Where Is Our Jeremy Corbyn?
By Chris Hedges
September 14, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Truthdig"
- The politics of Jeremy Corbyn,
elected by a landslide Saturday to lead Britain’s Labour Party
after its defeat at the polls last May, are part of the global
revolt against corporate tyranny. He had spent his long career as a
pariah within his country’s political establishment. But because he
held fast to the socialist ideals that defined the old Labour Party,
he has risen untarnished out of the ash heap of
neoliberalism. His integrity, as well as his fearlessness,
offers a lesson to America’s self-identified left, which is long on
rhetoric, preoccupied with accommodating the power elites—especially
those in the Democratic Party—and very short on courage.
I will not support a politician who sells out the
Palestinians and panders to the Israel lobby any more than I will
support a politician who refuses to confront the bloated military
and arms industry or white supremacy and racial injustice. The
Palestinian issue is not a tangential issue. It is an integral part
of Americans’ efforts to dismantle our war machine, the neoliberal
policies that see austerity and violence as the primary language for
speaking to the rest of the world, and the corroding influence of
money in the U.S. political system. Stand up to the masters of war
and the Israel lobby and you will probably stand up to every other
corporate and neoliberal force that is cannibalizing the United
States. This is what leadership is about. It is about having a
vision. And it is about fighting for that vision.
Corbyn, who supports negotiations with Hamas and
Hezbollah and once invited members from those organizations to visit
Parliament, has called for Israel’s leaders to be put on trial for
war crimes against the Palestinians. He has expressed support for
the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement (BDS) against Israel
and the call for an arms embargo against that nation. He would scrap
Britain’s Prevention of Terrorism Act, which, like the Patriot Act
in the United States, has been used to target and harass Muslims. He
wants the United Kingdom to withdraw from NATO. He cannot conceive
of any situation, he has said, that would necessitate sending
British troops abroad. He was a vocal opponent of the invasion and
occupation of Iraq and a founder of the
Stop the War
Coalition. He denounced the United States for what he called its
“assassination” of Osama bin Laden, saying the al-Qaida leader
should have been captured and put on trial, and he assailed the
British government for using militarized drones to
kill two British jihadists in Syria in August. He advocates
unilateral nuclear disarmament and has urged the elimination of
Trident, his country’s nuclear weapons system. He opposes any
British military intervention in Syria and wants to put pressure on
“our supposed allies in the region”—read Saudi Arabia—that support
Islamic State. He has called for talks with the leaders of warring
factions in Iraq and Afghanistan to end the conflicts.
“There is no solution to the killing and abuse of
human rights [in the Middle East] that involves yet more Western
military action,”
Corbyn has written. “Ultimately there has to be a political
solution in the region which bombing by NATO forces cannot bring
about. The drama of the killings and advances by ISIS in the past
few weeks is yet another result of the Bush-Blair war on terror
since 2001. The victims of these wars are the refugees and those
driven from their homes and the thousands of unknown civilians who
have died and will continue to die in the region. The ‘winners’ are
inevitably the arms manufacturers and those who gain from the
natural resources of the region.”
And that is just his foreign policy.
Corbyn says he will back significantly increasing
taxes on the wealthy and ending the unfair tax breaks of
corporations. He is for imposing safeguards to protect those on
welfare and instituting a “maximum wage” for corporate executives in
order to fight “grotesque levels of inequality.” He would install
widespread rent control to stop what he calls “social cleansing”
caused by gentrification. He has called on the Bank of England to
carry out what he terms a “People’s Quantitative Easing,” demanding
it invest billions in housing, energy and other infrastructure
projects. He supports the creation of a sanctuary in the Antarctic
to prevent mining and oil drilling there. He opposes
fracking. He calls for government investment to build renewable
energy based on solar and wind, and “global regulation” to prevent
the export of carbon products. And he would end the steps to
privatize parts of his country’s universal health care system, known
as the National Health Service.
As Labour veered to the right and became dominated
by corporate money and neoliberalism under Prime Ministers Tony
Blair and Gordon Brown—a process also carried out by the Democratic
Party under Bill Clinton and Barack Obama—Corbyn became a rebel in
his own party. Between 1997 and 2010, as a member of Parliament,
where he has held a seat since 1983, he voted against bills or
challenged positions championed by the “new” Labour Party leadership
more than 500 times. Blair, who detests Corbyn, warned that if
Labour backs Corbyn in the next election for prime minister (which
is set for 2020 but can be held any time a no-confidence vote occurs
in Parliament), it will face “annihilation” at the polls. Corbyn
responded by suggesting that
Blair should be prosecuted as a war criminal for his role in the
2003 invasion of Iraq.
Corbyn, in the course of his roughly 40 years on
the fringes of the British political establishment, has called for
the abolition of the British monarchy and has described Karl Marx as
“a fascinating figure who observed a great deal and from whom we can
learn a great deal.” He wants to nationalize energy companies and
renationalize the post office and the rail service. “Without
exception, the majority electricity, gas, water and railway
infrastructures of Britain were built through public investment
since the end of WWII and were all privatised at knock-down prices
for the benefit of greedy asset-strippers by the Thatcher and [John]
Major-led Tory governments,”
he wrote in a column for the Morning Star newspaper.
He has raised the possibility of the U.K. leaving
the European Union, citing the EU’s draconian assault on the Greek
people in the name of austerity. “Look at it another way,” Corbyn
said. “If we allow unaccountable forces to destroy an economy like
Greece, when all that bailout money isn’t going to the Greek people,
it’s going to various banks all across Europe, then I think we need
to think very, very carefully about what role they [the EU] are
playing and what role we are playing in that.”
Corbyn has proposed a National Education Service
that would, with increased taxes on corporations, provide free
universal education starting with day care and going up through
vocational schools, adult education programs and universities. He
would abolish the British equivalent of charter schools and end the
tax-exempt status of the elite private schools. He would bring back
state funding for the arts. He
issued a statement in August titled “The arts are for everyone
not the few; there is creativity in all of us.” It is worth reading.
The arts community in the United States, like that
in Britain, is in deep distress. Actors, dancers, musicians,
sculptors, singers, painters, writers, poets and even journalists
often cannot make a living. They have few spaces where they can
perform or publish new work. And established theaters, desperate to
make money to survive, produce tawdry spectacles or plays that are
empty pieces of entertainment rather than art. The war on the arts
has been one of the major contributions to the dumbing down of
America. It shuts us off from our intellectual and artistic
patrimony, contributing to our historical and cultural amnesia. The
parallel removal of the arts from school curriculums, now dominated
by vocational skills and standardized testing, has cemented into
place a system in which Americans have been taught what to think,
not how to think. Self-expression and creativity, disciplines that
make possible self-awareness, transcendence and the capacity for
reverence, are anathemas to the corporate state. The imposed dogma
of neoliberalism must be unquestioned.
“Under the guise of a politically motivated
austerity programme, this government has savaged arts funding with
projects increasingly required to justify their artistic and social
contributions in the narrow, ruthlessly instrumentalist approach of
the Thatcher governments,” Corbyn wrote in the August statement.
“During the 1980s, [then-Prime Minister Margaret] Thatcher sought to
disempower the arts community, attempting to silence the provocative
in favour of the populist. The current climate of Treasury value
measurement methodologies (taken from practises used in the property
market and elsewhere) to try to find mechanisms appropriate to
calculating the value of visiting art galleries or the opera are a
dangerous retreat into a callous commercialisation of every sphere
of our lives. The result has been a devastating £82 million in cuts
to the arts council budget over the last 5 years and the closure of
the great majority of currently funded arts organisations,
especially outside London.”
He went on:
“Beyond the obvious economic and social benefits
of the arts is the significant contribution to our communities,
education, and democratic process they make. Studies have
demonstrated the beneficial impact of drama studied at schools on
the capacity of teenagers to communicate, learn, and to tolerate
each other as well as on the likelihood that they will vote. The
greater involvement of young people in the political process is
something to be encouraged and celebrated. Further, the contribution
and critique of our society and democracy which theatre has the
capacity to offer must be protected. To quote
David Lan, ‘dissent is necessary to democracy, and democratic
governments should have an interest in preserving sites in which
that dissent can be expressed.’ ”
Corbyn says he would also reverse the government
cuts that gutted the BBC. He understands that the destruction of
public broadcasting, which is designed to give a platform to voices
and artists not beholden to corporate money, means the rise of a
corporate-dominated system of propaganda, one that now controls most
of the U.S. airwaves.
“I firmly believe in the principle of public
service broadcast and am fearful of following the path tread in the
United States, where PBS has been hollowed out, unable to deliver
the breadth of content to compete with the private broadcasters, and
where Fox News has as a result been effectively allowed to dominate
and set the news agenda,” he wrote. “I want to see the Labour Party
at the heart of campaigns to protect the BBC and its license fee.
When we [Labour] return to power we must fully fund public service
broadcasting in all its forms, recognising the crucial role the BBC
has played in establishing and supporting world class domestic arts,
drama, and entertainment.”
Corbyn became a vegetarian at the age of 20 after
working on a pig farm and witnessing the abuse, torture and
slaughter of the animals. He champions animal rights. He does not
own a car, bicycles almost everywhere and is notoriously frugal,
usually filing the lowest expense of any member of Parliament. His
favorite novelist is the late Nigerian writer
Chinua Achebe, who wrote “Things Fall Apart,” an exploration of
the destructive force of colonialism. Corbyn speaks fluent Spanish
and comes from a left-wing family. (His parents met at a rally in
support of the Republicans fighting Franco’s fascists during the
Spanish Civil War.)
He is acutely aware of the problem of male
violence against women. He would halt the government’s closure of
domestic violence centers for women, fight discrimination against
women in the workplace and bolster laws against sexual harassment
and sexual assault. He says his Cabinet would be 50 percent women.
Corbyn’s ascent to the head of the Labour Party
has already triggered a backlash against him by the forces of the
neoliberal political order. These forces are determined to prevent
him from becoming prime minister. The entrenched elites within his
own party—a number of whom have already
resigned from party leadership positions in protest of Corbyn’s
election—will seek to do to him what the Democratic establishment
did in 1972 to George McGovern after he won the party’s nomination.
The rhetoric of fear has already begun. Prime Minister David Cameron
on Sunday
tweeted: “The Labour Party is now a threat to our national
security, our economic security and your family’s security.” This
battle will be ugly.
Corbyn, like
Syriza in Greece and Podemos in Spain, is part of the new
popular resistance that is rising up from the ruins of neoliberalism
and globalization to fight the international banking system and
American imperialism. We have yet to mount this battle effectively
in the United States. But we, especially because we live in the
heart of empire, have a special responsibility to defy the machine,
held in place by the Democratic Party establishment, the war
industry, Wall Street and groups such as the Israel lobby. We too
must work to build a socialist nation. We may not win, but this
fight is the only hope left to save ourselves from the predatory
forces bent on the destruction of democracy and the ecosystem on
which we depend for life. If the forces that oppose us triumph, we
will have no future left.
Chris Hedges previously
spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in Central
America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported
from more than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian Science
Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New
York Times, for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
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