The FibDems have come up with a seemingly
perfect alibi for the notorious betrayal of their promise to abolish the
tuition fees that the previous Labour government had imposed: that they were in a coalition government and this
meant that they had to give up some of their promised policies in order to reach
an accommodation with their partners in government.
Now that coalition governments seem to be
the order of the day this is a get-out-of-jail card that all parties can play.
And seem to be preparing to do so already. At least this is what is suggested by the
increasing extravagance of their promises as the election campaign has gone on.
They seem to know they will have a ready-made excuse for not honouring them.
Using the need to compromise with coalition
partners as an alibi, however, is not one that will hold up. Most election
promises cannot be honoured even if there is a single party government with a
decent majority. That’s because they are promises to make capitalism work in a
way that it simply cannot be made to.
An adequately funded NHS and affordable
housing are examples. Such reforms cost money, money that can only come in the
end, in however roundabout a way, from profits. But profits are the life-blood
of the capitalist economic system. Which is why they have to be given priority
over meeting people’s needs adequately. And why governments always end up according
this priority, despite what they may have promised.
The only way a government could, for
instance, get more affordable houses built (apart, that is, by giving people
more money to spend, but nobody would
believe any party that promised that) would be to subsidise this. Houses are
built by profit-seeking companies and these are not going to invest in building
houses to sell to people who cannot afford to buy them. Left to themselves, they
invest in building houses for people who can afford to; these days, upmarket
houses and flats for the better off, whether bought to live in, rent out or
leave empty as a speculative financial asset.
The money to subsidise affordable housing –
or an adequate health service or reducing inequality or eliminating child
poverty or any of the other laudable promises we’ve been hearing – would have
to come either out of taxation, which will ultimately fall on profits, or from
borrowing from the rich, which will incur legally-binding interest charges
which will have to be paid out of taxation.
Any government which reduced take-home
profits in this way to promote a better life for people would provoke an
economic slowdown. Which would create other problems for people. It’s a
lose-lose situation but one that is built-in to capitalism.
Coalition politics won’t end this. All it
will do is provide parties with another specious excuse for not honouring
promises which can’t be honoured anyway. Just wait and see.
The Ten Candidates To Vote For
Jacqueline Shodeke - Brighton Kemptown;
Howard Pilott - Brighton Pavilion;
Robert Cox – Canterbury;
Steve Colborn – Easington;
Andy Thomas - Folkestone and Hythe;
Bill Martin - Islington North;
Kevin Parkin - Oxford East;
Mike Foster - Oxford West and Abingdon
Brian Johnson - Swansea West;
Danny Lambert – Vauxhall.
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