UK Election:
Moral victory for Corbyn & the politics of solidarity
John Wight has
written for newspapers and websites across the world, including the
Independent, Morning Star, Huffington Post, Counterpunch, London Progressive
Journal, and Foreign Policy Journal. He is also a regular commentator on RT and
BBC Radio. John is currently working on a book exploring the role of the West
in the Arab Spring. You can follow him on Twitter @JohnWight1
Published time: 10 Jun,
2017 rt.com
The story of the UK
general election is a huge personal and moral victory for Jeremy Corbyn with a
politics of hope and solidarity, and a cataclysmic personal defeat for Theresa
May with a politics of cynicism and austerity.
Confounding the opinion polls - to prove again their irrelevancy - the
end result of the most seismic UK election in a generation is a hung
parliament. What this means is that no party has won the 326 seats out of the
650 available required to achieve a working majority, necessary to ensure their
policies are voted through Parliament as legislation.
Incumbent Prime
Minister Theresa May is for now ruling out stepping down, as Corbyn and his
supporters are demanding in the wake of this result. It is hard to see how she
can possibly continue though, even with the support of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) as part of
a hard right coalition – certainly not after the humiliating reverse she’s just
suffered at the hands of the electorate. When we consider that she started this
election campaign over 20 points ahead in most polls, the extent of this
stunning turnaround cannot be overstated. Yet at present, like a latter day
King Canute, the Prime Minister is refusing to confront reality, choosing
instead the sanctuary of an establishment bubble in Westminster. If this is “strong
and stable leadership” then I’m a banana.
Hubris has been Theresa May’s undoing. She did not have to call
this election, and did so fully expecting to waltz back into Downing Street on
the back of a huge majority. Her arrogance was reflected in one of the most
lackluster and uninspiring campaigns for political office in British electoral
history. She made the mistake of confusing an election with a coronation, it
clearly having slipped her mind that the country already has a Queen and does
not need, or surely desire, another one.
Surveying this result, the confusion it has wrought, what must EU
officials in Brussels be thinking as they get ready to kick-start Brexit
negotiations in a couple of weeks’ time? One thing we all know beyond doubt is
that Britain’s negotiating position in those talks, already weak, just got
significantly weaker with May at the helm.
North of the border in Scotland, meanwhile, the Scottish
Nationalist Party (SNP), led by Nicola Sturgeon, suffered its own sobering
reversal, losing 21 seats to take their total down from 56 to 35 seats at
Westminster. In essence, the SNP has been a victim of its own success, having
won an astounding 50 seats at the last election in 2015. There was no way they
were going to hold onto all 56 seats, but a loss of over 20 seats was not
anticipated. Their loss came at the hands of Labour and especially Tory gains.
Indeed, in Scotland the entire Tory campaign was based on
opposition to a second referendum on Scottish independence. The result proves
that this Tory election strategy north of the border was successful.
This being said, Nicola Sturgeon was left with little alternative
other than to put the prospect of a second referendum on Scottish independence
on the table after last year’s EU referendum. Of the votes cast in Scotland in
that referendum, 62 percent were cast in support of remaining in the EU. Yet despite
Sturgeon attempting to arrive at a compromise arrangement with Theresa May that
would enable Scotland to retain its place in the single market while remaining
within Brexit Britain, she was roundly rebuffed. In so doing the Tories left
nobody in any doubt that to them Scotland is merely a region within the UK
rather than a partner nation of the UK.
Ultimately, the honeymoon period enjoyed by the SNP since the
referendum on Scottish independence in 2014 is over. Voters in Scotland have no
desire for another referendum on independence just 20 months after the last
one, regardless of the EU referendum result, with the onset of election fatigue
self-evident.
Overall, the story of this election is Labour’s astonishing result
and the momentous personal and moral victory achieved by the party’s leader, Jeremy
Corbyn. Since the day he was elected the most unlikely leader the party has had
in a generation, based on the media-focused and conflated figures who’d led the
party previously – i.e. Tony Blair, Ed Miliband – Corbyn has been subjected to
the most withering demonization by the Tory press of probably any political
figure of the left since his mentor the late Tony Benn.
Yet despite this relentless media assault, and despite having to
lead without the support of his own parliamentary colleagues on the Labour
benches behind him - colleagues who spared no opportunity to undermine and try
to derail his authority - he kept his nerve and equanimity and stayed the
course.
His manifesto for government was a game-changer, planting Labour’s
colors squarely on the side of working people with its proposal to tax the rich
and redistribute wealth to the poor and low waged in particular – in other
words to reverse a process whereby, under the rubric of austerity, wealth had
been transferred in the other direction.
The UK in 2017 is a right-wing dystopia, replete with food banks,
crippling levels of poverty, and an ocean of human despair. Austerity, rolled
out in response to the global economic crash and recession caused by the
reckless greed of the rich, has nothing to do with economics and everything to
do with ideology. It has been tantamount to the unleashing of a war against the
working class in service to the god of neoliberalism.
Corbyn’s manifesto came as a rejoinder to that, to the politics of
cynicism and callous cruelty, advocating desperately needed state intervention
in the economy and solidarity with those who’ve been battered and bruised over
seven years of Tory rule. In a remarkable symmetry with the success enjoyed by
Bernie Sanders in the US primaries of 2016, Corbyn enjoyed huge support from young voters, many casting
a ballot for the first time, with his vision of a society underpinned by common human decency.
Whatever happens now is anybody’s guess. The most likely scenario
in the months ahead is another election in order for either Labour or the
Tories to achieve a majority by which to govern the country effectively,
especially with the Brexit process being so important to its economic future.
Theresa May has asserted that despite presiding over the party’s
reduced majority in the Commons that she is the one to navigate the UK through
what promises to be tortuous Brexit negotiations. Thus far, however, key
members of her cabinet have been keeping ominously silent when it comes to
offering her their fulsome support. Significantly, when approached by the media
to get his view on Theresa May being able continuing as Prime Minister in light
of this result, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson answered with a wry smile.
As Shakespeare reminds us, “There’s
daggers in men’s smiles.”
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