role of the working class as the SWP argues, recognising and understanding the concept of the labour aristocracy is critical to re-affirming that revolutionary role. Hence we are not debating some abstract historical point. Bourgeois democracy depends on capitalism's ability to recruit a section of the working class to its side. But not just any section: it must be a stratum which controls the principal organisations of the working class, and which can constantly exclude any revolutionary element from these organisations - that is, act as the 'labour lieutenants of capital'. To win and retain the allegiance of this section, capitalism must be able to offer it a relatively privileged position, to give it a stake in capitalism's survival. The stratum is not fixed: its composition will change according to capitalism's development. Over the last hundred years (150 in the case of Britain), the fate of this stratum or labour aristocracy has been tied up with that of imperialism. Its form has changed: a hundred years ago, it was made up of skilled manual workers, whether in Britain, the US or Germany. Now it is more made up of white collar workers in the higher echelons of the public and service sectors. But without its support, imperialism could not maintain its democratic facade. In conditions where this privileged layer has proved incapable of controlling the organisations of the working class, or where imperialism has been unable to sustain it to any degree, the ruling class has had to resort to military or fascist rule,

In contrast, the struggle of revolutionaries and communists is to drive this privileged stratum from its positions of control, to isolate it from the rest of the working class. Without this political and ideological struggle, there can be no prospect of socialism. We can begin to see already the close connection between the SWP's rejection of the concept of the labour aristocracy, and a political practice which involves building an alliance with the left wing of this privileged stratum, particularly the left of the Labour Party. Hence Corr and Brown are not just discussing history: they are defending the political practice of the SWP. As we shall see later, their attack on Lenin in particular serves as a justification for their uncritical alliance with the left of the Labour Party on any issue to do with British imperialist foreign policy - be it Ireland, the Falklands or the Gulf War.

However, Corr and Brown have a major problem: that every contemporary political commentator on the phenomenon of the classic, late nineteenth century labour aristocracy not only recognised its existence, but usually predicated part of their political activity on either fostering it (The Liberal Party, Disraeli), organising it (the New Model Trade Unions), or fighting its bankrupt political standpoint (the revolutionaries). The existence of a privileged stratum of the British working class, overwhelmingly its skilled section in this period, was taken for granted in every political circle in the second half of the nineteenth century. In fact, the only people who have questioned it have done so at a distance of at least half a century, and are eithervirulent anti-communists (in particular Professor Seton-Watson who really started this hare running in 1953), bourgeois labour historians who deny the existence of classes let alone strata within classes (such as H Pelling), other modern labour historians who have a vested interest in playing down the significance of privilege (such as Stedman Jones), or the SWP. There is not a single authority within the revolutionary movement either now or at any stage in the past century who contested the issue; as materialists, they liked to deal with real phenomena rather than conjure them out of existence.

So how do our authors perform their own conjuring tricks? Selective quotation, sleight of hand, innuendo, a vast amount of ignorance, in other words, by using all the normal tools of the bourgeois academic trade. They start with Marx; so shall we.


Did Marx have a theory of the labour aristocracy?


Yes he did, whatever our authors say. Their view is that when he referred explicitly to its existence, it was in a 'descriptive' not 'analytic' manner (p41), or he used the term to refer to the trade union leaders, not to the privileged workers they led in the late nineteenth century. In particular, they say that whenever Marx made reference to the bribery of this upper stratum, 'the form of that bribery was left vague' (p42). However, it was quite overt. Marx worked alongside English trade union leaders in the Workingmen's International in the 1860s. The International was the prime force behind the formation of the Reform League in 1865, which agitated for universal male suffrage and a secret ballot. Its committee of twelve consisted of six workers and six middle class reformists.

Despite Marx's efforts, the workers soon adapted to the standpoint of the middle class reformists. The League started to receive considerable finance from far-sighted capitalists, and in particular leading Liberal politicians. As a result, the League qualified its demand for male suffrage with the phrase 'registered and residential'. This property qualification would exclude the mass of unskilled and casual workers. Marx condemned the manoeuvres of these working class leaders for the compromises they made. In 1868, it was the Tory Disraeli who 'dished the Whigs' by granting the extension of the suffrage to include about one in five workers; this respectable upper stratum had proved themselves worthy of this right, one which the ruling class was sure they would exercise with moderation. Later, in the 1868 general election, working class leaders were paid election expenses and £10 a head to canvass for the Liberals - a very direct bribe in any terms. Hence Marx's comment on one Barry 'that he is not one of the so-called leaders of the English workers, since these men are more or less bribed by the bourgeoisie and the government.' (Minutes and Documents of the Hague Congress of the International, p124)

Marx's experience in the First International was one of continuous struggle against the English trade union leaders, firstly on the Irish question and the defence of Fenian prisoners, and secondly in defence of the Paris Commune. Corr and Brown say that when Marx addressed the London Congress of the First International in 1871 and 'made reference to the unions as "an aristocratic minority" with most workers outside them, (he) again seemed to use the term in a general descriptive sense' (p42). They clearly have not read what he said, which completely undermines their position:

'The Trades Unions are an aristocratic minority - the poor workers cannot belong to them: the great mass of workers whom economic development is driving from the countryside into the towns every day has long been outside the trades unions - and the most wretched mass has never belonged; the same goes for the workers born in the East End in London; one in 10 belongs to Trades Unions - peasants, day labourers never belong to these societies.
The Trades Unions can do nothing by themselves - they will remain a minority - they have no power over the mass of proletarians.' (Minutes of the London Congress of the International, Marx and Engels Collected Works, Vol 22, p614)

This conclusion was drawn from the experience of nearly a decade of struggle, through which the unions had shown their complete contempt for the most oppressed sections of the working class, both at home and abroad. To suggest that he was using the term 'descriptively' is utter nonsense. It was these trade union leaders who attempted to get a motion of censure on Marx in the International in 1872 for saying that the English labour leaders had sold themselves 'to Gladstone, Morley, Duke and others' (Minutes and Documents of the Hague Congress of the International, p702). Those nineteenth century union leaders hada better understanding of Marx's threat to their position than do twentieth century academics.

Did Engels develop Marx's position?


Yes, he did, and in discussion with Marx too. Our two authors aren't quite clear on this; on the one hand, they say 'Like Marx, Engels began to detect the emergence of labour aristocracy in the early 1850s' (p43), on the other, they refer to the 'somewhat ambiguous ideas sketched by Marx and especially by Engels' (p46). But there is nothing ambiguous in his description in 1885 of the situation between 1850 and 1870, when be writes that 'A permanent improvement can be recognised for two "protected" sections only of the working class.' The first section are factory workers protected by limits on the working day, and:

'Secondly, the great Trade Unions. They are the organisations of those trades in which the labour of grown-up men (his emphasis) predominates, or is alone applicable. Here the competition neither of women or children nor of machinery has so far weakened their organised strength. The engineers, the carpenters and joiners, the bricklayers are each of them a power to the extent that as in the case of the bricklayers and bricklayers' labourers, they can even successfully resist the introduction of machinery... They form an aristocracy among the working class; they have succeeded in enforcing for themselves a relatively comfortable position, and they accept it as final. They are the model workingmen of Messrs Leone Levi and Giffen, and they are very nice people nowadays to deal with, for any sensible capitalist in particular and for the whole capitalist class in general.
But as to the great mass of the working people, the state of misery and insecurity in which they live now is as low as ever, if not lower.' (In Marx and Engels: Articles on Britain, pp378-9)

What is the conclusion of our authors after they quote part of this passage? 'But what Engels seemed to make was a close identification of "aristocrats" with bureaucrats', continuing: 'Later writers specifically refused to identify "aristocrats" with "leaders", the whole point being to shift the focus onto a layer of workers' (their emphasis, p44). Who are they trying to kid? In fact they are so poorly researched that when they go on to say that Engels' 1892 Preface to The Condition of the Working Class in England was 'Engels' fullest denunciation of the "aristocracy among the working class" - a "small, privileged protected minority" steeped in "respectable bourgeois prejudices" and "permanently benefited" by the proceeds of empire' (p44), they do not realise he is quoting a large chunk of his 1885 article. They themselves have not read the Preface - only Lenin's citations from it! This is not a trivial point; it exposes the bogus erudition of the article - it is no more than cod academicism.

For Engels, the aristocracy are the skilled sections of the working class organised in their New Model Unions. So when Corr and Brown argue 'It is still hard to pin down exactly who the labour aristocrats were for Engels' (p45) we can only conclude it is hard for them to understand anything. Already in the 1850s Engels and Marx were discussing the corruption of the English working class movement and connecting it to England's industrial monopoly. As Engels said in a letter to Marx in 1858: '..the English proletariat is actually becoming more and more bourgeois... For a nation which exploits the whole world this is of course to a certain extent justifiable.' (Marx and Engels: Selected Correspondence, p132). For those who would like to draw a distinction between Marx and Engels' alleged 'crudities', it is noteworthy that Marx never once contradicted Engels in his development of the position.

Our authors concede this, but then say 'there is no description or explanation of the mechanism by which the bribery works' (p43), and repeal the point elsewhere (eg p42, p45). That the bribes or privileges existed there is of course no doubt.

What were the privileges?


The labour aristocracy's privileges were both economic and political. Economically, their jobs were far more assured than those of unskilled workers; typically their unemployment rates were half or one third those of unskilled workers. Their wages were much higher - some 40 shillings per week at a time when theunskilled worker earned 20 to 25 shillings. They tended to live apart from the mass of the working class, socially and geographically. Their children had access to education. With higher wages came better food, better health and a longer life.

The political privileges were equally significant: the vote being one. The 1868 Reform Act with its property qualifications consolidated the developing aristocracy of labour by allowing it to participate in the bourgeois democratic process. This is not considered at all by our authors, although they speak for an organisation whose desire to vote Labour at every possible opportunity is remarkable if only for its single-mindedness. Yet this was the point at which the leaders of this aristocratic minority, aided by the most direct of bribes, sacrificed the interests of the mass of the working class for those of its privileged section, and became no more than an appendage to the Liberals.

Another political concession that came with increasing respectability was the legalisation of trade union organisation. However, the New Model Unions embraced only the skilled sections of the working class, and quite deliberately excluded the unskilled, through apprenticeships and restrictions on the number of labourers they might supervise. Corr and Brown, in defending these unions, argue that 'Nevertheless, it is one thing to forsake revolutionary class struggle but quite another to accept the philosophy of capitalism. The craftist unions clearly did not do this' (p60). Well, they appear to be alone in this judgement. Applegarth, leader of the Amalgamated Society of Engineers, and a member of the notorious London Junta, wrote in 1866:

'Let us then unite with dignified firmness and rest not until our unions have that protection to which they are entitled, and I trust that with such protection and a few more years' experience, we shall have established a new era in the history of labour, have gained the full confidence of our employers, adopted arbitration as the first resort of our differences, and freed our unions from the expense and anxiety of strikes as far as it is possible to do so...' (Quoted in T. Rothstein: From Chartism to Labourism, p186)
Now this would seem to be very much an 'acceptance of the philosophy of capitalism'; indeed, if a movement forsakes revolutionary struggle, it can do no other. Even Francis Williams, the official historian of the Labour Party some 45 years ago, is quite clear on the moderation of the skilled unions; discussing their role in the formation of the London Trades Council in 1860, he wrote:

'What was no less important was that they understood the middle-class point of view -- the point of view of those who in increasing measure now formed public opinion -- because they shared it. Their modest ambition indeed was to establish a new group within that wide amorphous class, raising the skilled workers whom they represented to a position totally divorced from that of the struggling mass below.' (F. Williams: Magnificent Journey - The Rise of the Trade Unions, p105)
Later on, Williams cites the opposition of the skilled unions to the eight- hour day in the 1880s as an example of their 'cautious, conciliatory and self-satisfied' attitude (Magnificent Journey, p162). Corr and Brown ignore this, although perhaps more than any other question it showed how opposed the craft unions were to the interests of the mass of the working class. On the one hand there were the socialists, including Tom Mann, demanding legislation for the eight hour day. On the other stood the craft unions, opposing any state intervention on the question, arguing that it was a matter of negotiation with the employers. Given that they were the only negotiating bodies, it was tantamount to saying only skilled workers could have the eight-hour day. Engels was in the thick of this struggle, and when under the influence of the new unskilled unions, the old gang of the skilled unions were defeated at the 1891 TUC, he spoke enthusiastically of the defeat of the 'bourgeois labour party':

'The old unions, with the textile workers at their head, and the whole of the reactionary party among the workers, had exerted all their strength towards overthrowing the eight-hour decision of 1890. They came to grief ... and the bourgeois papers recognised the defeat of the bourgeois labour party.' (Engels, Letter to Sorge, 14 September 1891)
Perhaps Engels was mistaken about their 'acceptance of the philosophy of capitalism'? Certainly Corr and Brown seem completely unaware of the major political battles of the time, when Tom Mann argued:

'New unionism must be judged by its fruits. Many identified with it had long been membersof their own societies and had grieved bitterly over the workers' poverty, particularly that of the unskilled and unorganised, and at the callous disregard shown by the old societies, even for the labourers in their own trade. The old school had proved unable to organise the unskilled and even to further their own interests.' (Quoted in Dona Torr: Tom Mann ond His Times, p18)
What was the source of these privileges?

We have already shown how Engels and Marx attributed the privileged existence of the labour aristocracy to England's industrial monopoly in the 1850s and 1860s, augmented by its colonial monopoly, especially during the period of relative industrial decline from the 1870s onward. When Corr and Brown cite Gareth Stedman Jones (who has accomplished his own personal revolution, become a professor and renounced both Marxism and the class struggle) in arguing that in Engels 'there was no definitive material theory of the labour aristocracy' (p45), it was certainly true that they produced no academic treatise on the matter. But Engels made pointed reference to England's monopoly position, as Corr and Brown concede earlier on in their article when they say that Engels was 'categorical' about the 'link between England's colonial monopoly and the corruption of a certain layer of the working class' (p43).

The liberal JA Hobson also made this connection at the turn of the century, and Lenin argued that by doing so, he showed himself more advanced than the so-called Marxist Kautsky. We would say that he was more advanced than Corr and Brown writing nearly a hundred years later. If we look at the sectors where skilled workers and their organisation were strongest, we find them to be closely connected to Empire: textiles, iron and steel, engineering, and coal. Textiles because of the cheap cotton from Egypt, and a captive market in India; iron and steel because of ship- building and railway exports, engineering because of the imperialist arms industry, and coal because of the demands of Britain's monopoly of world shipping. In a myriad of different ways, the conditions of the labour aristocracy were bound up with the maintenance of British imperialism. And this fact was bound to be reflected in their political standpoint.

To sum up: Corr and Brown show an amazing ignorance of the contemporary recognition of the existence of this privileged stratum; at each and every stage, they prefer to rely on bourgeois historians writing up to a century later. Their argument that 'in fact no new layer emerged which was materially and socially distinguishable from the rest of the working class in a way which was different from long established differentiation' (p67) is quite unsustainable in terms of all the contrary contemporary opinion. The point is that such a development within the working class was inevitable if the ruling class were to survive in conditions where the working class were becoming ever more preponderant numerically, and where there was a commensurate increase in their potential political and economic power. Furthermore, the emergence of the labour aristocracy was linked with the maturation of bourgeois democracy: only at that point in time when the ruling class could be satisfied that the working class would use the vote 'wisely' would they in fact receive it. Marx and Engels were well aware of the significance of the treachery of the Reform League; Corr and Brown over a century later are not.

from Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! No. 116, December 1993/January 1994
Watchdogs of Capitalism
The Reality of the Labour Aristocracy Part 2


In his continuing analysis of the SWP's position on the labour aristocracy, ROBERT CLOUGH, having shown how Corr and Brown distort Marx and Engels, examines their critique of Lenin's theory.
Last issue, we showed how Corr and Brown (International Socialism, No. 59, Summer 1993) misrepresented Marx and Engels in their efforts to deny the existence of a labour aristocracy in nineteenth-century Britain. With the assertion that neither Marx nor Engels 'had a consistent analysis of such a phenomenon', they concluded 'much less that their use of the term laid the basis for a causal explanation of reformism in the way which Lenin uses it., (Corr and Brown, p39) This article shows that they have as little basis for their position on Lenin as they did on Marx and Engels.

Although Lenin's analysis of the nature and role of the labour aristocracy was most fully developed during the First Imperialist War, his awareness of the connection between opportunism and imperialism was already evident in his contribution to the debate on 'socialist colonialism' at the 1907 congress of the Second International. The debate, on a proposition that advanced capitalist countries had the right to colonial possessions as part of a broader 'civilising' mission, revealed widespread support for such racism (from German trade unionists to Ramsay MacDonald, an ILP delegate), even though it was eventually out-voted. Reporting the discussion, Lenin wrote:

'Only the proletarian class, which maintains the whole of society, can bring about the social revolution. However, as a result of the extensive colonial policy, the European proletarian partly finds himself in a position when it is not his labour, but the labour of the practically enslaved natives in the colonies, that maintains the whole of society ... In certain countries this provides the material and economic basis for infecting the proletariat with colonial chauvinism. Of course, this may be only a temporary phenomenon, but the evil must nonetheless be clearly realised and its causes understood.' (Collected Works [CW], Vol 13, p77)
Significantly, at the same Congress, Lenin had also opposed the unconditional admission of the Labour Party to the Second International because of its refusal to recognise the existence of the class struggle. Politically, Labour was still tied completely to the Liberal Party as the most effective means of representing the interests of the upper stratum of the working class. The division between this small minority and the mass of the working class was as great as it had been in Engels' day: a study by the Liberal Sir Leo Chiozza-Money in 1905 estimated that 33 million out of a population of 43 million lived in poverty, of whom 13 million lived in destitution. In 1911, it was estimated that it required 30 shillings per week to support a family in minimal comfort: 5 million out of 8 million manual workers earned less than this, their average income being 22 shillings per week. During this period, the normal wage for skilled workers was some 40 shillings per week.

The Labour Aristocracy and the Working Class


It is impossible to understand Lenin's conception of the role of the labour aristocracy unless we accept his starting point: that the proletariat must be a revolutionary class because of its position within capitalist society. This revolutionary character is expressed first in its actions, and subsequently in its consciousness. This distinction is vital: that is why Lenin spoke of the political work 'that brings closer and merges into a single whole the elemental destructive forces of the masses and the conscious destructive force of the organisation of revolutionaries.' (Lenin, CW, Vol 5 p512) In the beginning was the deed: thus Marx quotesGoethe in Chapter One of Capital, giving his warm approval to this pithy statement of the materialist position. The starting point for the development of revolutionary consciousness within the working class is its 'spontaneous movement' (Lenin, CW, Vol 4 p260), not the other way around.

Given this, it is the role of the labour aristocracy to undermine, fragment and destroy this spontaneous movement in order to prevent the working class acquiring a consciousness of its revolutionary role. Through its control of the organisation of the working class, its privileged access to resources such as finance, the media, meeting halls and so on, the labour aristocracy actively fights to isolate every act of working class resistance to prevent it developing a revolutionary character. Thus there is no single act of betrayal, but a continual process of struggle in which the opportunists pit themselves against the emerging movement of the proletariat, and in which the defeat of the labour aristocracy is the precondition to the working class achieving self-consciousness.

With this in mind, we can understand how Corr and Brown 'disprove Lenin: it is by turning the problem back to front. They do not believe the working class is capable of struggling in a revolutionary manner until it has achieved a revolutionary consciousness. Thus they are obsessed with the backwardness of the working class, or as they term it, 'mass reformism'; and this fixation means that they cannot conceive how the proletariat is forced despite itself into the movement which is the precondition for transcending its backwardness. Corr and Brown draw here on their mentor Tony Cliff, who argued in the early years of the boom that the working class in the countries in the West 'show a stubborn adherence to reformism, a belief in the possibility of major improvement in conditions under capitalism'. He continued:

'Why is this so? Why the general apathy and rejection of revolutionary changes in society, when humanity as a whole is in the grip of life and death struggles? Only if we find the correct answer to this question can we answer a further one: for how long can reformism push aside revolutionary aspirations in the working class?' (all quotes drawn from 'The Economic Roots of Reformism', in Neither Washington Nor Moscow, 1982)
For Cliff, the way Lenin 'explained reformism, or to use the term he coined, opportunism' was inadequate, because 'an inevitable conclusion...is that a small thin crust hides the urges of the mass of workers. Any break in this crust would reveal a surging revolutionary lava. The role of the revolutionary party is simply to show the mass of the workers that their interests are betrayed by the "infinitesimal minority" of the "aristocracy of labour".' But according to Cliff, this 'is not confirmed by the history of reformism in Britain, the United States and elsewhere over the past half century: its solidity, its spread throughout the working class, frustrating and largely isolating all revolutionary minorities makes it abundantly clear that the economic, social roots of reformism are not in "an infinitesimal minority of the proletariat and working masses as Lenin had argued.'

So the critical issue is the reformist or backward consciousness of the working class: it is this that explains the absence of revolutionary struggle. However, the social and political conditions of 1957 when Cliff wrote this are a surer guide as to why there should be no revolutionary struggle: imperialist boom was creating 'full' employment and rising living standards. Lenin was writing in a quite different period of deep social and economic crisis when 'the actuality of proletarian revolution' (Lukacs) was no empty phrase. Conditions in the first quarter of this century threw the working class into constant struggle regardless of its prevailing level of consciousness; and at every stage, the labour aristocracy used its privileged position to frustrate, limit and undermine that struggle, and as a consequence frustrate, limit and undermine the development of an independent class consciousness. Thus Cliff's reference to 'surging revolutionary lava' is a ludicrous and bombastic caricature: the labour aristocracy as the 'class enemy within the camp of the proletariat' was indeed the critical obstacle to the development of communist movements, not as Cliff would have it, 'reformism', or the class enemy of the proletariat within its own mind.

Corr and Brown take Cliff's standpoint and attempt to give it a veneer of scientific respectability by culling numerous quotations from respectable bourgeois labour historians. The only basis on which they choose these academics is their common hostility to Lenin. Thus they can be Eurocommunists, structuralists, avowed revisionists or anti Marxists - Corr and Brown don't particularly care. Hence they see no methodological problem in treating the arguments developed by (say) Henry Pelling or AE Musson, reactionary bourgeois historians the pair of them (sorry: academics with a 'particular Whig interpretation of labour history' - Corr and Brown, p73) as of equal validity to those advanced by Lenin. We can only assume that Corr and Brown believe that these historians are neutral figures whose statements possess a scientific objectivity in and of themselves - a preposterous position for those who claim to recognise theexistence of a class-divided society.

For our part, there is a good reason as to why Corr and Brown have no methodological axe to grind with such people: they share the same class position, that of the petit bourgeoisie. And whilst the preconditions for the working class acquiring revolutionary consciousness is its spontaneous movement, it is the other way round for the petit bourgeoisie: they must acquire the consciousness before the commitment to the struggle. The result is that Corr and Brown, along with radical bourgeois historians, project their class position on to the proletariat. The obsession with reformism is none other than an obsession with the problem of the consciousness of the petit bourgeoisie.

Lenin on Opportunism


So what did Lenin really mean by 'opportunism', and how does it differ from the concept of 'reformism' advanced by Corr, Brown, Cliff and the bourgeois academics they cite? Essentially, it is an alliance between the ruling class and a privileged stratum of the working class directed against the mass of the working class. Thus he argued:

'The relative "peaceful" character of the period between 1871 and 1914 served to foster opportunism first as a mood, then as a trend. until finally it formed a group or stratum among the labour bureaucracy and petty bourgeois fellow- travellers. These elements were able to gain control of the labour movement only by paying lip-service to revolutionary aims.' (CW Vol 22, p111)
And later on:

'A few crumbs of the bourgeoisie's huge profits may come the way of the small group of labour bureaucrats, labour aristocrats, and petit-bourgeois fellow-travellers. Social chauvinism and opportunism have the same class basis, namely the alliance of a small section of privileged workers with their national bourgeoisie against the working class masses; the alliance between the lackeys of the bourgeoisie and the bourgeoisie against the class the latter is exploiting. (ibid, p112)
An alliance against the working class: hence Lenin's fondness for the phrase 'labour lieutenants of the capitalist class' as a description of the labour aristocracy. Yes, this represents a considerable development of Marx' and Engels' arguments, but there is no call for criticism on this account (see Corr and Brown p45). Events had moved on since the 1880s and 1890s: Lenin was writing in the midst of an imperialist war, where despite its earlier protestations, the leadership of the Second International were either openly or tacitly supporting 'their' ruling class in a revolting slaughter of working class people with the aim of deciding how to re-divide the colonies amongst the major capitalist powers. If Marxism could not keep pace with such changes, it could no longer be the science of revolution.

The war had revealed the existence of three trends within the socialist movement: the open opportunists, who enthusiastically supported 'their' ruling class (in Britain, the entire trade union leadership and the overwhelming majority of the Labour Party), the pacifists, who proclaimed their opposition to the war but refused to organise against it or to break with the opportunists who supported it (in Britain, Ramsay MacDonald, and in Germany, Karl Kautsky), and lastly the revolutionaries, who called for the defeat of 'their' imperialism and organised to achieve this end (in Britain, John Maclean, in Ireland, James Connolly, in Germany, Rosa Luxemburg, and in Russia, Lenin). Marxism had to explain the origin of those trends hostile to the working class, and Lenin alone of the revolutionaries was able to do so. But he then went further and translated this understanding into the practical political position which led to the defeat of Russian opportunism and the triumph of the October revolution. What we are discussing therefore is not Lenin's so-called crudeness or one-sidedness, but quite the opposite: his complete theoretical superiority to any other living socialist.

Now Corr and Brown find themselves in all sorts of trouble as they try to develop their criticisms of Lenin. On the one hand, they declare that Lenin talked a lot about the labour aristocracy, but had no consistent idea as to who it encompassed. On the other, they say he could not have been thinking of any section of the working class such as Engels' carpenters and engineers, for if he were, 'there were enormous implications for the concept of proletarian revolution, when whole sections of the working class would becastigated as "watchdogs of capitalism and corrupters of the labour movement"' (p46) the implication apparently being that there could not be any proletarian revolution whatsoever. Yet Corr and Brown exaggerate these 'whole sections' were always a minority in Lenin's view, and might anyway be thrown back into the mass of the working class under the impact of the overall crisis. In other words, the impoverishment of sections of the labour aristocracy was a thesis as uncontentious as the proletarianisation of sections of the petit bourgeoisie (even, possibly, some former academics). This of course happened in the 1920s in Britain; as John Foster observed, 'The previously "aristocratic" sections [skilled engineers, shipbuilders, textile workers and miners - RC] now came under crippling attack. Their local cultural institutions (the backbone of the old "framework" of control) disappeared into the abyss of unemployment'. However, he then continued:

'Yet to see this as the end would be to miss the whole essence of the labour aristocracy, to see it purely descriptively, in just one of its forms, and ignore its historical role and development: as the active process by which labour's class organisation was purged of anti-capitalist elements and made safer for economism and spontaneity.' (in ed J Skelley: The General Strike, p31)
And indeed the 'active process was to continue, with new sections of the working class being elevated in the 1930s to a level of privilege that had been previously enjoyed by skilled workers in those industries on which British capitalist prosperity had been built at the beginning of the century. But Corr and Brown are adamant: it 'makes no sense to think that Lenin saw the labour aristocracy in these workers. Lenin in fact used the term "labour aristocracy" to refer to reformist leaders (in particular to Kautsky)' (p 46). 'In fact', Lenin did not use the term 'labour aristocracy to refer to Kautsky - far from it: to Lenin, they were separate trends, and he repeatedly stressed the distinction, right from 1914 through to 1917. As he wrote in a work Corr and Brown claim to have read:

'Kautskyism is not an independent trend, because it has no roots either in the masses or in the privileged stratum which has deserted to the bourgeoisie. But the danger of Kautskyism lies in the fact that, utilising the ideology of the past, it endeavours to reconcile the proletariat with that party and thereby enhance the latter's prestige. The masses no longer follow the avowed social chauvinists...The Kautskyites' masked defence of the social chauvinists is far more dangerous.' (CW Vol 23, p119)
And in 1917:

'I might remark, in passing, that Souvarine is wrong in maintaining that "they [ie, the Russian comrades who speak of the collapse of the Second International] equate men like Kautsky, Longuet, etc with nationalists of the Scheidemann and Renaudel type". Neither I nor the Party to which I belong (the RSDLP Central Committee) have ever equated the social chauvinist viewpoint with that of the "Centre". In our official Party statements, in the Central Committee manifesto published November 1 1914, and in the resolutions adopted in March 1915...we have always drawn a dividing line between the social chauvinists and the "Centre". The former, in our opinion, have defected to the bourgeoisie. With regard to them we demand not merely struggle, but a split. The latter hesitate, vacillate, and their efforts to unite the socialist masses with the chauvinist leaders causes the greatest damage to the proletariat.' (CW Vol 23, pp195-6)

There is no doubt that Corr and Brown do not know what they are talking about. But this is not a matter of simple ignorance. If Kautsky was no more than a common or garden labour aristocrat as they suggest, then the trend that his position represents de facto cannot exist. Life is not so simple, for as Lenin argued, such a trend must and will come into existence in order to reconcile sections of the working class with the open and discredited opportunists. Henderson had to have his MacDonald, and Scheidemann his Kautsky, since on their own Henderson and Scheidemann could no longer command the allegiance of the revolutionary sections of the working class. Today, it is no different: John Smith must have his Kautsky or MacDonald whose task it is to reconcile radicalised sections of the working class with the rotten traditions of the Labour Party. And how might we expect that trend to act? In the 1980s, it would form an uncritical alliance with the Labour left in pacifist opposition to the Falklands War; in the l990s, it would renew that alliance in an equally pacifist opposition to the Gulf War. It might offer occasional criticisms of individual Labour leaders as they revelled in the slaughter of the Iraqi people, but not of the Party as a whole - indeed, the trend would remind its supporters that they should still vote for Labour despite its barbarity. And how would it justify this? Why,by explaining that Labour is despite everything a 'workers party' - 'capitalist' maybe, with a 'reformist' leadership certainly, but at the end of the day, still a workers party. And what organisation has adopted these positions and arguments? Corr and Brown will know - the SWP!

The correspondence between the Kautsky of 1914-17 and the SWP of today runs deeper. They share the notion that the problem for socialists is the backwardness of the working class - Kautsky used this to justify his refusal to break from the chauvinists since he would thereby break from the 'masses'. The corollary of this is that both Kautsky and the SWP condemn the spontaneous struggles of the working class since it exposes their alliance with opportunism. Thus the SWP has consistently opposed armed liberation struggles - which should be more properly described as revolutionary than spontaneous - especially that of the republican movement; it condemned black and white youth during the 1981 and later uprisings, and it condemned the miners' hit squads during the 1984-85 strike. It is clear then that the issue is not the 'backwardness' of the working class, but the backwardness of the SWP and the class position that its politics represent - that of the petit bourgeoisie.

Once we understand the interests that Corr and Brown's arguments serve, we can appreciate the full measure of their shallowness. The ambiguous class position of the petit bourgeoisie expresses itself in their reluctance to adopt a partisan position - hence Corr and Brown's pseudo-objectivity, their willingness to accept at face value the positions of bourgeois academia, the 'on the one hand on the other' presentation of their views. Indeed, it is partisanship that they criticise in Lenin, when they suggest that 'disillusion at the collapse of the Second International probably made it very difficult to avoid a certain amount of moralism, even among the finest revolutionaries' (p48). The inference is clear: Lenin allowed his judgement to be clouded by subjective feelings. 'Moralism' here is a pejorative 'moralistic' elsewhere in the article - but we must remember that only the privileged can afford the luxury of amorality and pretend that morality. and objectivity are polar opposites. Communist and revolutionaries reject this: there is a very definite working class morality, and that morality condemned the leadership of the Second International with scientific objectivity in 1914, just as it would condemn those who defended the Labour Party during the slaughter of the Gulf War.

To sum up: Lenin's position is comprehensible only if you start from 'the actuality of proletarian revolution' - that is, from a partisan standpoint. Any other approach must lapse into sociology or psychology, the fate of a bourgeois academia which wants anything hut a proletarian revolution. But the labour aristocracy as Lenin understood is not a sociological concept describing a stratum within, or without, or in some kind of juxtaposition to the working class, hut a historical process connected to the development of imperialism. Corr and Brown cannot understand this since they have not broken from the standpoint of the radical petit bourgeoisie, a standpoint which has to deny the existence of the labour aristocracy in order to ally with its political representatives.

from Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! No. 119, June/July 1994
The Labour Aristocracy
Part 3: Between the Wars



In our previous two articles, we proved that the concept of the labour aristocracy was an integral part of revolutionary theory from Marx's day, and that it was accepted as such by all major theoreticians in the working class movement. We showed how it was that the labour aristocracy created organisations to defend and advance its interests -- exclusive craft unions, and, later, as British imperialism's dominant position in the world was undermined, the Labour Party. We also showed how the newer unskilled unions, formed in opposition to the elitist craft unions, soon succumbed to the prevailing trend of opportunism, their leadership absorbed into the labour aristocracy. ROBERT CLOUGH continues his analysis of the labour aristocracy.
The inter-war period was to see the destruction of the privileged conditions of those skilled sections of the working class familiar as the labour aristocracy to Marx, Engels and Lenin. This did not however mean that the lahour aristocracy disappeared as a trend in the working class, rather that its composition changed. This article demonstrates how this process started in the 1920s, and a later article will show how their organisations -- the trade unions and the Labour Party -- adapted themselves in order to represent new privileged strata that were to emerge during the 1930s.

The First Imperialist War


The First Imperialist War had greatly accelerated the incorporation of the organisations of the labour aristocracy into the imperialist state. This process had started with the first significant state welfare measures of the pre-war Liberal Government. The introduction of labour exchanges, a national insurance scheme and the Old Age Pensions Act were all initially opposed by the skilled unions. The TUC Parliamentary Committee argued that national insurance should be restricted to trade unionists 'otherwise you will have men to support who never had been nor never will be self-supporting. They are at present parasites on their more industrious fellows and will be the first to avail themselves of the funds the Bill provides.' Such opposition was quickly bought off when the Government offered the unions a role in the administration of these schemes, and soon there proliferated bodies like the Courts of Referees (administering the National Insurance Act) on which there would always be at least one 'labour representative'.

With the outbreak of war, both the Labour Party and the TUC were swift to defend the Empire against the German threat. The TUC proclaimed an industrial truce and organised recruitment drives for the armed forces. The rewards were substantial: participation in all kinds of state committees to oversee production and distribution, and, for the Labour Party, the offer of cabinet positions in the Coalition Government. In return, the labour aristocracy was expected to police the working class, ensuring that there was a minimum of resistance to speed-up, falling wages and dilution of skilled labour.

The post-war boom


In the post-war period, the most immediate role of the Labour Party and the TUC was to help stave off working class pressure that had built up as working class living standards had plummeted. In the circumstances, the ruling class deemed a brief inflationary boom as politically expedient to buy time. It could not afford any domestic challenge whilst it re-shaped the post-war imperialist order in the context of a triumphant Russian Revolution. Hence it gave the trade union leadership some leeway to maintain its authority through the uncertainties of demobilisation.

For a very short period, the trade union movement was to embrace the mass of the unskilled male working class, as membership rose from 2 million in 1910 to 6.5 million in 1918 and 8.3 million in 1920, of whom 6.5 million were affiliated to the TUC. However, despite the enormous struggles of the period, no independent working class movement appeared with a leadership able to challenge such betrayals as the sabotage of the Triple Alliance in April 1921, or their connivance in the partition of Ireland. Union amalgamations created vast new organisations such as AEU, whose rule book still excluded unskilled workers and women, and the T&GWU and the GM. Both the latter unions, organising unskilled and semi-skilled workers, were structured in such a way as to give the maximum of power to unelected officials and thereby minimise the influence of these poorer sections of the working class. They were to become in effect the private fiefdom of a handful of trade union barons, most notably Ernest Bevin, General Secretary of the T&G throughout almost the whole inter-war period. Leaders such as he were truly to become the 'labour lieutenants of the capitalist class'.

It was not merely through its control of the trade union movement that the labour aristocracy sought to undermine the working class movement -- it was also through the manipulation of state welfare. Thus the Labour leader JR Clynes argued in parliament in 1921 that 'organised labour, I am certain, together with the employers, if both were called more in touch with the administration of benefits, could be of great assistance in locating the shirkers, and making it impossible to get money when work could have been got.' And throughout the country, local trade unionists were to play 'hunt the scrounger', often as representatives of Trades Councils on Public Assistance Committees and Boards of Guardians.

The crisis in British industry


From 1921 until after the defeat of the General Strike industrial capital by and large stagnated. Productivity within the coal industry fell substantially: 1.2 million miners produced less coal in 1924 than 1 million did in 1913. Cotton consumption fell and even in the peak year of 1929 amounted to only 1.5 million tons compared to 2.1 million tons in 1913. There was a similar picture for steel, iron and shipbuilding; overall, the value of export manufactured goods in 1923 was 73% of the 1913 level. The captive markets of the Empire were no longer a sufficient compensation for low levels of productivity in these traditional sectors of industry. Such improvements as there were arose more from the intensification of labour than from new investment.

The movement of wages in these sectors reflected the stagnant conditions, fallingsignificantly between 1920 and 1924 -- by 11% in cotton, 14% in shipbuilding, 20% in iron and steel and 26% in coal. In the service sector however, there was a different picture, as wages rose by about 15%. Unemployment showed a similar pattern: in 1926, it was 40% in iron, steel and shipbuilding, 18% in cotton, and only in coal at 9% did it match the prevailing levels of the service sector. The traditional labour aristocracy was experiencing a savage assault on its previously privileged conditions. The brief life of the first Labour Government in 1924 did not change anything, it was noteworthy more for showing the extent to which Labour had usurped the role of representing the interests of the labour aristocracy from the Liberal Party, whose disintegration was now assured.

Beyond the General Strike


In these circumstances, a fall in union membership was inevitable, particularly amongst unskilled workers: by the time of the 1926 General Strike in support of miners facing massive wage cuts, TUC-affiliated membership was down to 4.3 million, two-thirds of its 1920 level. And whilst the government engaged in nine months' intensive preparation from late 1925 for the impending confrontation, the trade union leadership did absolutely nothing. But this inactivity was in its interests: defeat in the General Strike would above all mean defeat for those forces which might threaten its control of working class organisation.

The aftermath of the General Strike was a brief industrial boom lasting until 1929, which set the context for a political offensive by the Labour Party/trade union alliance directed against the small Communist Party. During 1927-28, Communists were banned and proscribed within the Labour Party and the trade unions. This coincided with the Mond-Turner talks of 1928 (Sir Alfred Mond was head of ICI, Ben Turner TUC General Secretary), an attempt to develop an open and public alliance with the increasingly dominant forces of finance capital. Although they achieved little in immediate practical terms, their main political conclusion -- that British industry must completely re-organise and rationalise if it were to compete on the world market -- was to become the refrain of the 1929-31 Labour Government. 'Mondism' was in substance the equivalent of the 'New Realism' of the 1980s. It expressed the self-same interests of a very narrow stratum of the working class as it sought a new accommodation with the ruling class. Thus Bevin could argue that:

'It is all very well for people to talk as if the working class of Great Britain are cracking their shins for a fight and a revolution, and we are holding them back. Are they? There are not many of them as fast as we are ourselves.'
The image of 'militant' trade union leaders was of course far from reality. Between the General Strike and the outbreak of war, there were only two strikes of any significant size -- the 'more looms' dispute of 1932 in the cotton industry, and the 1937 London busmen's strike. The first was a desperate and unsuccessful struggle to resist a massive increase in the intensity of labour; the second was a calculated move by Bevin to destroy the only organised opposition to his rule of the T&G. In both, the Communist Party played a leading role. Otherwise the trade union movement had no relevance forthe mass of the working class from 1926 onward.

In summary, the process of institutionalising the organisations of the labour aristocracy continued throughout the first post-war decade. It took place in a number of ways. Nationally, the amalgamation of unions and their assets created huge monoliths whose first priority was their own preservation. Governmental committees with trade union representation had proliferated, Labour had been allowed to form an administration. At a local level, trade union and Labour leaders had been increasingly involved in local government, and in the administration of centrally-funded state welfare. As a consequence, the organisations they led acquired a certain independence from the more privileged strata of the working class they represented. Hence it was that whilst the old labour aristocracy was to fragment under an unrelenting ruling class offensive, the survival of its organisations was never in doubt. The 1930s would then become a transitional period, where a new labour aristocracy would arise based on the luxury and consumer industries of the Midlands and the South, and where the old organisations would adapt themselves to organise and represent their interests.