By Steve Topple
March 20, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - -
"The
Canary" -
-
#FacistBritain has been trending on Twitter.
But can we quantify whether the UK is descending
into a modern, fascist state? Simply put: yes,
we can.
Fascism’s “defining characteristics”:
nationalism and disregard for human rights
Che Scott-Heron Newton
tweeted how she believed fascism was “presenting
in modern Britain”. She noted four areas. One was
“Powerful and Continuing Nationalism”. In this
instance, she gave the example of police protecting
a Winston Churchill statue:
Heron’s second example
was:
Disregard for human rights: people are more
likely to approve of longer incarcerations of
prisoners, look the other way
She gave the example of the current furore of the
so-called ‘Police Bill’. But the degradation of UK
human rights has been ongoing for a long time. Back
in 2016, the UN
accused successive Tory-led governments of
“grave” and “systematic” violations of sick and
disabled people’s human rights. With the UK’s
potential withdrawal from the European
Convention on Human Rights, things will only get
worse.
The arts and crime
Heron’s third point
was:
Disrespect towards intellectuals & the arts
Tory attempts to clamp-down on universities ‘cancelling‘
far-right bigots from speaking forms part of this.
Or, as The Canary‘s Maryam Jameela put it,
the Tories attempt to ” quash dissent”. Then, you
have the Tories’
attacks on “lefty lawyers” doing human rights
work. Meanwhile, in recent years, they’ve also
cut public arts funding by 35%.
Finally, Heron
said:
Obsession with crime & punishment
The recent Policing, Crime, Sentencing and Courts
Bill (the ‘Police Bill’) is a case in point. As
Liberty
said, it includes:
dangerous measures including restrictions on
protest, new stop and search powers, a
“Prevent-style” duty on knife crime, and a move
to criminalise trespass.
Also, the Covert Human Intelligence Sources
(Criminal Conduct) Bill
allows intelligence services to break the law on
UK soil.
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So, Heron summed up some major indicators of
fascism well. It was in-part based on
historian Laurence Britt’s 2003
work on the signs of a fascist regime.
Picking apart his remaining ten points, how does
the UK look?
Scapegoats and sexism
Britt noted:
Identification of enemies/scape-goats as a
unifying cause.
From
immigrants to
Muslims via
disabled people, the UK establishment has always
had “enemies” and “scape-goats”. Now, we’re seeing
left-wing activists,
Black Lives Matter and the “woke”
being the target.
Another point Britt said was:
Rampant sexism.
The
recent clamping-down on vigils and protests in
the wake of Sarah Everard’s murder is a chilling
sign. Not that Tory misogyny is anything new. For
example, just in the social security system you had
the so-called ‘rape
clause‘ and the benefit cap
hitting lone mothers the hardest.
The mass media and national
security
Britt also listed:
A controlled mass media.
The UK media is already
controlled by a handful of right-wing
billionaires. Now,
with
GB News, Rupert Murdoch’s News UK
TV, former Daily Mail editor Paul
Dacre potentially heading-up the media regulator
Ofcom, and a Tory donor being put in charge of the
BBC – it’s going to get even more
dystopian.
Britt added:
Obsession with national security.
The Tories’
upping the cap on the number of nuclear weapons
the UK can have is one example. Its review
looking at left-wing “extremism” is another.
Amnesty
called the Investigatory Powers Act (which
allowed mass surveillance) “among the most draconian
in the EU”.
The new religion and corporations
Another marker of Britt’s was:
Religion and ruling elite tied together.
Flip this into capitalism being the new religion
– the mantra that guides how we all live our lives –
and it fits with Britt’s description of fascism
being marked by a ‘manufactured perception’ “that
opposing the power elite was tantamount to an attack
on religion”. The Tories
blocking of anti-capitalist teaching in schools
sums this up.
A crucial point of Britt’s was also:
Power of corporations protected.
This has been
ongoing for decades. But it has reached a
crescendo in recent years. The Tories
allow big companies to pay tiny amounts of tax.
Also, the
revolving door between big business and big
government is constantly open. As the Week
wrote last year:
Facebook has hired ten former UK government
policy officials with insider knowledge of
regulatory processes since the beginning of
2020, an investigation has found. …
The new claims about the so-called “revolving
door” between politics and the private sector
come just a week after J.P. Morgan announced
that former chancellor Sajid Javid has been
appointed as a senior advisor to the banking
giant.
Suppressing labour and cronyism
Britt then moved on to:
Power of labor suppressed or eliminated.
The Tories moves to
restrict protest is a current example. And in
2015, The Tories put in place what the Guardian
called the “biggest crackdown on trade unions
for 30 years”. The gig economy
helps this. And the
consistently low minimum wage puts the
power in the hands of the bosses.
Perhaps Britt’s most recognisable point was:
Rampant cronyism and corruption.
This is the Tories all over; not least during the
coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. As Byline Times
wrote on 16 March:
A company owned by a Conservative Party donor
has surpassed £200 million worth of Government
contracts during the Coronavirus pandemic
‘Nuff said’.
Election fraud
Finally, Britt noted:
Fraudulent elections.
The 2015 election was marred by
allegations of Tory election fraud. So
was the EU referendum. The establishment
corporate press
helped get Boris Johnson into power in 2019. But
the Tories are taking their election rigging agenda
further. Our First Past The Post voting system has
consolidated their power. And now, they’ll be
rolling it out to all English elections. As
City A.M.
reported, in London Assembly elections this:
would “wipe out” many smaller parties like
the Liberal Democrats and The Green Party
So, is all this truly fascism? On paper, the
signs are there. But there’s probably a better name
for it. And that is “corporate fascism”.
“Corporate fascism”
As Johanna Drucker
wrote for Riot Material on the US under
then-president Donald Trump:
Fascism is defined as the alignment of power,
nationalism, and authoritarian government. We
are there. The power is capital linked to
politics. Capital is not merely the currency of
money, but a force with nearly animate capacity
for agency. The nationalism is an inflammatory
rhetoric that galvanizes affect from responses
to actual conditions (the real erosion of social
infrastructure) in combination with a fantasy of
entitlement grounded in long-standing myths of
American exceptionalism. And the
authoritarianism is an increasingly evident
fulfilment of the worst fears of the founding
designers of Democracy, as its checks and
balances are put aside in favor of the interests
of corporate wealth and its beneficiaries as a
grotesque populism feeds on lifestyle fantasies
and delusional identification.
Corporate fascism is wanton, virulent, and
unregulated. Wanton because it has no regard for
consequences (psycho-socio-political pathology
is without constraints). Virulent because the
full force of inflamed populism is fuelled by
self-justified rage and unbounded triumphalism.
Unregulated because the capital is now amassed
in extreme concentrations of wealth without any
controls. Corporate because Citizens United
created the legal foundation for corporations to
act with the same rights, privileges, and
protections accorded to individuals, thus
sanctifying the role of disproportionate power
within a mythic construct of corporate entities.
Johnson’s government is also using that MO. It’s
no exaggeration to say that corporate fascism has
been creeping into the UK for decades. And it now
appears the situation is only going to get worse.
Featured image via
10 Downing Street – YouTube
Steve Topple is an independent journalist,
broadcaster and publicist. He specialises in issues
surrounding disability, health, housing, class,
economics and government. ‘
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