UK Labour Party revolution
JAMAL KANJ
September
20, 2015
http://www.gdnonline.com/Details/24255/UK-Labour-Party-revolution
The election of veteran socialist Jeremy
Corbyn to lead the Labour Party in the UK is a revolution by all means. In a
party grassroots election, the 66-year-old outsider defeated a line-up of
traditional Labour candidates.
Corbyn’s victory was a rejection of Tony Blair’s
wing as much as it was a swing to the left. Blair, who came back from
hibernation to campaign against Corbyn, was rebuffed by the rank and file of
the Labour Party. Party membership didn’t forgive Blair’s disgraceful servitude
role to George Bush and his Israeli fabricated “dossier” to sell the invasion
of Iraq.
Additionally, the outcome of the Labour Party vote
must be seen in consort with the wave of anti-austerity sentiment sweeping
throughout Europe. During the last economic crisis, European and US taxpayers
bailed large financial institutions and endured cuts in public services. With
improved economic conditions, bankers were back receiving huge salaries and
large bonuses while average wages stalled and pension cuts became modus
operandi for governments’ austerity programmes.
Greek voters led the European Spring by rejecting
the central bank’s conditions for bailout and elected the anti-austerity Syriza
Party to power. To the north, the Scottish overwhelmingly rejected
Labour, as an alternative to the Tories and cast their votes for the Scottish
National Party (SNP). In Spain, the emergence of Podemos is shaking the Spanish
political system. Even in the US, the presumed traditional Democratic
frontrunner, Hilary Clinton, is facing serious challenge from presidential
candidate and self-proclaimed socialist Bernie Sanders.
Approximately 60 per cent of the more than 400,000
registered Labour Party members, who supported Corbyn – even those believing he
was unlikely to win a national election – sent a strong message to Britain’s
pompous traditional political class and hammered the last nail in the
Blairites’ coffin.
Euphoria aside, Corbyn must now learn from previous
progressive victory lessons. In 1980, anti-austerity candidate Michael Foot
defeated James Callaghan and the old Labour guards’ choice to unseat Margaret
Thatcher. However soon after his election, Foot faced a rebellion when four
senior officials, known as “the gang of four”, walked out and formed the new
Social Democratic Party (SDP).
The SDP became the darling of corporate media
overnight and was posited as an alternative to the Labour. In June 1981, SDP
joined an alliance with the Liberal Party forming a new centrist party, the
Liberal Democrats.
The Labour Party swung further to the left and ran
on what the media described then as “suicide manifesto”. Shortly thereafter,
the substantial lead Foot enjoyed over the conservative government melted
faster than an ice cube under August desert sun.
Despite Corbyn’s large grassroots mandate, it is not surprising
that traditional Labour autocrats have joined hands with the corporate media to
undermine the new party leader. Soon after his election, Stephen Pollard,
editor of the Jewish Chronicle wrote that Corbyn was “barely fit to be
an MP,” and accused him as someone who “doesn’t just hate America,” but “hates
Britain itself.” Pollard had literally plagiarised the tired US
Republicans and FOX News chorus’ name calling and aspersion strategy
used against Barack Obama.
It is worth noting here that when Foot ascended to
the Labour leadership, he enjoyed a double-digit lead over Thatcher; Corbyn is
starting with a double-digit deficit to David Cameron. The new Labour leader
has already proven his special ability to run from behind. According to BBC
and other news reports, Corbyn was a 200-1 outsider when he ran for the party’s
leadership three months ago.
Today, Corbyn has five years to bridge the deficit
gap and defeat the Conservative government of Cameron. He has a unique
opportunity to make the Labour Party more inclusive by reaching out to the
large reservoir of marginalised British voters and to work with SNP supporters
to make Britain more of a United Kingdom.
* Mr Kanj (www.jamalkanj.com) writes
weekly newspaper column and publishes on several websites on Arab world issues.
He is the author of “Children of Catastrophe,” Journey from a Palestinian
Refugee Camp to America. A version of this article was first published by the
Gulf Daily News newspaper.
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