Ireland’s prime minister, Enda Kenny announced that the
Republic’s general election will take place on the last Friday of this month.
Probably the best political pundits, the bookies, make Kenny the favourite to
be returned as Taoiseach, allaying fears of a Syriza-style leftist government. The
Irish Labour party, faces accusations of betraying its working class base by
agreeing to austerity cuts and the implementation of water charges and resulted
in the two Irish anti-austerity groups Anti-Austerity Alliance (AAA) and People
Before Profit (PBP) joining forces to create a new left political party in
Ireland with plans to run candidates in the election. The
plan is to to campaign against austerity cuts, water privatization, and
abolishing for low- and middle-earners an income tax known as the Universal
Social Charge. Gerry Adams’ Sinn Fein have in effect stolen many of these
issues. "This is a choice between whether you want a society that is fair
and equal or more of the same," Gerry Adams, president of the leftist Sinn
Fein party told reporters. "It's not about an economic recovery, it's
about a social recovery."
People are noticing that 'the way things are' isn’t working
and nobody takes the blame for letting them get so bad but the people are told
that they will have to pay the cost and increasingly people are saying NO! The
socialist position is that the working class need a political party to contest
political power. The working class must organize politically in their own
defence.
If the ‘Shinners’ win
the next election, with their anti-austerity agenda, they are going to have to
make good all their promises, and that means governing within capitalism. They
will find that the requirement to attract funds for all activities they want
the state to fund means in some sense either accommodating to the markets or
international bodies. Another party will come along and capitalise on the
discontent with their policies (and, again, the advantage lies with the
established parties with networks of support, it is unlikely to be a swing to the
left that will follow them). Those political parties who want to keep
capitalism can deliver reforms that don't destroy capitalism, and those who
propose reforms that would destroy capitalism would be instantly seen to be
proposing the "impossible".
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