Showing posts with label respect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label respect. Show all posts

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Tariq Ali: George Galloway's Respect could help Britain to break the political impasse

George Galloway's Respect could help Britain to break the political impasse

UK politics has been governed by Thatcherism for decades. Galloway's triumph should force people to rethink their passivity
George Galloway, Bradford West by-election
George Galloway celebrates with his supporters after winning the Bradford West byelection. Photograph: Anna Gowthorpe/PA
George Galloway's stunning electoral triumph in the Bradford by-election has shaken the petrified world of English politics. It was unexpected, and for that reason the Respect campaign was treated by much of the media (Helen Pidd of the Guardian being an honourable exception) as a loony fringe show. A BBC toady, an obviously partisan compere on a local TV election show, who tried to mock and insult Galloway, should be made to eat his excremental words. The Bradford seat, a Labour fiefdom since 1973, was considered safe and the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, had been planning a celebratory visit to the city till the news seeped through at 2 am. He is now once again focused on his own future. Labour has paid the price for its failure to act as an opposition, having imagined that all it had to do was wait and the prize would come its way. Scottish politics should have forced a rethink. Perhaps the latest development in English politics now will, though I doubt it. Galloway has effectively urinated on all three parties. The Lib Dems and Tories explain their decline by the fact that too many people voted!
Thousands of young people infected with apathy, contempt, despair and a disgust with mainstream politics were dynamised by the Respect campaign. Galloway is tireless on these occasions. Nobody else in the political field comes even close to competing with him – not simply because he is an effective orator, though this skill should not be underestimated. It comes almost as a shock these days to a generation used to the bland untruths that are mouthed every day by government and opposition politicians. It was the political content of the campaign that galvanised the youth: Respect campaigners and their candidate stressed the disasters of Iraq and Afghanistan. Galloway demanded that Blair be tried as a war criminal, and that British troops be withdrawn from Afghanistan without further delay. He lambasted the Government and the Labour party for the austerity measures targeting the less well off, the poor and the infirm, and the new privatisations of education, health and the Post Office. It was all this that gave him a majority of 10,000.
How did we get here? Following the collapse of communism in 1991, Edmund Burke's notion that "In all societies, consisting of different classes, certain classes must necessarily be uppermost," and that "The apostles of equality only change and pervert the natural order of things," became the commonsense wisdom of the age. Money corrupted politics, and big money corrupted it absolutely. Throughout the heartlands of capital, we witnessed the emergence of effective coalitions: as ever, the Republicans and Democrats in the United States; New Labour and Tories in the vassal state of Britain; socialists and conservatives in France; the German coalitions of one variety or another, with the greens differentiating themselves largely as ultra-Atlanticists; and the Scandinavian centre-right and centre-left with few differences, competing in cravenness before the empire. In virtually every case the two- or three-party system morphed into an effective national government. A new market extremism came into play. The entry of capital into the most hallowed domains of social provision was regarded as a necessary reform. Private financial initiatives that punished the public sector became the norm and countries (such as France and Germany) that were seen as not proceeding fast enough in the direction of the neoliberal paradise were regularly denounced in the Economist and the Financial Times.
To question this turn, to defend the public sector, to argue in favour of state ownership of utilities or to challenge the fire sale of public housing was to be regarded as a dinosaur.
British politics has been governed by the consensus established by Margaret Thatcher during the locust decades of the 80s and 90s, since New Labour accepted the basic tenets of Thatcherism (its model was the New Democrats' embrace of Reaganism). Those were the roots of the extreme centre, which encompasses both centre-left and centre-right and exercises power, promoting austerity measures that privilege the wealthy, and backing wars and occupations abroad. President Obama is far from isolated within the Euro-American political sphere. New movements are now springing up at home, challenging political orthodoxies without offering one of their own. They're little more than a scream for help.
Respect is different. It puts forward a leftist social-democratic programme that challenges the status quo and is loud in its condemnation of imperial misdeeds. In other words, it is not frightened by politics. Its triumph in Bradford should force some to rethink their passivity and others to realise that there are ways in which the Occupiers of yesteryear can help to break the political impasse.

RESPECT & LEFT FRONT OF FRANCE: George Galloway and Jean-Luc Mélenchon expose a huge political gap

George Galloway and Jean-Luc Mélenchon expose a huge political gap

The rise of France's 'third man' and Bradford's by-election both show a left populism can win mass support in this crisis
Jean-Luc Melenchon
Jean-Luc Melenchon, Front de Gauche's candidate for the 2012 presidential election at a ‘march for the 6th republic' in Paris. Photograph: Benoit Tessier/Reuters
If next month's presidential election turns out as expected, France is heading for confrontation over the disastrous austerity drive now choking the economic life out of the eurozone. As in Britain, the economy is struggling to recover from the crash of 2008, loaded down with bad bank debts and heading for debilitating cuts and tax increases – but with the added burden of being locked into a German-orchestrated treaty that would make an economic stimulus illegal.
Since last month's atrocities in Toulouse, President Nicolas Sarkozy has improved his poll ratings a bit, pandering to xenophobes and Islamophobes and posturing as a security champion. But the most unpopular president in the 53 years of the French fifth republic is still at least six points behind his Socialist rival for the second-round runoff. Barring unforeseen upsets, a post-crisis incumbent is once again expected to be put to the sword and François Hollande elected president in May.
The bland Hollande is very far from the swivel-eyed radical he has been portrayed in the British media. "We opened up the markets to finance and privatisation," he boasted recently of the neoliberal-friendly Socialist governments of the 1990s. And he has backed the "golden" balanced budget rule required by the new fiscal treaty. But he has also promised to renegotiate the treaty, and supports a jobs programme paid for by bank and wealth taxes, along with a 75% tax rate on those earning more than a million euros a year – the stuff of George Osborne's nightmares.
What has transformed the contest has been the dramatic rise of Jean-Luc Mélenchon, former Socialist minister and candidate of the Front de Gauche (Left Front), who has gone from 6% to 15% in a few months to become the pivotal "third man" in the election. He has done so with an unashamedly populist campaign, targeting marginalised working class voters prey to the National Front, inspiring the young and non-voters and using the kind of street language alien to the magic circles of the French political establishment he abandoned.
The result, as the Economist reported, has been a "sensation". Last month Mélenchon called for a "civic insurrection" in front of 100,000 supporters in the Place de la Bastille in Paris. Backed by the communists, he has united almost the entire fractious French left behind him, calling for a cap on incomes over €360,000 a year, the dismantling of Nato, control of the banks, withdrawal from Afghanistan, a referendum on the EU treaty, European "disobedience" and a right for workers to take over plants threatened with closure.
Crucially, he has taken head-on the National Front's Muslim-baitingMarine Le Pen – who he denounced as a "filthy beast spitting hatred" – and overtaken her in the polls, helping to dispel in the process the threat that she might reach the runoff, as her father did in 2002. Even more tellingly, Mélenchon's success has pushed both main candidates to adopt more radical rhetoric on the economy: Hollande's 75% tax was a direct response to the Mélenchon phenomenon, while even Sarkozy now demands the rich pay more and toys with some EU disobedience of his own.
There is of course no read-across between a national French campaign engaging millions and last week's extraordinary election result in Bradford West, which saw George Galloway win a larger share of the vote than in any by-election since 1945, and with more votes than all the other parties put together. But some parallels are still striking.
In both cases a well-known former parliamentarian from the main centre-left party has used a charismatic radical left populism to mobilise alienated voters at the sharp end of austerity against a political elite that has failed to deliver for them for decades.
As is the case with Mélenchon, the metropolitan media so loathe Galloway that – with the exception of the Guardian – they failed even to report the growing tide of support for Respect during the campaign and have been largely unable to make sense of it since, dismissing the result as a one-off based on Galloway's larger than life personality and ability to "play the Muslim card".
It's true that Galloway's record on western-backed wars and occupations in the Muslim world, and his uncompromising defence of the most demonised community in the country, gave him a particular credibility in a constituency with a 37% Muslim population. And the call for withdrawal from Afghanistan is certainly popular with Muslims – though it's also supported by 70% of the entire country.
But the central thrust of Galloway's pitch in Bradford was in fact about cuts, tuition fees, unemployment, poverty and the decline of a city neglected and mismanaged by all the main parties. Respect campaigned as "real Labour" against New Labour, while Galloway declared he wanted to "drag Labour in a progressive direction". And far from dividing communities on ethnic or religious lines, he won majorities in every part of the constituency, including the mainly white areas.
Bradford was a vote against austerity and war, but also against a reviled me-too political establishment, local and national. That alienation has been growing for years, but as cuts are forced through and living standards squeezed further, expect more one-offs whenever the opportunity arises.
Such alienation is common across de-industrialised, deregulated Europe and can also be exploited by the right. It's a common assumption, based on the experience of the 1930s in particular, that the populist right is best placed to exploit the volatility and insecurity of slumps. But both the Mélenchon and Galloway campaigns, among others, are a reminder that the left can set the political pace if it's prepared to give a voice to people's real concerns.
In France, the only real danger of a Sarkozy win is if Hollande is not seen to be offering a genuine alternative. And the stronger the vote for Mélenchon in the election's first round, the more difficult it will be for Hollande to cave in when a clash with Angela Merkel, Brussels and the financial markets comes.
As for Britain, a Mélenchon or Bradford-style platform could not of course make up a winning national strategy. But both point to a yawning unrepresented political space. Either Ed Miliband is bolder in moving Labour away from a discredited inheritance and giving a powerful voice to what he calls its "battered base" – or others will fill it as the costs of crisis bite deeper.
Twitter: @SeumasMilne

Friday, 30 March 2012

RESPECT Statement on George Galloway Election Victory - "The Bradford Spring"

Thursday, 29 March 2012

THE BRADFORD SPRING: A STUNNING ELECTION VICTORY FOR THE PEOPLE OF BRADFORD WEST

http://www.respectparty.org/2012/03/stunning-election-victory-for-people-of.html

This Thursday, 29th March, the people of Bradford West sent a clear message to the leaders of  Labour, the Liberals and the Tories: "You can no longer take our votes for granted."

George won 18,341 votes beating Labour by over 10,000 votes.

In a stunning by-election victory, won over less than three short weeks, Respect's George Galloway has shaken up the political 'establishment.'  Labour's is vote down, the Tory is vote down and the Lib-Dems are reduced to the fringe. Surely the austerity agenda of the Con-Dem Coalition or the 'austerity-lite' of New Labour fails utterly to address the concerns of everyday people.

The Respect Party intends to take George's victory further in the local elections in May - Bradford deserves Respect in the council as well as at Westminster.

You can help us by joining the Respect Party today.


George Galloway, Respect: 18,341 (55.9%)

Imran Hussain, Labour: 8,201 (25%)

Jackie Whiteley, Conservative: 2,746 (8.4%)

Jeanette Sunderland, Lib Dem: 1,505 (4.6%)

Other: 2,021 (6.2%)

Turnout: 50.8%

Majority: 10,140

Thursday, 29 March 2012

George Galloway and RESPECT Destroy New Labour in Bradford West by-election

IN OUR OPINION IT IS CLEARLY FOR THE BEST THAT GEORGE STAYS SOUTH OF THE BORDER IN ENGLAND, WHERE HE ACTUALLY DOES SOME GOOD, INSTEAD OF BEING A STOOGE FOR BRITISH UNIONISM, NEW LABOUR AND THE BRIT-LEFT WRECKERS BACK HOME IN HOPEFULLY SOON-TO-B-INDEPENDENT SCOTLAND  - Real SDL.

George Galloway wins Bradford West by-election

Respect Party candidate George Galloway polled more than 18,000 votes
(SOURCE: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-17549388)

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Respect Party candidate George Galloway has taken the Bradford West parliamentary seat from Labour, winning the by-election by 10,100 votes.
Mr Galloway, expelled by Labour in 2003, said it was the "most sensational victory" in by-election history. He received 18,341 votes - a 56% share.
He said his victory represented a "total rejection" of the major parties.
At the 2010 General Election, Labour's Marsha Singh, who resigned on health grounds, won with a majority of 5,763 .
The party had held the West Yorkshire seat since 1974, except for a brief period in the 1980s when the sitting MP defected to the SDP.
Labour candidate Imran Hussein came second with 8,201 votes as the party's share of the vote was 20% down on its 2010 figure.
'Bradford spring'
Conservative candidate Jackie Whiteley was third, with 2,746 votes. Jeanette Sunderland, of the Liberal Democrats, secured 1,505 votes.
Mr Galloway, who co-founded the anti-war Respect Party after being expelled by Labour because of his opposition to the Iraq war, said the result represented the "Bradford Spring".
He said the "mammoth majority" and "mammoth vote" represented a "total rejection" of the three major parties in the British political system.
Mr Galloway urged his former party to turn away "decisively" from the course set by former Prime Minister Tony Blair.

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It is Labour that have been wiped out tonight - it must be a huge humiliation for Ed Miliband and his team”
Kris HopkinsConservative MP
He said Labour "must stop imagining that working people and poor people have no option but to support them if they hate the Tory and Liberal Democrat coalition partners.
"They have to stop supporting illegal, bloody, costly foreign wars because one of the reasons why they were so decisively defeated this evening is that the public don't believe that they have atoned for their role in the invasion and occupation of other people's countries and the drowning of those countries in blood."
Mr Galloway urged his former colleagues to "stop taking their supporters for granted" and "unite the coalition" it once had.
The Respect politician was mobbed by supporters as he left the count.
Labour's candidate did not make a speech after the results were announced, but Labour MP Toby Perkins said the Bradford West result was "desperately disappointing".
He attributed Mr Galloway's success partly to his celebrity status from having appeared on TV reality show Celebrity Big Brother which he said had been "a very significant factor".
Mr Perkins said: "I think frankly there wasn't a lot the other parties could do about it. [Voters had] seen him on Big Brother.
"They wanted him on their streets and now they've got it, and let's hope that he lives up to the promise that he's made to them and actually delivers on the optimism that surrounds his campaign."
'Lone, loud voice'
A Liberal Democrat spokesman said the party was "clearly disappointed" with the result.
"While we were always expecting to fight for fourth in this election, it is quite astonishing for Labour to lose this seat and the Conservatives see such a drop," he said.
Kris Hopkins, the Conservative MP for nearby Keighley, said his party had not won Bradford West for 42 years, so "there were not high expectations".
"It is Labour that have been wiped out tonight. It must be a huge humiliation for Ed Miliband and his team," he added.
BBC Yorkshire political editor Len Tingle said there had effectively been two campaigns in the seat - one with the three main UK parties focused on the economy and jobs, and the other run by Mr Galloway which had his party's anti-war message at its forefront.
George GallowayGeorge Galloway (r) co-founded the Respect Party after being expelled by Labour in 2003
BBC political correspondent Chris Mason said there had been a feeling that Mr Galloway might split the left-wing vote, but he had not been expected to defeat Labour.
Our correspondent said the margin of the victory was "extraordinary", adding that it was not simply a matter of the Labour Party losing to Mr Galloway but "being thumped" by him and his party.
He predicted that, once in the House of Commons, Mr Galloway would be "a lone voice but a very loud one".
It is the second time Mr Galloway has upset the political odds - he pulled off one of the results of the 2005 General Election when he overturned a large Labour majority in London's Bethnal Green and Bow to become the Respect Party's first MP.
His win in Bradford West is a remarkable comeback after disappointing showings at the 2010 General Election and the 2011 Scottish Parliament elections.
The outcome was being closely watched by all the parties as a snapshot of voter opinion, following last week's Budget and ahead of council and mayoral elections next month.
The Conservatives came second in the constituency in 2010, on a 65% turnout, ahead of the Liberal Democrats in third. Respect was fifth in 2010.
Prior to Bradford West, there had been five by-elections in England and Scotland since the start of the current Parliament - Oldham and Saddleworth, Barnsley Central, Leicester South, Inverclyde and Feltham and Heston - with Labour retaining all five seats.
The full result (with vote share and change since 2010 in brackets):
George Galloway (Respect) 18,341 (55.89%, +52.83%)
Imran Hussain (Lab) 8,201 (24.99%, -20.36%)
Jackie Whiteley (C) 2,746 (8.37%, -22.78%)
Jeanette Sunderland (LD) 1,505 (4.59%, -7.08%)
Sonja McNally (UKIP) 1,085 (3.31%, +1.31%)
Dawud Islam (Green) 481 (1.47%, -0.85%)
Neil Craig (D Nats) 344 (1.05%)
Howling Laud Hope (Loony) 111 (0.34%)