Alan Thornett,  a Respect National Council member, offers his views on a possible future for the organisation.  Some bits may, or may not, be controversial. In particular Alan flags up the “big breakthrough theory”, the orientation to Labour in opposition and Respect’s democratic functioning.

image I agree with much of what Clive Searle (Respect National Secretary) says in his report on the election results circulated a couple of weeks ago. The report was written after an extensive post-election discussion on the Respect National Council (NC) and reflects the majority view in that discussion. There was however another strand of opinion at the meeting which is reflected in this text.

I agree with Clive’s analysis of the general post election political situation. He spells out very well the scale of attacks we face under the Con/Dem coalition, the squeeze on the small parties after the leadership debates, and the swing to Labour which took place in the last stages of the campaign.

He is also right that the Respect vote was qualitatively better than the rest of the left. Whilst Respect lost its MP and failed to get either of its other main candidates elected it received a very credible vote both at parliamentary and local government level. It won 33,000 votes across its 11 parliamentary candidates and an average of 13% across its 80 or so local government candidates. Salma Yaqoob’s vote in particular shows that she has a very strong base.

His stress on the importance of the election to Parliament of Caroline Lucas and the defeat of Nick Griffin and the BNP in Barking also very important.

Whether the coalition is ‘weak and unstable’ we will have to see. It is potentially unstable but it is also bound together by its need to survive and its joint total commitment to its cuts agenda. It is already clear that they are going for deep and radical cuts and will not be deflected by divisions within the coalition on other things.

Solidarity with new Labour?

What is far more controversial is what the report implies for the future of Respect. There were three main points of debate at the NC: What is the rationale for the existence of Respect in the post-election period; how should Respect be built in the new situation and is it or should it be a campaigning party as well as electoral machine.

One prominent NC member, who is a Socialist Action supporter, argued that after the election Respect should no longer see itself as an anti New Labour party but as an anti-coalition party in solidarity with new Labour in opposition. This is reflected in Clive’s statement.

To me this is seriously problematic. When it comes to opposition to the cuts, of course, Respect should work with all who are prepared to oppose them, including New Labour if that is what they do, though since they are fresh from pushing through their own cuts this is not too likely. The fact is that New Labour is still New Labour and this is not about to change when the leadership election has been concluded. What we are likely to get is not a retreat from New Labour but some kind of New Labour plus.

The crisis of working class representation, therefore, which was the political rationale for the existence of Respect, remains undiminished. Either Respect continues to address this by providing a political alternative to new Labour or it has no rationale for existence.

Building a broad left alternative to New Labour, however, is likely be more difficult with New Labour in opposition than it was with Labour in office. Moreover, the next election, whether it comes in May 2015 or before, is likely to squeeze the small parties just as much as the recent one. The two party system will still be in force even if AV is introduced and the ‘leaders debates’ are sure to continue with the same effect on the small parties. This implies a sharp rethink as to how Respect can be built in the present period.

Big breakthrough theory

One thing which needs to go immediately is the much debated theory of the ‘big breakthrough’ — which has been the defacto approach of the main players in Respect. This involved concentrating resources into breakthrough constituencies and then building on the kudos once victory is achieved. Respect does not have a future, as I put it to the meeting, simply as a support network for two or three key constituencies — important as they undoubtedly are.

This was a problem when there was a good chance of such victories since (in the case of Respect) it distorted the character of the organisation and left those outside of the key constituencies to fend for themselves. This has neither been a useful way to build Respect or the best way to support the target constituencies. Now with such breakthroughs far more difficult to achieve it is completely redundant.

George Galloway’s election victory in 2005 was the product of a very particular set of circumstances: a brutal and unpopular war, a constituency with a very big anti-war population and a pro-war New Labour incumbent. Also a Respect candidate who was a central leader of the anti war movement and with a Labour left background. This is becoming increasingly difficult to repeat even by Salma Yaqoob who has anti-war background and an exceptional local base.

The one option not open to Respect, therefore, in the post-election situation is more of the same — which seemed to be the message from the NC discussion. Instead the task facing Respect is to build itself outwards into those areas and sections of the working class (including the white working class) where its presence is currently weak or nonexistent whilst preserving the bases of support it already has. This can only be achieved by consistent work at the local level between elections backed up by national materials and structures.

A national perspective

It means building Respect as a political party with all that implies. Respect needs to have a perspective of becoming a national organisation with a national presence and it needs to act as such if it is to value the breakthroughs it makes into new areas and build them on a permanent basis. It was good that Respect extended its parliamentary candidates in the run up to the election but the task now is to integrate them into its ranks on a permanent basis.

At the NC it was argued that Respect is already a campaigning party as well as an electoral machine, and of course Respect fully support some very important campaigns such as Stop the War and Viva Palestina. It is far from consistently a campaigning party, however. Its activity around the economic crisis has been poor (other than in the paper which has faded through lack of support in the key areas) and there is a danger that this will be the case in the emerging campaigns around the cuts. We should already be doing meetings around the country about the cuts with our most prominent speakers.

Priorities have become most sharply distorted when an election gets close in the main constituencies. The elected bodies cease to meet and all activity and decision making reverts to local constituency level. The entire delegations from South Birmingham and East London (which are a hal
f of the NC) absented themselves en-block from the NC meeting 8 weeks before the general election, making their priorities absolutely clear. It rendered the NC unable to play any significant role in the election or in anything else. One of the few decisions it did take — to update the 2005 manifesto for use in the election — was subsequently set aside by the officers and an alternative manifesto adopted without reference to any of the elected bodies.

Respect needs to take itself seriously build itself as a fully functioning party with a comprehensive political platform, engaging in a range of activities. This is the only way to build a political alternative.

For this, however, the democracy of the organisation needs to be completely overhauled and the transparency of decision making re-established. Members have to be involved in decision-making and the integrity of its elected bodies respected. Regular materials have to be produced at national level to service the branches. Local branches need to feel that they are part of an organisation and that they are getting some support.

As far as the immediate future is concerned Respect needs to become fully involved in the in the escalating struggle against the cuts ad other anti-working class policies of on the coalition government. We should be holding meetings around the country and setting out our stall as a part of the struggle. Maybe the paper could be re-discussed and the website, which appears to have been abandoned, reactivated to carry up to date material both on the attacks which are being prepared and the organisation of resistance.

(10.6.10)

 

4 responses to “A contribution to the debate on the future of Respect”

  1. Just how much use is it, in the end, to have these isolated “bases” of support (or votes, at least)?

    Discussion on the Philippine elections by Sonny Melencio is quite interesting on this:

    “In a letter to a comrade residing in Bolivia, I mentioned that our party the PLM (Partido Lakas ng Masa) was adopting the Latin American electoral strategy of building local bases first in order to contest the national leadership in future elections. The comrade replied that this was not the Latin American strategy at all.

    “The strategy, he said, was not focused on building local bases first, but on preparing the capacity to contest the presidency through a broad alliance of progressive and socialist forces. It means using the strength of the mass movement, and in some cases the mass uprising, to force the scenario of changing the bourgeois leaders of the land by the combined forces of the Left, the social movements, and the broad progressive forces. These have been the experience, according to him, of the electoral victory that brought Hugo Chavez and Evo Morales into power in Venezuela and Bolivia, respectively.”
    http://lakasngmasa.blogspot.com/2010/05/notes-on-may-10-elections.html

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  2. I watched Salma Yaqoob on Question Time the other night and thought she was a strong confident and articulate advocate of Respect. In the eyes of the public who see or hear her in debates she is representing a political party that might be small and unrepresented in parliament but has a few significant local bases,

    I think the un-named comrade in Bolivia is right. about the ‘combined forces of the left, the social movements and the broad progressive forces’. The way I see it here is that Respect is part of those ‘combined forces’ but what it fails to do is CONNECT with its potential base and NETWORK supporters and activists.

    A very small party has to develop its political identity and breadth of experience if it is to grow and influence more people to support it, the social movements and the broad progressive forces on the English political scene.

    If the Respect NEC invests in the people who support it then out of the relationships it facilitates and nurtures will come the resources to make the impact necessary to really politically harness the deep struggles of working people and the unemployed, pensioners, etc.

    I think Alan is right in his approach and I am seriously thinking about re-joining Respect now it if I can FEEL like I can be involved in some way and there is a significant shift in openness and engagement from what I experienced previously. I have a great deal of respect for Salma and I feel that she is a person of good integrity, warm humanity and resilience.

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  3. What is distinctive about Respect that would make it a pole of attraction outside the “main constituencies”? If workers are looking for an anti-cuts campaign they have other places to look.

    If it hasn’t been a fully functioning party up to now, why would it be expected to start now?

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  4. What the last election showed,was that the font is still dominant,especially in Scotland,for the Labour party.

    Respects,only game is electoral reform,For them and those ignorant enough with closed eyes, to ignore the power of Respects,religious following will come a cropper.

    Electrol reform, is the only road to a form, of passed ,so called democracy,albiet Musslim or Christian belief.

    What that ,outside socialisms ,non denominational is to be seen.

    Yer land and who resides,is no longer a bastion of biggotry and hate.Yer land is how!s the neibour and can i ask them for a bowl of suger.

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