The dominant section of the capitalist class in Britain want
to stay in the EU, but they have a political problem. Their representatives, in
the Tory Party committed themselves to holding a referendum on the question. This
was unwise, from their point of view, as this is to delegate a decision of
vital interest to them to a population of workers that is largely uninformed on
the issue and whose heads have been filled over the years with patriotic
nonsense for other purposes. It is by no means certain that they will win the
referendum, though they probably will if they put the media organs they control
into top gear. Cameron and others are now presently warning workers that
leaving the European Union is a "leap into the dark" with unknowable
consequences. Martin Temple, the chairman of the manufacturers’ organisation
EEF, warned to leave the European Union would amount to a step into an “abyss
of uncertainty and risk.”
The main argument put forward by the anti-EU section of the
capitalist class is that it involves a loss of "our" sovereignty. It
may well involve a loss of their sovereignty but the rest of us
have no "sovereignty" to lose. Certainly, we have the vote and we can
use it to elect politicians to Westminister. But neither Parliament nor the
government can control the way the economy works. They can try but if they go
against the profit logic of the system they just make things worse. The most
they can successfully do is go along with this logic. They emphasise
Parliament's "constitutional right" to control the economy,
completely ignoring the fact that experience has shown this to be a purely
paper right. The capitalist economy works according to certain economic laws
which no government or legislative body can over-ride. So the argument about
sovereignty is not really about what the constitution may or may not say. It's
about the effective power that a capitalist state can exercise within the
capitalist economy.
Capitalism has always existed within a framework of
competing states, none of which is strong enough to impose its will on all the
others. States, as weapons in the hands of rival groups of capitalists,
intervene to further the interests of the capitalists that control them. They
do this by using state power to set up protected markets, raw materials
sources, trade routes and investment outlets. In normal times their weapons are
tariffs, taxes, quotas, export rebates and other economic measures. The extent
to which a capitalist state can distort the world market in favour of its
capitalists depends both on its industrial muscle. In the dog-eat-dog world of
capitalism might is right. Over the years capitalism has become more and more
international, more and more globalised. This has tended to reduce the margin
of manoeuvre open to states, i.e. has reduced their "sovereignty". The
sovereignty argument is really an argument within the capitalist class as to
whether they should give up some of the might of their state to be able to
benefit from the greater might of a larger grouping. In the capitalist world,
just as much as for workers bargaining over wages, "unity is
strength". The less stupid capitalists are circumspect. They realise that
Britain can't really go it alone, but has to be associated with some larger
grouping.
As socialists, we don't take sides in this inter-capitalist
argument. We don't support one section of the capitalist class or the other,
and we don't have any illusions about the "sovereign power" of
Parliament to pass reformist legislation that can make capitalism work in the
interest of the exploited class of wage and salary earners. Capitalism just
cannot be reformed to work in this way; so transferring some of the powers of
the House of Commons to a European Parliament in Strasbourg makes no
difference. Whether or not the British capitalist class stay in the EU is not a
working-class issue. Let the capitalist class and their parties and supporters
settle the matter for themselves. In the meantime we continue to campaign for
the establishment of a world society without frontiers where the resources of
the Earth are the common heritage of humanity and are used to produce the
things we need to live and to enjoy life for us to take directly.
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