Why Jeremy Corbyn is Terrifying The London
Elite
By Craig Murray
August 16, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
For a decade, I have argued that democracy in the UK is
dysfunctional because an entrenched party system offers no real
choice. The major parties offer political programmes which are
virtually indistinguishable. As I put it in lectures, if the range
of possible political programmes were placed on a linear scale from
1 to 100, the Labour and Conservative parties offer you the choice
between 81 and 84.
This exclusion of political possibility is reinforced by a corporate
media structure, led by the BBC, in which ideas outside the narrow
band of establishment consensus are ridiculed and denigrated.
Therefore even political ideas which have the consistent support of
the majority of the population, such as nationalisation of railways
and other natural monopolies including utilities, simply cannot get
an airing. Of all the broadcast coverage of the Iraq War, less than
3% gave time to anti-war voices, despite a majority opinion against
the war.
This phenomenon explains why a large majority of both Conservative
and Labour MPs are members of the Friends of Israel when public
opinion consistently sympathises more with Palestine. It also
explains the quite extraordinary media onslaught against Scottish
independence.
I pointed out that Nicola Sturgeon’s appearance in the TV leadership
debates was the first major airing of an anti-Trident argument on
broadcast media in England for a decade. Actually hearing
anti-austerity arguments led to a huge surge in support for the SNP
in England as well as Scotland.
Now Jeremy Corbyn, having obtained a platform where on occasion he
has been able to have his views broadcast direct without media
mediation, is experiencing a massive surge of support. Ed Miliband’s
lasting achievement is that he managed to put the ordinary people
who marched against the Iraq War in charge of the Labour Party, not
the careerist Blairite committee manipulators. The result is
stunning.
The sheer panic gripping the London elite now is hilarious to
behold. Those on the favoured side of Britain’s enormous wealth
gap are terrified by the idea that there may be a genuine electoral
challenge to neo-liberalism, embodied in one of the main party
structures. This is especially terrifying to those who became
wealthy by hijacking the representation of the working class to the
neo-liberal cause.
The fundamental anti-democracy of the Blairites is plainly exposed,
and the panic-driven hysterical hate-fest campaign against Corbyn by
the Guardian would be unbelievable, if we hadn’t just seen exactly
the same campaign by the same paper against the rejection of
neo-liberalism in Scotland.
I think I am entitled to say I told you so. Many people appear
shocked to have discovered the Guardian is so anti-left wing. I have
been explaining this in detail for years. It is good to feel
vindicated, and even better that the people I have repeatedly shared
platforms with, like Jeremy and Mhairi, are suddenly able to have
the genuinely popular case they make listened to. Do I feel a little
left behind, personally? Probably, but I would claim to have
contributed a little to the mood, and particularly my article on the
manufactured myth that the left is unelectable has been extremely
widely shared – by hundreds of thousands – in the social media storm
that is propelling the Corbyn campaign.
There has been very little comment on the impact a Corbyn victory
would have on the SNP. Indeed, despite being unbendingly unionist,
the Scottish media have been unable to avoid representing by
omission the fact that the Labour leadership contest is taking place
almost entirely in another country with another political culture.
But there is no doubt that a Corbyn-led Labour Party would be more
attractive in Scotland than the Tory lite version, although the
paucity of Labour’s Scottish leadership would be a constant factor.
Much would depend on the wider question of how the careerists who
make up most Labour MPs and MSPs would react to a Corbyn victory.
At Westminster, I can see no reason at all why Liz Kendall, Chuka
Umunna and their like cannot simply cross the floor and become
Tories. Cameron is astute enough to find junior ministerial
positions for them and the Tory ranks would be elated enough to
swallow it. But most of the careerists will look at their new
constituency members and suddenly discover left wing principles. It
will be less bloody than people expect.
In Scotland, a Corbyn victory will bring some swing back to Labour
from the SNP, but most of the old Labour demographic have now set
their hearts on independence. Should Corbyn actually look set to win
a UK general election in 2020, that would very possibly dent the
enthusiasm for independence at the margins. It would in no sense
reduce my own desire for independence, but even I would feel it less
urgent. A Corbyn led UK would not cause the same feeling of moral
revulsion. All of which is a good argument for having the next
referendum early.
Should Corbyn not win the Labour leadership, the effect will be
opposite. The SNP will be boosted by the death of the last hope that
the Labour Party might actually mean something again, rather than be
a vehicle for soulless careerists spouting management-manual jargon.
If Corbyn loses, the Labour Party in Scotland really might as well
wind up. The cause of independence will be furthered.
So what do I want to happen? I want Jeremy to win, of course, deeply
and sincerely. I am an internationalist and not a Machiavellian. I
want the chance of a just society and an ethical foreign policy for
England and Wales. Like me, Jeremy wants to see Ireland eventually
united. I have never discussed Scottish independence with him, but I
am quite sure his opposition is not of the Britnat imperialist
variety.
You can be sure that the security services are heavily targeted on
the Corbyn campaign. Allow me one last “I told you so”. I came in
for much ridicule when I stated, from certain knowledge, that MI5
were targeted on Scottish Nationalists (I had actually been shown
the tasking). This comes into the category of obvious truths which
the media and political consensus seeks to deny. The ridicule even
came from some within the SNP – which, like any other organisation
deemed a threat to the UK, is itself penetrated by the security
services. Well, now that truth has become mainstream too. I do not
anticipate any apologies.
Craig John Murray is a former British
ambassador to Uzbekistan, and was Rector of the University of
Dundee.
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/