Survey reveals shift to the left Print E-mail
By Matt Wells   
Wednesday, 13 June 2007

A recent poll of Labour Party members, published in the Sunday Times (see http://www.yougov.com/) shows why the New Labour clique around Gordon Brown were determined to keep left challenger John McDonnell off the ballot paper.

On a sample taken of Party members and levy paying Trade Unionists, the survey shows that both are significantly to the left of the leadership and in light of this it is unsurprising that the careerists running for Deputy have suddenly found their left credentials

68 % of party member and 75 % of levy payers want Brown to publicly distance himself from Bush's Middle East policy. On the domestic front, 66 % and 75 % would back a new higher rate of income tax for those earning over £ 100,000 a year. The Blairite public services agenda does not appear popular with 58 % and 67 % wanting a ‘drastic rethink/slowdown' of ‘reforms' carried out in Health, Education and other services. Nor surprisingly 58 % and 66 % would back renationalisation of the railways and there is a clear lack of support for renewal of Trident which only receives 37 % and 38 % in the poll.

Of course statistics can be used to prove anything. The Brown camp would point to the poll's finding that their man garnered an impressive 82 % and 74 % against Mc Donnell's 18 % and 26 %. But this does not reveal the full picture. There has been a rise in McDonnell's support over the last month from 9 % and 10 %. And this was despite a virtual media blackout. Had the PLP machinery allowed a contest it is arguable this would have risen still further. All sorts of tricks were used, including phoning one MP in the small hours, as the deadline for nominations approached with threats that his career would be over if he didn't nominate Brown immediately!

Sectarians point to this as proof that the Labour Party is finished, that the Capitalist carpet-baggers have won. This shows a lack of faith in the power of working people to effect change. Brown was nominated by the largest Trade Unions. Pressure from those union leaders would have ensured a contest. The socialists outside Labour argue that the unions have no influence over the Labour Party or Brown, so that must mean it is time to leave Labour.

The reason Trade Union leaders have no influence over the Party or Brown is that they are not prepared to wield the power that stands behind them in the millions of trade union members. These unions could have forced their sponsored MPs to put the interests of working people before their immediate career concerns and nominate McDonnell. But the union leaders were not prepared to. The pressure from the trade union rank and file has not yet reaches a stage where this can happen at present but it is bound to do so in the future. The language being used by the deputy leadership candidates shows what will happen if there is a real groundswell in the unions and wider society.

Even Harriet Harman, who is probably one of the safest candidates for the Brown camp sees fit in her election statement to tell members how she ‘has fought for progressive causes...championed the rights of working people, fighting alongside trade unions to win advances that have changed people's lives for the better'. This is coming from one of two candidates without a single nomination by a union (the other is Hilary Benn). In her address, she has to go back as far as the 1979 Grunwick dispute citing her work as a lawyer to bolster her point.

Her appeal to Labour's traditional supporters is clearly an attempt to assure she wins the contest which will, unlike the real contest, be decided by members. Though undoubtedly motivated by career considerations this points towards the potential for major change inside the Party if and when pressure is brought to bear from below. The language being used in the candidates campaign material suggests that Labour MPs are beginning to wake up to the fact that there is a real possibility that the Party could lose the next election. For some this means losing their careers and all the trappings that go with life as an MP.

Under certain conditions a seed will grow. The New Labourites think that they have seen off the left in the Party, perhaps for the last time. And many on the left outside the Party seem to agree with them! This is because they fail to understand the processes at work. The McDonnell campaign is a point of reference for a left opposition which under certain conditions is bound to develop in the future. Like a seed it will grow and our critics on the right and left will be left with no explanation.

 

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A national minimum wage of at least two-thirds of the average wage. £8.00 an hour as a step toward this goal, with no exemptions.

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