WENDY’S LABOUR BACKING COUNCIL HOUSE SALES
by Ken Ferguson
THE
Thatcher years saw several key moments in her
war against the Left and the labour movement.
The mass mobilisation of state violence against
the miners in the 1984 strike, the relentless
privatisation of public assets and the Falklands
War cry to ‘Rejoice’ amidst the war dead are such
moments.
But above all else one policy has achieved outstanding
success in its intention of destroying collective
services : the right to buy council houses.
The so called ‘Right to Buy’ for council tenants
saw tens of thousands of council houses sold off
at cut prices to tenants and has, in Scotland,
reduced the stock of homes for rent by almost
half a million.
Along with the sale of shares in public firms
such as gas and electricity this key policy aimed
to turn workers into ‘stakeholders’ in capitalism
and weaken support for unions and collective services.
It has to be said that the Tories made no secret
of their intention.
In 1974 a Tory think tank wrote:
“Simply by visiting
To counter this they drove the sell off policy
through and after some initial resistance Labour
surrendered and accepted it.
Thirty years on the proportion of people saddled
with mortgage debt and facing soaring housing
costs as the price of putting roof over their
head has soared.
Every day the media talk of house prices, interest
rates and possible house repossessions as the
crisis deepens.
Thirty years on and there is a growing realisation
that the huge rise in house prices allied to the
growing difficulty in paying them means that rented
homes are needed again.
In a welcome move in that direction last year
the SNP government announced plans to restart
modestly a council house building programme.
They have also restricted the right to buy yet
when the issue came before the Scottish Parliament
last month the supposed ‘socialists’ on the Labour
benches voted, along with the Tories, to oppose
it
Probably not since Holyrood opened for business
has there been a clearer example of the total
abandonment of principles which lie at the heart
of New Labour.
They are now 110 per cent behind the idea of people
merely as consumers who meet their needs in the
market with those unable to do so left to make
do with increasingly pressurised public services.
That’s why when Wendy rose to proclaim to Labour’s
Aviemore conference that she was the ‘socialist’
alternative to Salmond her performance was about
as convincing as Bernard Mathews endorsing vegetarianism.
This latest blunder further underlines the reality
of New Labour as washed up and incapable of meeting
the challenges posed by the current environmental
and economic crisis.
by Ken Ferguson
LAUNCHED
amidst a flood of high noon tough talk to the
local militias demanding they surrender the
Perhaps the operation was doomed from the moment
that Bush praised it and described it as a “defining
moment” in the war so far.
Iraqi prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki flew to
In the teeth of stiff resistance which saw some
Iraqi forces refusing to fight and some changing
sides this deadline was first extended and them
quietly shelved.
Days of fighting which effectively imprisoned
the civilian population in their houses without
basic services such as water and electricity
and killed hundreds was simply a complete failure.
Its wider significance it that it brings into
question a key part of the US version of Iraq,
the idea that the Iraqi army is a unified disciplined
force capable of keeping order on the strife torn
streets.
Nouri al-Maliki’s prestige has taken a dive and
wider questions about the official tale of an
Moqtada al-Sadr, the target of the assault, emerges
from the crisis strengthened not only as a military
figure but also as a political player in the elections
due later this year.
Not only has this led the
Far from packing their kit bags and getting on
a flight home it is now clear that
BBC news of course spoke of the Brits supplying
food and ammunition but it is also clear that
Royal Artillery units were bombarding targets
in support of the Iraqi army and that RAF planes
launched air strikes.
Most significantly was the revelation that wavering
Iraqi army units were ‘stiffened’ by the support
of 150 Scots infantrymen from the Royal Borderers
backed by armoured vehicles.
The relatively small number involved will be downplayed
but in reality means that far from just training
the Iraqi army to shoot straight and march in
step the Brits are once again active participants
in the war.
Only last autumn at the height of election speculation
Gordon Brown stood among the tropical kitted troops
and spoke of getting the Brits out of the desert.
That now seems about as real as a desert mirage
and Brown must add the Iraqi quick sands to growing
list of disasters increasingly imperilling his
government.