As socialists we believe that only by the whole of the
working class ridding ourselves of the employers, their policies, their parties
and their system, can people build socialism and begin to take control their
lives. Things do not happen automatically, but only by people understanding the
actual conditions and consciously fighting to change both the conditions and
themselves. No existing British political party other than ourselves in the
Socialist Party represent working people’s real interests and ambitions.
The current discussion on the European Union and whether to
stay or go has become one of the most heated arguments taking place. The
strategists of European capital see America, Asia and China as economic rivals.
Thus to project themselves on a world scale they must band together. From being
a source of the development of society, capitalism and the nation state have
become a terrible drag and impediment to the full and harmonious development of
the productive potential. The capitalists are attempting on a capitalist basis
to try and overcome the basic problems with which they are faced. The debate
over EU finds the capitalist class profoundly divided.
British capitalism is always searching for a panacea. The
CBI and Big Business are the most intent and determined to keep Britain in the
EU. The City of London, banking, insurance and transportation interests, which
have a decisive say in British foreign policy, hope that staying in the EU will
maintain the primacy of their interests. They see rich pickings ahead and that is
their “interest” and they care little if others go to the wall. Everything they
do starts from the capitalist premise. They see the exit camp as simply just
nationalistic myopia, with “national sovereignty”, “the nation”—with all the myths
of capitalism of the past finding echoes in their propaganda. “Let us have a
rich and sovereign Britain”, is what the Brexit supporters are saying. Proponents
of withdrawal argue that Britain could have its cake and eat it outside the EU.
They claim that British companies could participate in the EU, exporting to the
Continent and continuing to attract inward investment. At the same time, they
can enjoy the benefits of their involvement in the rest of the world economy,
trading with and investing in North America and the Far East. A powerful group
of capitalists who back the Euro-sceptics are those who represent off-shore
interests – firms which though based in Britain operate on a global rather than
a European basis. This hard anti-European wing of British capital is
undoubtedly a minority of the ruling class, but its right-wing media power greatly
amplifies its voice.
The stay in the EU
camp make great play about “the terms” of Cameron’s new deal. The terms the British
ruling class are getting are the best they can get in their interests, given
the weakness of British capitalism at the present time. It was a bargain
between gangsters, each striving for some advantage over the other. Britain is
probably already the most internationalised of the major capitalisms. Because
British capital’s interests are more globally dispersed than those of its main
competitors, it is harder for the ruling class to arrive at a consensus about
what line they should take over Europe.
Everything is forgotten in a blind, unenlightened debate.
However, the Socialist Party can see that if there is no solution inside the EU,
there is less of a solution outside it. Both pro- or anti-EU campaigners, there
must be placed the class internationalism and cross-border solidarity of the
working class. The problems facing the working class can only be solved by
socialism. There is no magical way in which this issue can be avoided. Workers
everywhere must engage in struggle against the common enemy—capital, by
expropriating the ruling class. We call upon our fellow workers in different
countries to stand shoulder to shoulder against the phony internationalism of
supporting one’s own ruling class in any temporary arrangements they make with
the ruling class of other countries.
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