The
elections coming up seem to be very similar to every other. For
all the promises nothing ever gets better. Nothing ever gets
resolved. If you seek to protest both the Brexshiteers and the
Remainders then perhaps a vote for the Socialist Party might suffice.
The
Socialist Party candidates contesting South East England are: Mandy
Bruce, Ray Carr, Dave Chesham, Rob Cox, Mike Foster. Stephen Harper,
Neil Kirk, Anton Pruden, Andy Thomas, Darren Williams.
These
are the choices. Carry on regardless with a society
which has not, nor can, solve the problems we face today. Or we can
elect to change things and bring about a society of cooperation, not
competition. A society of equality not inequality. A society of
production to satisfy human need, not to satisfy the drive for
profits for a few.
We
in THE SOCIALIST PARTY cannot bring this society about for you, nor
are we offering to. Only you can, by working together and acting for
yourselves. If there is a majority of people who understand and want
this change and work to bring it about then it WILL happen.
When
elections to the European Parliament take place workers in countries
all over Europe are being given the opportunity to express their
views at the same time. At the moment they misuse this opportunity by
confining their support for capitalism. The World Socialist Movement
advances the concept of world socialism, a planet without borders and
without the State. We argue for forms of free associations of
producers and world-wide federated communes. The EU is a
capitalist economic bloc, displaying all the vices and
irrationalities of capitalism. We are against it. We are equally
against the alternative of ‘independent’ capitalist
nation-states. Our alternative to both is the fight for world
socialism and for international working class unity and solidarity.
Socialists maintain that workers must free themselves of patriotism
and national superiority in their own interests, for without
discarding these aspects of the prevailing ruling class ideas they
will never themselves be free.
The
EU has nothing to do with internationalism. Fortress
Europe has class walls. The vast majority of those denied entry are
poor and vulnerable; those with wealth and privilege are invariably
welcomed. Crisis plays into the hands of the right, as history tells
us. Nationalism and xenophobia are returning. Fortress
Europe has encouraged xenophobia in general and helped to provide
rationales for the right-wing with the idea of securing Europe
against ‘threats’ from without.
The
EU is essentially a business arrangement, an agreement between
different capitalist ruling classes, relating to the way in which
they organise their markets. Europe’s capitalists find themselves
driven by the scale of business operations to try and integrate their
efforts. Only in this way could they develop the resources to enable
them to compete with other giants of the modern world economy. The EU
wants a ‘europeanisation’ of capital – but this continually
clashes against national state boundaries. The national state is not
our state. It functions to defend the ruling class, and cannot
operate in any other way. Neither the narrow British nationalism of
the Brexiteers nor pseudo-Europeanism of the Remainers are a solution
in the interests of the working class.
Neither
the Eurosceptics nor the Euroenthusiasts offer a way forward but
simply highlight the bitter divisions within the ruling class. In or
out, the problems facing the worker are very much the same. The
remedy to the problem lies in the unity of the workers of the world
against the capitalists of the world. The battles the labour movement
will have to fight cannot be won within the confines of one country.
Never were the perspectives of real internationalism more relevant
and more practicable. Side by side we must join battle with our
common enemy. The workers’ movement should not be wasting
valuable time now fighting irrelevant battles on the questions
of national sovereignty or ‘our British way of life’ but
should be gathering and coordinating its international forces for the
battle for socialism. The struggles of the world’s labour movement
demand the maximum cooperation between the different national
sections. The workers of Britain have interests in common with the
workers in Europe and of all countries. Their interests are opposed
to the capitalist class of all countries including Britain.
1 comment:
Well over 100 people at the hustings in Chesham (Bucks) yesterday evening. Like the others (except the one tonight at a university in Canterbury) it was organised by a pro-Remain group, seemingly with the purpose of allowing Remain supporters to decide which of the Remain party lists to vote for, with the Labour candidate (an outgoing MEP) saying that he too was a Remainer and favoured a second referendum. This made the Tories and us outsiders and may be why the Brexit Party candidate withdrew at the last moment. As Mike reported for Banbury, all six parties, including us, were given strictly equal time (as it should be).
The audience gave the Tory representative a hard time and even we were heckled for saying that Brexit wasn’t that worth getting worked up about since, if it happened, it wouldn’t make much difference to people’s everyday life (a bit provocative given the nature of the audience) as capitalism would continue. Still, it was a chance to put the case against capitalism and for socialism and our views on climate change and mass population movements.
It was chaired by a journalist from BBC Three Counties Radio who also interviewed a spokesperson for the Party. Two of the counties (Beds and Herts.) are outside the South East Election Region, not that that matters. Far from it, as it spreads our views wider than we anticipated.
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