| A fringe meeting
at the Labour Party Conference heard a call for the party to set up constituency
organisations in Northern Ireland.
The
call was made by a local official of the GMB, Andy McGivern, who said
that the party was receiving money from 13,500 trade union members in
Northern Ireland, but was offering them no services in return.
Andy McGivern went on to argue that these people "have made a conscious
choice to give funds to the party". This is stretching the point
more than a little.
A better measure of the local support for New Labour is the fact that,
since the ban on people in Northern Ireland joining was lifted, less than
100 people have signed up.
The 13,500 workers pay money to Labour only because they are members of
unions that are affiliated. Many are unaware they are paying into the
union's political levy, never mind that this money, £175,500 a year
according to Andy McGivern, is being used by their union leaderships to
prop up Tony Blair.
There is no clamour among working class people for New Labour to organise
here. Rather there is a growing outrage at New Labour's right wing policies.
This is the government which is trying to impose water charges. It is
the government of privatisation, of cuts in services, of crippling tuition
fees and of a minimum wage set at a poverty rate. It is the government
which has lied its way into a disastrous war against the Iraqi people
in order to help George Bush and western oil companies get their hands
on Iraqi oil.
Labour governments in the past also implemented right wing policies, but
none swallowed the doctrines of neo liberalism or became leading evangels
of a right wing offensive against the working class with the gung ho enthusiasm
of Tony Blair. Despite the failures of past Labour governments, the party
maintained a connection with the working class. Millions of working class
people saw it as "their" party and felt they could influence
or change it.
This is no longer so. The millions who at one time would have looked to
Labour now recognise that its class character has changed. While the party
retains trade union affiliation, these links are now at the top only,
between the trade union bureaucracy and the Labour leadership. It still
gets money from the unions but these sums are increasingly dwarfed by
the huge amounts it receives from big business.
Last year it received £9.1 million in handouts from businesses,
including huge donations like the £2.5 million given by Lord Sainsbury.
The instinctive understanding of workers that this is no longer "our"
party is decisive in determining Labour's future. The instinct to join
Labour in order to "reclaim" it has gone. Instead workers are
voting with their feet and leaving the party.
Party membership has halved since Blair became Prime Minister. The present
official, and inflated, figure of 208,000 is the lowest for 70 years.
The real question is not why Labour does not organise in Northern Ireland,
but why trade union leaders are still paying money, including money from
members in Northern Ireland, to this party.
Some of the so-called "awkward" squad of "left" union
leaders like Tony Woodley of the T&GWU are still arguing in favour
of affiliation, and are preparing to give more money to Labour's election
fund, claiming they can get more influence in return.
Some privately back Gordon Brown, seeing his accession to Number Ten as
a return to "Old Labour". They forget that Gordon Brown has
been the architect of the right wing economic agenda of this government.
He has pioneered tax cuts to the rich, PFI schemes to sell off public
services and is currently swinging his axe to cut 108,000 jobs from the
civil service.
All these leaders are out of touch with the mood of the vast majority
of trade union members who want to see all links with Labour broken. The
firefighters' union have given a lead with their conference decision,
moved by Northern Ireland Socialist Party member, Tony Maguire, to disaffiliate.
Let New Labour organise in Northern Ireland if it wants. A Blairite organisation
will have even less impact than the failed attempt by the Tories to transplant
their Thatcherite organisation here.
In Britain the key now is to build a working class party to replace New
Labour. In Northern Ireland the key task is to build a genuine socialist
alternative to the failed sectarian and right wing parties. New Labour
can never be a vehicle for this. Instead of calling for New Labour to
organise, the 13,500 trade union members who are unwillingly paying money
to Blair should demand that this £175,500 be put to proper use -
building a new mass party to represent working class people here.
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