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From:
Kabir Njaay <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 29 Jun 2007 12:29:18 +0200
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Blair leaves office and becomes Bush's "peace envoy":

Sycophancy in parliament and an insult to world opinion

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/jun2007/blai-j29.shtml

Statement by the Socialist Equality Party of Britain

29 June 2007

The manner of Tony Blair's departure as prime minister says a great deal
about both British and international politics.

Easily the most hated man in Britain, his last appearance in parliament at
Prime Minister's Question Time became an occasion for wistful nostalgia,
mutual backslapping and sycophancy. As Blair concluded his appearance with
the declaration, "I wish everyone, friend or foe, well and that is that, the
end." the House rose in a standing ovation.

Parliament has never witnessed anything like it. Even the Conservatives rose
and applauded, led by party leader David Cameron who had earlier delivered a
gushing tribute to the outgoing prime minister and his supposed
achievements.

The display gave the lie to Blair's statement that he had "never stopped
fearing" his appearances in parliament and his claim that "It is in that
fear that respect is retained." As the *Guardian's* Simon Hoggart noted, in
reality "they never laid a glove on him. MPs have, with rare exceptions,
been the poodle's poodles."

In keeping with this, Blair's final turn before the assembled MPs
underscored the degree to which virtually any pretence of party political
differences has been abandoned—with the result that Britain now functions,
for all practical purposes, as a one-party state.

This is not a recent development, but the culmination of political and
social processes that began in 1979 under Margaret Thatcher. However, to
understand just how complete the transformation of political life during
Blair's term in office has been it is instructive to compare their
respective departures from office.

Both have proved extraordinarily divisive figures, yet the manner of their
leaving could not be more striking. Pushed out of office by popular
hostility and a palace coup within her own party, Thatcher's last statement
to the House—forced on her by a motion of no confidence—was replete with
denunciations of socialism and dire warnings that Labour would return
Britain to "conflict and confrontation" and reverse Tory privatisation of
key services. Whilst her own party rose in her support, various Labour MPs
denounced them as "hypocrites".

If no trace of ideological divisions greeted Blair's own departure from
office, it is with good reason. Labour's response to the crisis of rule
facing British capitalism—brought on by the deep unpopularity and divisions
within the Conservative Party—was to undertake the final abandonment of its
previous programme of social reformism.

Blair's election as Labour leader in 1994 saw the proclamation of "New
Labour" and the junking of Clause Four of the party's constitution on social
ownership. Consequently, far from Labour's subsequent election victory in
1997 confirming Thatcher's warnings, Blair professed to be her disciple on
economic issues and promised only greater consideration of social issues
within the framework of a globally competitive market economy.

What was termed Labour's "Third Way", or sometimes as "Blairism", was in
reality only a repackaging of Thatcherite orthodoxy. Labour's economic
policies saw a continuation of deregulation, including freeing the Bank of
England from central control and the extension of privatisation into
education and the National Health Service. In addition, universal welfare
provision was replaced by a system based on means-testing.

The net effect has been a historically unprecedented redistribution of
wealth away from working people and into the coffers of the super-rich, with
the richest 1,000 people in Britain more than trebling their wealth in the
decade since Blair took office. As a result, the UK is now at the bottom of
the table of developed countries in terms of social mobility, trailing even
the United States. Last year Britain, for the first time, also overtook the
US in hours worked.

There is nothing in Labour's economic programme with which the Tories
disagree, hence Cameron's ongoing efforts to portray himself as Blair's
natural heir and his declared aversion to party political disputes. Blair's
successor Gordon Brown has similarly proclaimed that the "need for change
cannot be met by the old politics so I will reach out beyond narrow party
interest" and "build a government that uses all the talents" of "men and
women of goodwill". He has already made overtures to the Liberal Democrats,
offering Shirley Williams—one of the leaders of the now defunct Social
Democratic Party, the right-wing breakaway from the Labour Party—an advisory
post and inviting ex-party leader Paddy Ashdown to join his cabinet. Leading
entrepreneur Alan Sugar has been appointed as a business adviser.

There is also essentially unity on Britain's foreign policy, despite the
disaster in Iraq.

It is universally acknowledged that it is popular hostility to the Iraq war
and the ongoing occupation that has forced Blair to leave office earlier
than he would have wished. Yet, even in his final speech, Blair felt able to
defend his decision to join the US-led assault. And no one was in a position
to attack him for it.

Brown and the vast majority of the Labour Party supported the war, as did
the Conservatives. Both parties are keen to extricate themselves from the
debacle produced in Iraq and its domestic consequences. But there are major
constraints on their ability to do so.

At no point has criticism within ruling circles gone beyond complaints that
Blair tied Britain's interests too closely to those of the United States and
to the neo-conservatives within the Bush administration in particular. Many
believe that a harder bargain should have been struck or that by maintaining
a greater degree of diplomatic independence, Britain could have acted as a
restraining influence on Washington. No one, however, has seriously proposed
a rupture with the US. Instead, Britain has offered to assume greater
responsibility in Afghanistan to compensate for a troop reduction in
southern Iraq.

To go further would require the development of a bloc of European powers
that could act as a counterweight to the US. But despite broad concerns
within Berlin and Paris over how Washington has destabilised the Middle
East, the prospect of a US defeat in Iraq alarms them even more.

This goes some way towards explaining why the degree of political disconnect
on display in parliament's farewell to Blair was matched by the response
within international circles.

Blair's final days in office were dominated by the efforts of the Bush
administration to impose him on the Middle East quartet—the US, European
Union, Russia and the United Nations—as its "peace" envoy. Blair's
appointment to such a role is an act of cynical indifference; yet another
calculated thumbing of the nose on the part of the major powers to popular
opinion. Millions throughout the world view Blair as a war criminal for what
he has done in Afghanistan and Iraq, his opposition to a cease-fire during
Israel's attack last year on Lebanon, and his recent efforts to promote
factional warfare amongst the Palestinians. His name is synonymous with the
promotion of war in the Middle East on behalf of the Bush administration.

But it is precisely for this reason that the US advanced him as the
replacement for former World Bank head James Wolfensohn. He is Washington's
man, charged with furthering its efforts to establish hegemony over Middle
Eastern oil supplies at whatever cost.

Everyone knows this. Russia was demonstratively against Blair's appointment,
as was Germany, which was not even informed until the last moment. Yet after
only a short delay, Blair was installed—to wreak further havoc and suffering
on the peoples of the Middle East.

Several commentators expressed astonishment at the manner of Blair's
departure from Number 10 and his new appointment. The *Guardian's* Jonathan
Freedland noted that given Blair's "reputation is for ever tainted by the
invasion of 2003" his "graceful exit" and "in a manner of his choosing" was
"puzzling".

"Is there a precedent for this?" he asked, noting that Britain's Anthony
Eden did not survive the Suez Crisis in 1956, President Lyndon Johnson was
"overwhelmed by his escalation of the Vietnam war" and the "Lebanon war of
1982 had a similar effect on Menachem Begin".

"There is a pattern here, and Blair does not fit it," he continued, stating
that his appointment as Middle East envoy "suggests he's pulled it off,
winning instant rehabilitation, at least from the club of world leaders."

Blair can continue to assume a position of political prominence because he
is not in any real sense a British politician—something he confirmed by
immediately stating that he would stand down as MP for Sedgefield.

Neither does his reliance on Bush make him—strictly-speaking—an American
politician. More correctly, he is the political creature of a global
financial oligarchy that dictates economic and social policy in the US,
Britain and the world over—based exclusively on their own personal
enrichment.

Blair's departure coincided with a study of 71 countries by the investment
bank Merrill Lynch and consultancy firm Capgemini, recording how the world's
100,000 super-rich has been able to almost entirely remove itself from the
rest of society. It found that last year the "globalisation of wealth
creation" had seen the wealth of "high net worth individuals" rise by
11.4percent—taking their total prosperity to $37.2 trillion, more than
15 times
the annual output of the UK economy.

This is a layer that is not simply uninterested in the situation facing the
vast bulk of humanity—its own fortunes are predicated on its further
impoverishment.

Political developments in the US and Britain in the past two decades had
something of a pioneering character, in that the dominance of this narrow
and fabulously rich layer was established fastest and most completely in
these two countries. But the same development is unfolding throughout Europe
and internationally. Its most significant impact has been a fundamental
realignment of official politics to the right and the resulting
disenfranchising of the mass of the population.

For years, Blair's eventual departure from office was held out as bringing
with it the possibility of a change in course and a government more
responsive to the views of the electorate. Instead, Blair's official
depiction as an elder statesman and parliament's fawning on him have
confirmed that—on the essential issues of imperialist aggression and social
reaction—things continue as before. Consequently, the divorce between
working people and the entire political establishment must bring with it an
opposing political realignment within the working class—a realignment to the
left that must be based on an anti-imperialist and socialist perspective.
See Also:
Britain: New Labour's right-wing course to continue under Brown
<http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/jun2007/brwn-j26.shtml>[26 June 2007]

Blair's legacy: Militarism abroad, social devastation at home
<http://www.wsws.org/articles/2007/may2007/blai-m11.shtml>[11 May 2007]

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