It’s Time
To Take Power Back
Britain Faces the Biggest Crisis of Democracy in its
History
By Nafeez
Ahmed
July 17,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Canary"
-
Welcome to
prime minister Theresa May’s new regime: it
represents perhaps the most authoritarian, racist
and austerity-obsessed government in British
history.
Britain is
now being run by an unelected leader presiding over
a draconian surveillance-state, hell-bent on
accelerating war on the poor and vulnerable, at home
and abroad. And if that wasn’t bad enough, the
official opposition to this regime is falling apart.
The fight
to reclaim our democracy must be ramped up. Now.
Austerity on steroids
May
launched her premiership on Wednesday with a grand
speech that would not have sounded out of place if
spoken by a leader of the Labour Party.
But even
though she sacked George Osborne, she has already
made clear she has no intention of reversing the
former chancellor’s core policies. In fact, while
Osborne had begun to slow down his own commitments
to austerity as the economy failed to meaningfully
improve, May refuses to back down from the
government’s commitment to:
]…]
continue with its intention to reduce public
spending and cut the budget deficit.
May has
given lip-service to building a “better Britain”
that “works not for a privileged few but for
everyone” – but plans to continue brutally cutting
public services and even basic welfare benefits that
are hitting the poorest, hardest.
As an MP,
the new PM has
supported the discredited ‘bedroom tax’, voted
against higher benefits for people who cannot work
due to disability or illness, and voted against
public spending to create guaranteed jobs for young
people.
She doesn’t
want to increase tax against people with incomes
over £150,000, voted against a banker’s bonus tax,
generally voted to reduce taxes on giant
corporations, and overall wants to strangle the
power of workers by neutering trade unions.
Police-state
And that’s
just one element of what May stands for.
In her
previous incarnation as home secretary, the new PM
presided over the controversial ‘Preventing Violent
Extremism’ (Prevent) programme, which as The
Canary
exclusively reported appears to have been
influenced by far-right anti-Muslim extremists with
ties to neo-Nazis. The programme disproportionately
targets ordinary Muslims, and singles out those who
criticise government foreign policies and Prevent
itself.
Added to
that, there is May’s notorious Investigatory Powers
Bill.
So far,
covert mass surveillance has continued without any
legal basis. If May’s Bill is passed, the
intelligence services will have wide-ranging
legal authority to hack and infiltrate all
electronic systems for the purposes of spying. That
means covertly installing malware on computers,
using keyloggers to monitor all your keystrokes,
tapping into telecommunications cables, installing
malware on smartphones and so on.
Particularly worrying is that “bulk” surveillance –
that is, surveillance of groups, communities and
whole societies – can be justified on three simple
grounds: national security; preventing or detecting
serious crime, and threats to “the economic
well-being of the UK”. In other words, basically
anything.
A
Corbyn-led Labour party, for instance, could
be construed as “threatening” the profits of
corporate lobbies with a stranglehold over the
government.
If anyone
has doubts about the dangerous implications for
democracy, check out
this essay by British intelligence expert Robin
Ramsay, delivered to various Labour party branches
in 1996. He uses a wealth of declassified documents
to show how Britain’s national security state has
for decades sought to subvert and manipulate the
British left, including the Labour party – even
using “surveillance down to the level of trade
councils and union branches.”
Kill the environment
Sources
inside the Tory party have told Paul Goodman, editor
of ConservativeHome, that May plans to fold the
Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) into
the Department of Business, Innovation and Skills
(BIS).
The DECC
has already been watered down under David Cameron,
focusing less on tackling climate change, and more
on shilling for the shale oil and gas industry.
But this
would ring the death-knell on DECC’s environmental
credentials, making the department entirely
subsidiary to more important considerations of big
business and corporate power.
The new
PM’s contempt for the environment is further obvious
from her own voting
record. She has generally voted against measures
to prevent climate change, supported selling
off England’s state-owned forests,
opposed regulations on fracking, and never even
bothered voting on financial incentives for low
carbon electricity generation.
Deport the foreigners
Wherever
you stand on Brexit, its primary campaign promise
was proper immigration controls. Even Nigel Farage
promised that the Vote Leave campaign was not
targeting Europeans who had already made their homes
in Britain.
But May
took that further by effectively
threatening to deport the three million EU
nationals already living in Britain – the same
policy advocated by the neo-Nazi BNP.
The
alarming undertones of this shouldn’t be
underestimated. In times of economic crisis, as we
saw in the 1930s, fascism invariably rears its ugly
head.
I’m not racist, I just
like making jokes about black people
May’s lurch
to the far-right is mirrored in her selection of
Boris Johnson as foreign secretary. But the former
Mayor of London, now the face of Britain on the
world stage, has a long history of openly racist
statements.
Here’s a
brief
round-up from The Mirror:
Visiting Uganda, Johnson cheerily said to UN
workers and their black driver: “Right, let’s go
and look at some more piccaninnies.” (The
Observer, October 5 2003)
He also
wrote: “The Queen has come to love the
Commonwealth, partly because it supplies her
with regular cheering crowds of flag waving
piccaninnies.” (Daily Telegraph, January 10
2002)
Of Tony
Blair’s trip to Africa he said: “The pangas will
stop their hacking of human flesh and the tribal
warriors will all break out in watermelon smiles
to see the big white chief.” (Daily Telegraph,
January 10 2002)
And he
defended colonialism for boosting Africa’s
economy saying: “Left to their own devices, the
natives would rely on nothing but the instant
carbohydrate gratification of the plantain.”
(Spectator 2 February 2002)
More
recently, Johnson declared that US President Obama
has an “ancestral dislike” of Britain because he is
“part-Kenyan.”
Although he
has apologised for some of his previous racist
‘jokes’, he has never retracted this appalling
statement. In case it’s not blindingly obvious: if
you think making jokes about black people is okay
and non-racist because you’re joking, you’re racist.
The new colonialism
Adding
insult to injury, May’s new trade secretary is none
other than the
disgraced former Defence Secretary, Liam Fox,
who was forced to resign from the Cabinet in 2011.
Fox had allowed his friend Adam Werritty to
masquerade as an official government advisor, while
taking vast amounts of money from special interest
groups eager to capture government defence policy.
One
vehicle for these interests was Fox’s ‘Atlantic
Bridge’, a sham charity – later investigated and
exposed by the Charity Commission – with
close ties to the American Legislative Exchange
Council (ALEC), the main lobbying arm behind the Tea
Party movement in the US, funded by Big Oil, Big
Guns, and Big Pharma.
As trade
secretary, Fox is well-placed to apply his expertise
in corruption and subterfuge to molly-coddle the web
of imperial power exposed in a
new report by British charity, War on Want. The
report, The New Colonialism: Britain’s scramble
for Africa’s energy and mineral sources,
reveals that a network of British firms now controls
over $1 trillion of oil, gas, coal, diamonds, gold
and other resources across Africa through mining
operations.
The British
government facilitates these operations with trade
policies that oppose African efforts to regulate and
protect their economies from foreign corporate
power. The result? While reaping massive profits for
British corporations, local democracies and worker
rights have eroded.
Fox is
already plugged into this web of power. One donor to
his joint ventures with Werritty is Mick Davis, who
was CEO of the transnational mining firm, Xstrata
Plc, until its merger and absorption by Anglo-Swiss
giant Glencore in 2013. Glencore Plc is one of the
main firms exposed in the War on Want
report.
Messing up Brexit
As if this
wasn’t bad enough, the Brexit plan is not going to
mean less austerity because we’re out of the EU. The
priority of May’s government is to protect London’s
big financiers.
May’s new
chancellor, Philip Hammond, has insisted that
austerity remains the right answer to the 2008
financial crash, but promises “a new phase” for the
economy.
What does
that mean?
In the
words of the Financial Times, the new
chancellor has:
promised to defend the interests of the City of
London in the EU exit negotiations, admitting
there was ‘no room for complacency’… Although
he said other EU countries had an interest in a
strong City, he added: ‘We need to ensure access
to the EU single market for our financial
services industry in London.’
Observers
in the City
recognise that the chancellor is not implying a
shift away from austerity. Sources at major bank,
BNP Paribas, said that Hammond’s comments didn’t
mean “fiscal prudence” would be abandoned, but
merely revised in terms of timelines.
Market
analyst Jasper Lawler of CMC Markets agreed
Hammond’s appointment would reassure big financiers
previously worried by May’s earlier suggestions that
she might reduce austerity.
David
Davis, May’s Brexit Minister, is also no enemy of
austerity. Whatever his shambolic plan to leave the
EU will be, he is committed to empowering corporate
finance in the UK.
His MP
voting record is similar to that of his new
boss. He consistently opposes public spending to
create jobs, wants reduced corporation tax, likes
astronomical banker bonuses, and wants to weaken
trade unions. Davis’ Brexit negotiations won’t be
about a “better Britain” for all of us: they’ll be
about a “better Britain” for banks and corporations.
Shambolic opposition
As this new
regime consolidates itself, the opposition is in
increasing disarray. The Labour party faces an
escalating mutiny against its own
democratically-elected leader. And ironically, one
of the chief mechanisms is to suddenly
rig the rules so that the party’s new membership
has to pay £25 just to vote in the leadership
elections.
The chief
instigators of the coup against Jeremy Corbyn,
whatever you think of him, invariably fail to offer
any meaningful alternative to the mix of policies
being pursued by the Tories: hawkish military
interventionism, support for mass surveillance,
fundamental agreement that austerity is the only
option, to name a few.
To make
matters worse, the entire media-industrial complex
has united against the incumbent opposition leader.
A
new study from the London School of Economics
Department of Media and Communications warns that
the British media can no longer meaningfully call
itself a “watchdog” of political power. It has,
instead, become a “bloodthirsty attackdog” against
the main opposition leader. This systematically
biased reporting, based on “snarling and barking” at
a politician that “happens to challenge the status
quo”, say the authors, is “unworthy of a democracy.”
So we now
find ourselves in the extraordinary position of
watching British democracy crumble before our eyes.
An
emboldened Tory regime is preparing for a future of
intensifying privatisation, austerity for the poor,
welfare for the wealthy, extreme nationalism,
institutional racism, and arrogant militarism
abroad.
The most
popular opposition leader in decades is facing an
unrelenting onslaught not only from those in his own
party who barely differ from the Tories they claim
to oppose, but also from the entire establishment
media.
The Tory
machine’s ability to pursue an agenda at odds with
the interests of the vast majority of the British
public is therefore more powerful than ever.
This means
that the fight to take back British democracy from
regressive vested interests must be stepped up, now.
Apathy is not an option. Apathy is what got us here
in the first place.
Call to action
Now is the
time to take action: action to get educated about
our politics, our economics, our societies, our
different communities, our environment.
Action to
get engaged in all these areas at a grassroots level
– no, not just stepping out to the polling booth now
and again, or even just joining a party. Action by
engaging critically and constructively with the
institutions that claim to represent us at multiple
levels – whether through turning up, joining,
writing, speaking.
Action to
show our faces at obscure meetings where vested
interests would rather we don’t appear. Principled,
ethically-consistent action designed not merely to
show a broken system that we will not be ignored,
but even more importantly to showcase the vision and
values we stand for.
Along with
action that creates change outside those
institutions, and forces them to look and listen.
Action to
change realities at a local level here and now, so
we can begin empowering our communities in a way we
never thought possible before: growing our own food,
collectively; pooling our resources and developing
local community investment funds; forming local
collectives to facilitate the education of our
children; and challenging the increasing
encroachment of unaccountable state-corporate power
in all areas of life.
We must
begin mobilising both within and beyond the existing
system.
These
actions won’t change our predicament overnight, but
they are the baby steps we must take to begin
rebuilding British democracy from the ground-up.
Dr.
Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed is an award-winning
investigative journalist, international security
scholar and bestselling author. He is International
Editor at The Canary. He writes the 'System Shift'
column at VICE's science magazine Motherboard, and
is the creator of INSURGEintelligence, a crowdfunded
public interest investigative journalism project.
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