From the January 1980 issue of the Socialist Standard
Tony Benn may be the next Labour Prime Minister of Great
Britain. Almost alone among the Labour leaders, sunk in a gloom as they are
after their party's defeat last May, he offers a plan for Labour's future, with
an optimism that they will one day once again get power over British
capitalism.
So we were surprised when he agreed to be interviewed by the
Socialist Standard about his policies and attitudes as he expresses them in his
recent book Arguments for Socialism. Defenders of capitalism are notoriously
difficult to persuade to match their case against ours. The interview (which
Tony Benn preferred to call a debate) lasted an hour and our published account
of it has needed to be abridged.
In truth, Benn's plan for Labour's revival is little more
than a paper thin assumption that, with a few constitutional changes, his party
will be able basically to alter its nature. It will, he hopes, be able to throw
off its past as a party which has run capitalism firmly in the interests of the
capitalist class and begin to run society in the interests of the majority.
There is no evidence to support this assumption; indeed after every electoral
failure Labour tries to bolster its confidence by telling itself, and us, that
it can and will change.
Benn's political ideas are basically that if there are enough
small reforms imposed upon capitalism the system will, in a way which has yet
to be explained, suddenly stop being capitalism and become socialism. In the
case of Benn, even this shaky argument might have been a little stronger if he
had been able to give any idea of what socialism is or even to know whether the
Labour Party stood for socialism.
He claims that reforming capitalism is "doing
something", as opposed to socialists who are "pure" and
"impotent". This is a familiar, not to say exhausted, argument - one
which continues to exist only because those. like Benn, who put it forward do
so by ignoring reality and experience.
The working class have had plenty of time to become familiar
with Labour governments and with Labour politicians who - no matter what the
effect of their anti-working class policies, no matter how obvious their
failures to eliminate capitalism 's problems tirelessly assure us that a vote
for Labour is a vote for a better society. This, again, flies in the face of
reality.
One final point. Benn, as we have said, is a leading
politician But his justifications for capitalism, and his objections to the
principles of revolutionary socialism which are uncompromisingly put forward by
the Socialist Party of Great Britain, were exactly the same as those we
confront all the time, wherever we are and whenever we state the case for the
new society of common ownership.
Socialist Standard: You claim to be a socialist and to stand
for something which you describe in your book Arguments for Socialism as
democratic socialism. Now the Socialist Party of Great Britain also claims to
stand for socialism and because of this we are hostile to the Labour Party. So
it is clear that we and the Labour Party differ about socialism and what it is.
Could you tell us how you define socialism?
Tony Benn: I suppose there are many schools of socialism in
this country. There is the Labour Party, which is not particularly
ideologically united; there is the Communist Party, there is the New Communist
Party, the Socialist Workers' Party, the International Marxist Group. There are
an enormous number of schools of socialist thought and I suppose that
discussing socialism is like discussing religion. I think that if you look at
British socialism you have to see it in two ways: first of all you have to see
those sects of socialist thought, all of which are very valuable, as a means of
illuminating what is happening. Then you have to ask yourself a second
question: how does the working class movement in Britain mobilise itself for
social change by defending its interests against those hostile to it, and how
does it secure advances on limited fronts or major fronts? The Labour Party
comes in the second category. It is the instrument of the British working class
movement but there is no ideological test in the Labour Party. There are people
in the Labour Party who in other countries would be Christian Democrats and
there are others who in other countries might be communists I suppose — or
anything in between and beyond. So the Labour Party has never purported to
stand for a particular school of thought and to that extent it lacks the purity
the SPGB would like to see. It's an instrument.
Socialist Standard: That doesn't answer our question of how
you define socialism: you don't define socialism in terms of a basic change in
society.
Tony Benn: In the preface to the book I identify some of the
influences in my life that brought me to a view that I describe as socialist
and only I can decide how I'm to be classified. But the influences that were
present in my life have driven me to conclusions that the structure of society
needs to be changed in such a way as to bring about a fundamental and
irreversible shift in the balance of wealth and power in favour of working
people and their families. If you want to put it in the classic language:
"To secure for the workers by hand and by brain the full fruits of their
industry and the most equitable distribution thereof as may be obtainable on
the basis of the common ownership of the means of production, distribution and
exchange."
Socialist Standard: Could we move on from there and ask you
about a specific feature about society which is drawn from your book. The
actual statement is: "Investors there will always be." You follow
this up by saying " . . . but there is no valid reason why the investors'
money should give them first claim to control over those who invest their
lives." Now socialists would argue about the detail of that statement at
some length but for the moment we would like to ask you how you would reconcile
the existence of investors — which necessarily means other people who work to
produce the yield on the investments, in other words exploitation, profit
producing — with a system of society which, in any rate in part, is defined in
Clause Four as "common ownership"?
Tony Benn: Well, if you have savings in the Post Office
Savings Bank are you an investor? If you have money put aside in a pension fund
are you an investor? If you are a borrower for the purpose of buying your own
house, is there anything wrong in borrowing money that you may yourself have
invested in a Building Society? I don't think that raises the question of
socialism at all: the right of people to put aside from their current earnings
money that they wish to invest. What really matters is whether that gives them
command over the livelihood of others and that is the key difference, as I
understand it. I've never heard the argument put forward by socialists that
it's wrong for somebody to put aside money from their earnings to provide for
their holiday or their retirement. It seems to me to be perfectly compatible
with socialism.
Socialist Standard: We don't think, when you were talking
about "investors", you mean people with small amounts of savings in
something like the Post Office. You have to draw a distinction between people
in pension funds and the sort of people you're referring to in your book when
you say you came to the realisation that banks and the big financial
institutions actually controlled what you did, rather than the other way round.
Does your answer mean that you do envisage a socialist society as having
investors?
Tony Benn: I think the question really would entirely
depend, in this context, upon whether the financial institutions were publicly
owned, which I think they ought to be, or not. If you have the pension funds in
public ownership and those pension funds then put their money into a publicly
owned industry like Leyland for the purpose of expanding motor car production
they are investors. What I am saying is that neither the state investor, nor
the private investor should have the power to determine matters of industrial
policy that are properly the concern of those who work in those firms. I've
never heard the argument used that socialism would abolish the concept of
investment, because investment is the transfer of surplus into future
production or into some other socially desirable purpose. The question is, who
does it and what are the consequences of it?
Socialist Standard: Socialists—members of the SPGB—would say
that your vision, which you call socialism, looks very much like capitalism. In
your book you indicate that you think that governments, including Labour
governments, failed to affect problems like poverty; in fact you mention
something like "we aim to eliminate poverty" and you say a couple of
lines later "This is a very old aim." So if you're arguing that
Labour governments have failed to eliminate poverty and other problems like
unemployment which you draw attention to in your book, do you not think this is
a basic failure, something to do with the capitalist system of society rather
than with personalities in the Labour Party?
Tony Benn: Oh, yes. I don't think it's got anything to do
with personalities in the Labour Party. In 1959 the Labour Party was persuaded
to abandon socialism on the basis that capitalism would always give you growth
and welfare, full employment and so on. That was one of the features which
explained the failure. Other features you could go into in greater detail, but
the main one was that we abandoned the attempt to make fundamental changes. But
that no more shakes my confidence in the Labour movement, as the instrument of
social change, than a defeat in a general election shakes my confidence in the
validity of the ballot as means of determining who should be in power.
Socialist Standard: The argument, surely, is that the Labour
Party has been in government roughly half the time since World War II and by
your own arguments this "fundamental and irreversible shift in power"
has not happened. We can try and put it a bit further; it won't with a Labour
government, whichever Labour government, whether it's your brand or Callaghan's
brand or whatever. You're not actually trying to affect the fundamental basis
on which society works. For example, nationalisation is one of the things the
Labour Party has always taken Clause Four to mean — it was intended to shift
the balance of power and it hasn't done so in the industries which have so far
been nationalised. You've got to be responsible for the Labour Party; your
record since 1945 is one of, on your own definition, somewhat large failures.
Tony Benn: If we are asked to justify our record, as we are,
then I must ask the SPGB what it has got to show for its record of great purity
and but little influence and political impotence. However we make changes it
will take time and we have to be both impatient and patient at the same time.
These changes cannot be carried through overnight.
Socialist Standard: Could we take you up on the point of
unemployment? In your book the conclusion you come to, having outlined the
problem pretty adequately, is to say that we should not lay the blame for what
has happened at the door of any individual or any group of individuals. A
couple of sentences later you say "These contradictions are fundamental to
the economic system under which we operate." Now that's what socialists
are talking about. We are saying that problems like unemployment are not
susceptible to being reformed out of existence. We argue that a basic change in
society is needed.
Tony Benn: It's not due to personalities but it is due to
something being fundamentally wrong. If you say that reform had never secured
change, how do you explain, for example, the very substantial change that did
occur when the Combination Acts were repealed viz-a-viz the role of the trade
unions—or the impact upon society, which has been very profound, through the
extension of the franchise? I think that to say that reform is always wrong
because what is needed is fundamental change entirely misses the point that, to
be effective, reform has to be fundamental and this becomes a semantic
argument.
Socialist Standard: First of all we don't think that your
reforms are actually doing what you claim they are doing. To put it another
way, if the Labour Party got all that you claim it would like to do, that would
not be fundamental change. Things are changing every day — there's been
fantastic changes, some of which the Labour Party has helped, some of which
it's held back. You talk about unemployment, say you have got to do something
about it but you can't; ultimately unemployment is one of those inevitable
problems which keep cycling up and down in this society. This is what's
happening now, it happened last winter and the Labour Party, even at its best,
is not going to stop that.
Tony Benn: That is a view, which is very common on the ultra-left, based upon
pessimism — that doing anything is a waste of time because you're bound to
fail. In some circumstances, as now, we are in a mainly defensive posture, to
prevent the destruction of the Welfare State and the rise of unemployment to
two or three million. It would be a remarkable achievement for the Labour
movement. Our first function, as a representative of the British working class
movement, is defensive. At the same time we have then to organise and explain
and analyse and mobillise and then win a majority for a change.. Now you can
say "If you do all that it's simply not worth doing. It won't do anything
you describe." Well that form of pessimism feeds sectarianism because
having dismissed the entire Labour movement in which the hopes of the British
working class have been put, in one shape or form, for a century, it justifies
the view that you should like in a little world of purity and impotence. I'm
driven to say that although I don't think you are either pure or impotent.
Socialist Standard: You accuse of being pessimistic; we
would say that what you are doing is confusing, creating a fog, because you're
building up hopes of all sorts of people who are desperate for a change yet you
can't put them in a situation where they can bring about that change.
Tony Benn: What I'm saying is that while the present
structure of economic and industrial power remains the problems of our society
are inevitable and until we open our minds to a different concept of society we
can have Labour governments in office but never Labour governments in power.
And we can have Labour governments in power and never have socialism in
practice.
Socialist Standard: We urge the working class to learn from
their experiences and one thing which is signally clear is that at the moment
they are not learning from their experiences. In particular, they don't learn
from their experiences of government. You mention the 1945 Labour government;
well you know the sort of policy that government carried out. For example they
took the working class of this country into the Korean war, they immediately
imposed an attack upon working class living standards, they behaved in the
accepted way of any capitalist government. And that has been the history of all
Labour governments up to now. Now the socialist attitude is that the working
class should learn from their mistakes. Could we tie that up with a point about
fundamental change needing consent; we argue that in order to change society
there has to be a socialist consciousness. Now do you think that when a Labour
government does this sort of thing — when it attacks trade unions, for example,
when it attacks working class living standards, when it prosecutes the wars of
capitalism, when, in other words, it behaves pretty well like any Conservative
government — do you not think that to call that socialism, or to say it has
something to offer the working class, does anything but raise consciousness? It
causes confusion.
Tony Benn: I draw the same distinction as between the
organisation of the church and the christian message, which has survived,
despite the organisation of the church over a long period. I don't regard any
human organisation as being capable by its nature of reflecting in a pure form
the socialism the Labour Party professes. What I'm saying is that the Labour
Party is the only instrument by which socialism can be introduced. Socialist
governments have had some successes and some failures. I've never argued that
Labour governments are socialist in themselves but they are the instrument
through which socialist ideas can be introduced.
Socialist Standard: It looks to us just the opposite. If you
didn't know the names, didn't know who was who, you wouldn't be able to tell
the difference. If you dropped from Mars at the time of the last Labour
government and heard Callaghan last winter, how would you tell that that was
supposed to be the instrument for introducing socialism? You are asserting what
you want to believe; you've got your eyes closed to what is really going on in
the Labour Party.
Tony Benn: Well that's perfectly fair comment and criticism.
If I'm asked to justify the Labour Party I will look at the resolutions that
have been passed by the party Conferences. Those of them that have been
implemented embrace real and fundamental socialist concepts. Nobody is going to
persuade me that the National Health Service was not a fundamental change in
the opportunity and access the people have to good health. The comprehensive
schools do represent a fundamental change in the concept of education.
Legislation designed to advance trade unionism has fundamentally altered power
relationships at work. Now those are only three examples. But to say that the
whole thing is a fraud and has been intended to confuse and divert people is to
do less than justice to the common sense of the people who support the Labour
Party.
Socialist Standard: Do you think, then, that whatever comes
out of the current enquiry into the organisation of the Labour Party, a Labour
government would ever respond to a decision by your conference which it saw as
being against the interests of British capitalism? For example, if the
Conference passed another resolution to abandon unilaterally British nuclear
weapons, weapons which a Labour government thought, as all Labour governments
have thought up to now, are very necessary to British capitalism — do you
really think they would scrap the weapons?
Tony Benn: Well if you're saying that democracy is impotent
in the Labour Party, and is destined to be impotent in the Labour Party, you're
saying that democracy is impotent everywhere. If the Labour Party, by changing
its Constitution so that its leader is accountable, its policy is determined by
its members, its MPs can be reselected — if you are saying that all those
things are destined to fail, you are saying that there is something inherently
wrong about the Labour Party, that even if it adopted your policy en bloc it
could never be capable of implementing it. And this again is a form of
institutional pessimism which I simply can't accept.
Socialist Standard: If the Labour Party adopted our policy
en bloc it wouldn't then be the Labour Party — it would be a different party,
that would stand for socialism. You see, the SPGB says — we want socialism. We
define it very clearly, we talk about a world common ownership society with
free access, voluntary co-operation. That's the society we are after. We are
not a "broad church", we are not a broad movement, we are after
socialism and nothing else. Now you say you want fundamental change but on the
other hand you also say you want what the Labour Party wants. Now a lot of
members of the Labour Party, as you know, are not for fundamental change at
all. They are for very small reforms because that is the way they see the
Labour Party making progress. But we would like you to be specific about what
fundamental changes you want.
Tony Benn: Well I'll do the best I can, but I will be
referring to policies that have been adopted by the Annual Conference which
are: that the crisis of investment has got to be resolved by diverting the
nation's savings to re-equip the nation's industry in circumstances that are
accompanied by, and indeed promoted by, expansion of public services. We want a
society where all those who exercise power are accountable to those over whom
they exercise it. Now you might say that's a very generalised phrase but it's
no more generalised than saying we want a world full of good people to work
with each other because that's the "second coming". In any
circumstances I can foresee for the next century or more, any little bits of
socialism you create will be operating within a hostile sea of capitalism or
fascism or international control of some kind or another. To reject the idea of
piecemeal changes because there has not been a total change can become an
excuse for not even trying. I'm arguing that socialism is always going to be
piecemeal advance towards a change because you do not have it within your
capacity to make the big change at once, which could not in any case be made
without winning people's hearts and minds to the benefits of little changes, and
that has got to be done in other countries as well. I will accept that your
dream world is broader than my dream world but my dream world is perfectly
capable of encompassing yours. I don't quite understand how your dream world
would help me in trying to deal with the day to day problems of the people I
try to represent.
Socialist Standard: The case for socialism is not a matter
of pessimism or a dream; at the matter it is a matter of diagnosis. In
answering the question about fundamental change you promptly started to talk
about piecemeal change and that really is the whole kernel of it. There have
been centuries of attempts at piecemeal changes — some of them you discuss in
your book — and yet capitalism today is as terrible a system to live under as it
ever was. The working class still have tremendous problems and there are still
people like yourself who are putting forward policies to deal with them. Now
our diagnosis of that situation is that capitalism has outlived its usefulness
and all organisations — and we include them all in this — are going to fail if
they don't recognise that basic fact. So we say, as part of our diagnosis, the
remedy comes next: a fundamental change in society, a social revolution, and
that is something the Labour Party has never stood for.
Tony Benn: All I'm saying is quite simply that if you are
going to make an advance you have got to be prepared to tackle problems on a
piecemeal basis, by which I mean discrete areas that you change.
Socialist Standard: I'm glad you're not a doctor. I wouldn't
go to a doctor who said that, when I had a problem, tackle that problem just as
it comes up. We are saying that the logic of your argument leads, not to
socialism but to different forms of capitalism. By establishing socialist society
we will not be chasing after all these little problems one after another, which
is what you advocate. We will be actually changing the society which causes the
problems.
Tony Benn: But you skip the whole problem of how you create
a socialist society. You simply say — "If things were different, you would
have a better life." It is no good me going to somebody and saying
"If things were different you wouldn't be out of work, your mother
wouldn't have to wait two years for an operation". They want to know, how
do we make it different? And frankly, if I as a minister approached the
problems that way, there would have been no interest at all. If people simply
went to ministers and heard this interesting lecture about how under socialism
it would be different and then were sent away with our problems round our
necks, it would be a disaster.
Socialist Standard: You are saying that a socialist can't
exist in a Labour government, which is absolutely correct. Or in the Labour
Party.
Tony Benn: Well, anyway I've enjoyed it very much. A stern
cross-examination.
3 comments:
The Labour Party didn't get Benn, they got New Labour and Tony Blair. The problem has to do with the perception amongst the working class that capitalism is the best of all possible systems of wealth production and that the wealthier the capitalists become, the wealthier the workers will become. On a psychological level, this is a social form of sado-masochism. On the level of political-economy, it is true that some workers will become better off as their capitalist employers become richer; but that has more to do with the price of more educated labour power fetching a higher price and the investment of some of those higher wages into real estate speculation.
What can i add to your comment? Again you express yourself very well and not many visitors to the blog would disagree with what you wrote.
I think we need to ask ourselves the question how can we effectively present our case and counter those we disagree fundamentally with and not get accused of sectarianism, as has happened on another of our blogs. Should we cease clearly stating home-truths and tactfully water down our critiques?
Someone has asked me, if they can "see", this? YFS
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