Over the last few months the world’s mass media - which is owned, controlled and dictated to by the capitalist class - has been preoccupied by the election carnivals taking place in France, then Britain, throughout the rest of the world such as in Venezuela, Iran and India, and now more and more in the United States.
The overriding theme of the propaganda about the election masquerades has been the defence of the democratic governmental facade of capitalist rule. A facade designed to hide the reality of an irresolvable economic crisis, the carnage of imperialist war, the pauperisation of the working class, the destruction of the environment, the persecution of refugees. It is the democratic fig leaf that obscures the dictatorship of capital whichever of its different parties - right, left, or center, ‘fascist’ or ‘anti-fascist’ - come to political power in the bourgeois state.
The working class is being asked to make the false choice between one or other capitalist government, this or that party or leader, and, more and more today, to opt between those who pretend to abide by the established democratic protocols of the bourgeois state and those who, like the populist right, treat these procedures with an open, rather than the concealed, contempt of the liberal democratic parties.
Come to hear and discuss the political alternative that the Communist Left proposes for the working class and its struggle.
Time: 2pm, UK time, Saturday 21st September 2024
This is an online meeting. If you want to take part, write to [email protected] [1] and we will send you the links.
The recent report of the inquiry commission about the Grenfell disaster, under the direction of Sir Martin Moore-Bick, is damming and merciless in its condemnation of all parties involved in the refurbishment of the building nearly ten years ago. The report clearly establishes that safety regulations with regard to a possible fire were largely ignored. It denounces the complete lack of responsibility of each of the stakeholders and the total absence of any concern with regard to the residents housed in the tower building.
The 68-metre-high Grenfell Tower with its 24 floors was built in 1974. In 2015-16 it was completely refurbished and fitted with new windows and external cladding, mainly to make Grenfell look more attractive to wealthy neighbours. But the people living in the building were worried because during the refurbishment, safety – an issue with which they had long been concerned – did not appear to have been a priority. In the event of fire the only way out was a single concrete staircase that cut through the core of the building. It was the only escape route for a block housing hundreds of people. Those on the three top floors were looking at 22, 23, 24 flights of stairs. Moreover, many of the fire safety devices were no longer monitored, and even declared unfit. Fire safety instructions for residents were nowhere to be found and, according to residents, no integrated fire alarm system had been installed.
An action committee of tenants repeatedly sounded the alarm over fire safety problems with the Kensington and Chelsea Tenant Management Organisation (KCTMO), the agent of the building, together with the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea (RBKC) “responsible for the management of fire safety” (the Grenfell Inquiry's final report). The action committee openly accused the KCTMO of criminal negligence. But it turned into a dialogue of the deaf.
When fire broke out at the West London tower block in the early hours of June 14, 2017, instructions were eventually issued, advising people to lock themselves in their flats until instructed otherwise by the fire brigade. "Your new front doors are more than 30 minutes resistant to any fire, giving the fire brigade more than enough time," the KCTMO had told residents in March 2017. In June of the same year it emerged that £300 000 had been saved on the refurbishing works, but at the cost of 72 dead and 77 injured, the worst UK residential fire since World War 2. This is capitalism in the 21st century.
Not enough to blame individuals or companies alone
The recent report of the inquiry commission does not point to the capitalist system, but to the companies, institutions, managements directly or indirectly involved in the refurbishment of the Grenfell building. But it is not enough to blame particular actors, we have to dig deeper. We will then reach the fundamental mechanism of the capitalist economy in open crisis, where competition is pushed to the limit. This is why the article we wrote in 2017 was called Grenfell Tower fire: A crime of capital [2] (ICC Online).
The increasingly fierce competition in the construction sector, as in many other sectors of the capitalist economy, brings with it phenomena such as corruption, indifference, negligence, looking the other way and not treating tenants with any respect. All this together creates a poisonous cocktail where unscrupulous businesses can emerge and “basic neglect of its obligations in relation to fire safety” (as the inquiry’s report puts it) reigns supreme.
At the time of the Grenfell fire the construction sector was characterised by aggressive incentives to investors, the stripping of planning restrictions, low public controls on capital investment, major tax breaks, high financial risks and crucially, when it came to human safety, a ‘look the other way’ system of self-regulation.
This deregulation was one of the cornerstones of the policy of the Cameron government. “The government’s deregulatory agenda, enthusiastically supported by some junior ministers and the Secretary of State, dominated the department’s thinking to such an extent that even matters affecting the safety of life were ignored, delayed or disregarded”. The Department for Communities and Local Government under David Cameron was “well aware” of the risks posed by flammable cladding but “failed to act on what it knew”[1].
But we should not remain on the level of pointing at the particular actors. It is essentially “the mode of production which engenders such disasters from its very entrails[2] From this perspective the Grenfell fire was no accident, or an unfortunate coincidence; no, the conditions for such a disaster were knowingly and willingly created. And we should have no illusions, because under capitalism such catastrophes happen over and over again anywhere and everywhere in the world. Capitalism as a global system does not necessarily apply the lessons it draws from such disasters. For instance,
In capitalism there will be no end to the series of disasters, caused by the bourgeoisies’ gambling with the conditions in which people live, work and are educated. Only the working class can solve such problems by putting an end to this whole barbaric system. An organisation of the capitalist left like the Socialist Workers’ Party can of course agree that the deaths and injuries caused by the Grenfell fire “stem from a system that put private profit ahead of everything else - including the lives of poor and black people”. But this is only in appearance, because when it comes down to proposing a means of preventing the outbreak of such catastrophes it mainly limits itself to slogans like “keep demanding justice” and the demand that “the bosses and politicians responsible get jail time”. This will not change anything fundamental, because the system will find new corrupt businessmen and politicians to do its dirty work, and will above all keep engendering disaster like the Grenfell fire.
Dennis
Saturday 5 October, 2pm
Calthorpe Arms, 252 Grays Inn Rd, London WC1X 8JR
The articles, reports, and resolutions that you can find on our website (en.internationalism.org) are produced by a real living, breathing revolutionary organisation. Our work is not limited to online and hard copy publications, we also intervene towards pickets, strikes and demonstrations. Alongside that we hold meetings, sometimes online and sometimes face-to-face in the flesh. Some of these meetings are around subjects that the ICC thinks are important for the working class, with a presentation of our point of view, followed by plenty of time for discussion. We also hold Open Meetings which are open to anyone who is interested in anything to do with our political positions and analysis. Whether on questions from the history of the workers movement, or on the principles established by the groups of the Communist Left, or on aspects of our analysis of the national or international situation, or on the work of revolutionary organisations, or with questions on or disagreements with anything that we have published, you are encouraged to contact us before the next Open Meeting and outline what you would like to discuss with the ICC. These meetings can be really productive in following up on correspondence, in answering questions, in all aspects of the process of political clarification.
If you want to propose topics for discussion, write to us at [email protected] [1]
ICC introduction
The international online public meeting called by the ICC in July in the wake of the elections on Britain and France gave rise to a very animated discussion between comrades from several continents. The discussion showed that it is extremely important for revolutionaries to have a clear grasp of the phenomenon of populism (and the rise of the far right) which has become a major element in the growing political disarray of the ruling class. Inevitably, the debate gave rise to different interpretations of the populist phenomenon and its significance. We are publishing here two contributions from close sympathisers, written after the meeting. In our view, they provide a very clear defence of the ICC’s analysis of the phenomenon.
Contribution by KT
Contribution by Baboon
During the early part of the discussion on the presentation there were three positions put forward on populism that demand a defence from the ICC’s position on that subject…
Two of the positions seemed to be broadly similar, with one of them saying that populism was an expression of the bourgeoisie which was kept in check by the power of the state, alongside a similar position that populism was controlled by the bourgeoisie. There was also a third position that populism was a diversion manufactured by the bourgeoisie aimed at confronting the class struggle of the proletariat.
On the first two positions: populism, such as it affects many states in the world, including the most powerful ones, is fundamentally an expression of the accelerating decay of all the major aspects of capitalism, i.e., its decomposition. The increasing difficulties in managing the political life of the ruling class is one example, along with others like environmental destruction and the spread of military barbarism, that are superstructural symptoms of a dying economic infrastructure, the representatives of which (the bourgeoisie) are less and less able to control. Rather than the “control” suggested by the positions of these comrades, the situation very clearly expresses a serious loss of control. This was laid out in the 1990 “Theses on Decomposition” where there is “a society devoid of the slightest project or perspective, even in the short term, and however illusory.” The Theses go on to stress that: “Amongst the major characteristics of capitalist society’s decomposition, we should emphasise the bourgeoisie’s growing difficulty in controlling the evolution of the political situation” and further “at the same time the fact that the proletariat does not yet threaten its own survival, creates within the ruling class, and especially within its political apparatus, a growing tendency towards indiscipline and an attitude of ‘every man for himself’” (Points 8 and 9).
Populism is a global and general expression of the decomposition of capitalism which, similar to all the expressions, “responses” and “solutions” of the ruling class, can only incite and invite further crises, loss of control and instability to the national and international arenas. One such expression is the ascension of Trump and all that he stands for to the Presidency of mighty America. Certainly Trump’s “excesses” were largely kept in check during his term in office but Trump’s “deal-making” approach to international relations is entirely unsuitable for the looming confrontation with China, which also necessitates the bleeding of Russian imperialism. In this respect, Trump’s goading and abuse of US “allies”, tearing up protocols and ignoring diplomatic channels is also counter-productive to the short and longer-term demands of American imperialism. And Trump is threatening much more of the same in his second term. This is not populism controlled or engineered by the state but a loss of control with the potential for further loss of control and chaos in international relations. Trump wasn’t “kept in check” by the US state when he rejected the result of the 2020 election process, openly threatened his political enemies, stoked up divisions as populism does everywhere, whipping up a phoney “unity” based on the fear and hatred of the “other” and unleashed his mob on the Capitol.
In Great Britain, the infection of populism has almost destroyed the Conservative Party, the oldest and most stable political party of the bourgeoisie anywhere in the world. The ruling class referendum for Brexit – the argument for which was largely based on extreme nationalism and racism - showed a total loss of control and indiscipline from this, the most stable and able bourgeoisie on the world stage. This loss of control by the bourgeoisie resulted in a severe self-inflicted wound to the national economy and the standing of Britain throughout the world. More was to follow as the British government was further gangrened by populism with the election of chancer Boris Johnson to Prime Minister, and when he and his clique showed themselves spectacularly inept, the even more spectacularly inept Liz Truss, whose populist economic measures led to an unprecedented economic war within the British state, was elected Prime Minister. Over three days of her short reign of just over a month the British Treasury, under orders from the Truss clique, did battle with the Bank of England, which was backed by a concerned Biden administration. Truss limped off the political stage like a wet lettuce leaving a further unnecessary hit on the British economy (and coming dangerously close to its entire pension funds wiped out) and Britain’s international standing and political class was reduced to a joke across the world.
Thus, in the last few years, the most powerful and the oldest political economies of capitalism have, in the face of crises, shown not “control” of the situation but a complete loss of control, political indiscipline and an opening up to chaos.
The other position that goes along similar lines as the bourgeoisie controlling and directing populism is that it is a deliberate tactic of the ruling class being used as a diversion or counter against the class struggle of the proletariat.
Any serious campaign undertaken by the ruling class to counter the struggle of the proletariat is not of the ilk of populism, a phenomenon which, while it can rake in some workers, is a political expression whose strength lies within the petty bourgeoisie, the citizen, the fear and hatred of the others. It’s a scream of despair from the petty bourgeoisie. A strategy of the bourgeoisie against the class struggle has much more substance than this.
The election of the Labour Party in the UK was not a result of a significant leftward turn of the bourgeoisie to counter the workers’ struggles, but a general ballot box response to the growing inanities of populist conservatism. In this election (as with Trump in the US) some workers would have voted for populist tropes along the lines of race, immigration and “woke” elites, but many more workers voted against such expressions. At any rate it was something of a victory for the bourgeoisie because, as in any election, workers voted alongside the petty bourgeoisie and the bourgeoisie as citizens, individuals; populism and anti-populism are just two sides of the same coin as far as rallies, elections and democracy are concerned. It would be odd indeed if the bourgeoisie were to use populism as a diversion against class struggle when its racism, xenophobia and totally irrational economic policies have their far greatest echoes and resonance in the realms of the petty bourgeoisie.
There’s no doubt that the ruling class use the many expressions of decomposition against the workers, hammering their consciousness on a daily basis. But this is different from a deliberate class struggle strategy by the bourgeoisie because populism is such an undisciplined and irrational mish-mash that has no perspective for the national economy or international relations, let alone one that has the strength to “divert” or counter the working class. In the last few years we have seen a clear de-facto rejection of populism by the working class (whose fundamental interests are international) in the greatest and broadest range of workers’ struggle for four decades, and which took place during the upsurge of the populist phenomenon.
The 2022/3 eruption of workers’ struggle did not come out of clear blue sky. The ICC article “After the rupture...” (International Review 171) correctly points to tendencies of struggles breaking out internationally from 2018/19. Significant strikes were breaking out in the US in 2019, during the Trump administration; and in Britain strikes began during Johnson’s reign and further deepened and spread during the Truss debacle and the into the reign of the populist-gangrened Conservative Party. The global development of workers’ struggle developed during the heights of populism (and just before, during and after the Covid pandemic – see After the rupture in the class struggle, the necessity for politicisation [3], International Review 171)
“which clearly demonstrates that if it was a weapon against the working class then it was totally ineffectual. But, by using the same faulty method which sees populism as a diversion against class struggle, one could conclude that populism accelerated the class struggle. Neither was the case, and the obvious synthesis is that populism represents a loss of control by the political class of capitalism.
This is not to deny the persisting power of populism and the use that it has made of democracy in order to pursue its obscure aims. Already in some countries populists in power are having to curb their “excesses” and adjust to the needs of the national interest and global imperialism – similar to the way the Greens had to where they had some electoral clout, on a smaller scale.
The recent wave of international class struggle, the most profound for four decades, is a riposte to the question of populism by a proletariat that is tentatively putting forward its own priorities and its own perspective which are distinct from that of the bourgeoisie and petty bourgeoisie. It is also a riposte to capitalist decomposition in that while the proletariat can’t stem the tide of decomposition, it can offer a different perspective, a working class perspective, which it has opened up and given a glimpse of a different future.
Baboon, 24.7.24