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8th March 2002
Apathy is now one of the main talking points of the political
classes, who write and broadcast about it all the time, laying
the blame on those, especially young people, who just will
not turn up to vote as responsible citizens should blaming
them for the problem.
Certainly the vote is an important right won by earlier
generations many of whom gave their lives to win what we now
take for granted, and in very recent times the Africans fought
like tigers to gain that right against their previous exclusion
from the democratic process by the Apartheid regime.
But why are people disinterested in politics - as many are
-for we must understand why the vote seems to have lost so
much of its appeal and there are two reasons why this is happening.
First, that whereas the political problems facing this generation
are challenging, difficult and interesting, the practice and
coverage of politics is shallow, abusive and personalized
and that alone is enough to switch us off, since exchanges
of insults in parliament, the control freakery of the Millbank
Tower apparatchiks and the organized punch ups masterminded
on Newsnight simply do not satisfy our desire to know what
is going on, why and what we can do about it.
The second reason is much deeper and it is the widely held
suspicion that the government itself is apathetic about many
of the concerns of those who voted Labour in the last two
general elections, a view shared by pensioners facing a cut
back in their retirement income and students who cannot understand
why they are being asked to pay for their education at college.
People are told that we have to be careful about public
expenditure to avoid endangering our economy but there is
always plenty of money about to pay for wars in Iraq, Yugoslavia
and Afghanistan and for the Board of Directors in British
business who seem to find plenty of cash for their salary
boosts, share options and golden handshakes when they fail,
living happily in the knowledge that they are not going to
be asked to pay a penny more on tax at the top rate.
The government is also believed to be apathetic about the
ever-widening gap between rich and poor both here and worldwide
where that gap can be clearly attributable to the injustices
that flow from globalization which New Labour supports uncritically.
And the government is clearly apathetic about the Charter
of the United Nations, following Washington into any war they
want to wage whatever that Charter says about international
law.
Post office workers feel that the government is apathetic
about the 30,000 jobs that may be lost if the privatization
plans for the GPO go ahead, the police feel the same when
they face worsened conditions under the plans the Home Secretary
is introducing and the teachers cannot understand why they
have been singled out for an attack by the Education Secretary.
Labour members feel the government is apathetic about the
party and their policy role at Conference, while special advisers
with no connection with the party are hired to invent policies
for No 10 to consider and decide - a process that has led
the BBC to decide that it will no longer televise our Conference
because they know it has no power.
Many cabinet ministers too must now being feeling that the
prime minister is apathetic about them and loyal Labour MPs
are beginning to wonder exactly what role they now play in
the business of government since the key parliamentary committees
are not even allowed to cross examine the government's top
advisers.
In short the government has consciously decided to cut itself
off from those it was elected to represent but still demands
that they vote loyally when the time comes without expecting
to play any role in policy making at any other time.
These are very serious weaknesses that we have to correct
if we are ever to reclaim the democratic rights which the
pioneers fought so hard to give us, and which, quite plainly
are being systematically withdrawn in the guise of modernization,
but which are in fact a throwback to a monarchical style of
government when the courtiers picked by the king hovered round
the throne and had a contempt for the common people.
The question we have to ask ourselves is how do we respond
to all this and there are many alternatives on offer including
the dream of a new pure socialist party to replace Labour
and remedy all the faults that I have described and there
are many honest, decent and sincere people who are working
to bring that about, but we cannot wait for our political
system to be completely restructured, though it could possibly
happen at some time in the future, and, if it does, New Labour
will be the catalyst that brought it about.
What we have to do now is to build public support for radical
policies that meet the needs of all those who feel the government
is apathetic about them and that points to huge national campaigns
like the one on Peace which brought 20,000 to Hyde park and
Trafalgar Square last Saturday which was absolutely ignored
by the Media, except of course the Morning Star, proving to
my satisfaction that the press proprietors and broadcasting
bosses are quite happy to see us apathetic about politicians
so long as we listen to their pundits and believe what they
are told.
That is why we must rediscover our right to participate
in our future and not accept the role allocated of us - as
mere spectators of the activities of our leaders who claim
the right take all the decisions and expect us to obey them.
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