Interviewed on BBC Radio 4 on 17 January Tony Blair explained
the dilemma the UK capitalist class face. He
pointed out that for the past 40 or so years their governments (even
under Thatcher) had pursued the policy of being
part of an Europe-wide single market (i.e.
a market with common regulations and not just a tariff-free
trading area) and that they were now completely
integrated into it in terms of export markets and supply chains.
They could withdraw but this would cause disruption and would be
giving up a secure market they had already.
A referendum had voted in favour of withdrawal but this could be
interpreted in various ways, including just withdrawing from the EU’s
political decision-making and
enforcing institutions. He said
that this (now called Norway Plus)
would limit the economic damage but would leave the UK in the
position of a rule-taker, as
the extreme Brexiteers pointed out, as it would have no say in drawing up the single
market’s regulations.
Hence, his view that it
would be better for the UK capitalist class if the UK stayed in the EU.
This is politically impossible, at least not without another
referendum. It is true that if the UK gives up
its frictionless access to the single market this would be the first time in
the history of capitalism that a capitalist state has voluntarily surrendered a
favourable a market it already has. In
proposing this,even via a no deal, the
extreme Brexiteers are in effect arguing that two birds in the bush are worth
more than one bird in the hand.
If there is no second referendum and no deal is ruled out, the
only deal that would make sense from the point of view of the majority of the
UK capitalist class would be Norway Plus as that would at least ensure the
status quo of frictionless exports and imports and would avoid having to turn
the clock back by unravelling the single market integration that has happened
so far. The trouble is that this is likely
to split their main party, the Tories, as the Tories like to remind themselves
happened to them in the mid-1840s when
Sir Robert Peel embraced Free Trade and repealed the Corn Laws.
From the point of view of pure democratic theory, there is
nothing wrong with holding a second referendum.
One referendum result can be overturned by another referendum.
In this particular case — which
is about the trading arrangements of the UK capitalist class —
the issue is not one that concerns those who want socialism.
It would be an even greater festival of xenophobia than the
first. And those favouring it might not get
the result they expect, and why the UK capitalist class might settle for Norway
Plus as less risky politically. But they
don’t act directly.
They leave that to their political representatives, the MPs, who
have their own agendas like staying in or obtaining office or being re-elected
at the next election or keeping their party together and who might screw things
up.
The Labour Party leaders want a general election.
These makes sense from their point of view since, if they don’t
get one now, they won’t get
another chance until 2022. Some
Labour supporters imagine that this is the most important issue today as a
Labour government will end austerity and usher in a period of prosperity for
the many. But they are as deluded as those
workers who believe the toffs who tell them that Brexit will bring them bright
horizons and a golden future. Neither
will for the simple reason that capitalism does not work, and cannot be made to
work, in the interests of the majority. It
is a system driven by profit-making
that can only work in the interest of the profit-takers.
ALB
No comments:
Post a Comment