Wayne Madsen
Strategic Culture
13 June 2017
Strategic Culture
13 June 2017
The
ability of British Labor Party leader Jeremy Corbyn to deny
Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May a parliamentary majority in the
general election provides proof that the anti-capitalist left is on a
comeback. Corbyn was successful in targeting several Conservative- and
Scottish National Party-held seats, picking up 30 seats for Labor.
Before
the election, corporate-run opinion polls and media predicted that the
Tories would dominate over Labor and ensure that the Labor’s humiliating
defeat would spell the political end of Corbyn. Instead, it was May and
her Conservatives who were humiliated by losing 13 seats in the House
of Commons and being forced to negotiate with a right-of-center Northern
Ireland regional party, the Democratic Unionists, to form a shaky
minority government.
During
the election campaign Corbyn was demonized as a far-leftist not able to
govern. Many British younger voters rejected the characterization of
Corbyn. Instead, Corbyn’s «back to basics» Laborites, who are committed
to the socialist and workers’ rights principles upon which the party was
founded, were buoyed by the election. What was rejected by the voters
were the austerity moves taken by May and her Tories, austerity that
started under the phony Labor governments of Tony Blair and Gordon
Brown. Blair and Brown had long discarded the workers’ planks of Labor
in favor of a set of pro-big business and globalization policies that
placed the interests of multinational corporations ahead of those of
Britain’s working class.
The
Blairites within Labor hoped for a resounding electoral defeat for
Corbyn, thus allowing them to reclaim control of Labor for the globalist
pro-European Union interests who had originally turned the party away
from its socialist roots under the prime ministerships of Blair and
Brown. The Blairites were sorely disappointed by Corbyn’s ability to
rally workers and students and cost May her majority in Westminster.
Corbyn, like 2016 U.S. Democratic Party presidential hopeful Bernie
Sanders, the Independent Socialist senator from Vermont, was able to
mobilize supporters through a combination of grass roots campaigning and
the clever use of social media. Sanders traveled to Britain and
endorsed Corbyn on a three-day speaking tour throughout the nation. This
gesture served as an indication that the «special relationship» between
America and Britain, while all-but-destroyed by Donald Trump, remains
strong within leftist political circles on both sides of the Atlantic.
Corbyn, no traditional Atlanticist, has questioned Britain’s nuclear
deterrent and involvement in the NATO alliance. Sanders likewise
questions America’s bloated military budget.
Blair,
like May, abhors social media and the Internet because of the power it
takes from the hands of the oligarchy that rules the United Kingdom. In
2007, just before stepping down as prime minister, Blair lashed out at
the Internet in what he called his «farewell lecture on public life.»
Blair, who never really left public life, said the Internet was
«pernicious, less balanced, more intent on the latest conspiracy theory
multiplied by five». Blair, like his successors Brown, David Cameron,
and Theresa May, wanted to revise regulatory regimes already in place
for newspapers and television to take into account the Internet. Blair’s
problem with the Internet was that several stories appeared indicating
that the sudden heart attack death of Labor Party leader John Smith in
1994 was «too convenient» in allowing Blair and Brown to assume control
over the party and neuter the socialist tendencies of Smith and his
supporters. Corbyn has now reclaimed control of Labor from the very ilk
who capitalized on Smith’s untimely death.
Corbyn
and Sanders send chills down the spines of the uber-capitalists. Corbyn
vowed to renationalize British railways, taking them away from the
corporate vultures who have placed profits over safety and reliable
service. Sanders wants a single-payer universal health care system for
the United States. Corbyn wants to stop the steady pace of National
Health System privatization initiated under Blair, Brown, Cameron, and
May. Corbyn and Sanders both want free tuition university education.
Corbyn and Sanders have made socialism «cool again», particularly among
young voters who have seen the devastation brought about by declining
job prospects wrought by the austerity-guided corporatists who
commandeered the British Labor U.S. Democratic Parties. The millennial
generation looks poised to reject rule by the one percent of
billionaires, instead favoring governments that represent 100 percent of
the people.
Corbyn
also played it smart on the issue of Brexit. Instead of vigorously
campaigning for the UK to remain within the European Union, Corbyn was
ambivalent on the issue. By not tying himself to the «Remain» camp,
Corbyn fared well among workers who have tired seeing their jobs handed
to EU migrant workers streaming into Britain from Romania, Bulgaria, and
Poland. Corbyn has essentially sent a message to the left that a
socialist does not have to be suicidal when it comes to the sovereignty
of Britain and the protection of its working class. Corbyn’s stance is a
far cry from the globalist rhetoric espoused by Blair, Brown, and the
«globalist brothers»: Ed Miliband and his brother David Miliband.
Sanders
also rejects globalist «free trade» deals that have cost American
workers heavily in terms of employment, job quality, and wages. Sanders
and Corbyn have exposed «liberals» and «socialists» who embrace free
trade agreements tied to globalization as the fakes, phonies, and frauds
they truly are.
As
the case with Corbyn and his opposition Blairite party hacks, Sanders
has faced unrelenting criticism from the Democratic Party pro-business
interests. Once taking their direction from the pro-corporate Democratic
Leadership Council (DLC), the Bill and Hillary Clinton wing of the
party accused Sanders of being too far left, not a real Democrat, and
anti-business. In fact, the DLC’s agenda so poisoned the Democratic
Party, making it unpopular among the rank-and-file, the group changed
its name to the «Third Way», dropping any pretense of being «Democratic»
at all. Most post-election polls now agree that had Sanders been the
2016 Democratic candidate, he would have soundly defeated Donald Trump,
winning the «rust belt» states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and
Ohio that Hillary Clinton lost.
French
leftist leader Jean-Luc Melenchon has cautioned France not to trust
President Emmanuel Macron and his new centrist Republic on the Move
party and its pro-corporate platform of curbing labor rights. Some
French voters agreed with Melenchon by giving him more of the leftist
vote – 11 percent – in the first-round parliamentary election that saw a
mere 49 percent turnout of voters.
The
Socialist Party, which has long dominated the left in France, received a
paltry 7 percent of the vote. Melenchon warned Macron that with such a
low turnout, the president had no mandate to implement his anti-labor
and other austerity measures. Macron’s party was projected to win some
400 votes in the 577-seat National Assembly in the second-round election
on June 18. By beating the Socialists, Melenchon is now the titular
leader of the French left and is well-positioned to emerge stronger if
Macron, a former Rothschild banker, places France under the austerity
jackboot of the international bankers. The Socialist Party, by dancing
with the bankers for so long, has forfeited its right to represent the
left.
Corbyn’s
success in Britain has had ripple effects around the world. In
Australia, the Labor Party’s left has seized on the British election to
urge the party leadership to return to socialist values. Australian
Labor Party and opposition leader Bill Shorten, who is very much in the
mold of Blair and Brown, faced calls from leftist Labor MPs to follow
Corbyn’s lead and move to the left.
Jeremy
Corbyn and Bernie Sanders have reminded the world that there is nothing
wrong with being a leftist or a socialist. The corporate political
parties have succeeded, through a concerted propaganda campaign, to
demonize the left. During the 2016 campaign, Donald Trump repeatedly
called Sanders a «communist.» The media echoed that false
characterization while ignoring the fact that Trump’s policies
represented garden-variety fascism. Corbyn and Sanders have
reinvigorated socialism and the world will be a better place for it.
Source: https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2017/06/13/anti-capitalist-left-back.html
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