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The votes are
counted. The talking begins to form a local administration for Northern
Ireland/Six Counties. The winners prepare for power while the losers lick their
wounds. But in a telling remark a newly elected DUP Assembly member said that
the differences between the DUP [Democratic Unionist Party] and the UUP [Ulster Unionist Party] were that the DUP had "the personal
touch."
Indeed it will
become increasingly difficult as the years go on to differentiate between the
five main parties, the DUP, Sinn Fein, UUP, SDLP and Alliance. Already they are lining up to put
their snouts in the trough of Chancellor Gordon Brown as they seek sweeteners
in the form of "a peace dividend" of £1 Billion to share power with each
other. In the past they have introduced pro-capitalist policies in the form of
public private partnerships and there is no clear differentiation in the
economic policies they have advocated. Of course the reality is that they will
introduce and implement the economic policies dictated by the British
Government and which have their origins in the policies of the international
capitalist bodies such as the IMF and the World Bank. Those with the republican
traditions who still harbour illusions in the radicalism of Sinn Fein should
note the pathetic performances of Gerry Adams on TV in the 26 Counties/Irish
Republic when he floundered when pressed on specific policies to deal with
issues such as health.
When the IRSP took
up a principled position of opposition to the Good Friday Agreement we were
vilified by some on the left and by Sinn Fein (P) as warmongers and anti
-peace. But we clearly indicated we opposed the GFA because it endorsed the
British policy of divide and rule. It institutionalised sectarianism, cemented
British rule in a part of Ireland,
and endorsed partition.
Now the chickens are
coming home to roost. Condition after condition was put on Sinn Fein, which saw
massive decommissioning and eventually endorsement of the PSNI [The new police
force that has replaced the old RUC].
Faced with a set up
that forced them into choosing sectarian camps the vast majority of the voting
population chose to vote for the party that seemed the strongest to represent
their sectarian interests. Hence the great success of the DUP and Sinn Fein in
the elections taking just under 60% of the seats available. But before getting
carried away, supporters of Sinn Fein should note the actions of the PSNI
during the elections. The arrest of a candidate outside the count, and the
arrest of the husband of a Sinn Fein councillor was the PSNI sticking two
fingers up to those Shinners [Sinn Fein] who talked about putting manners on
the Police. The reality is that the boot is on the other foot.
However there was
little joy for anti-policing candidates or indeed candidates from the left.
Below we print their votes. It makes sorry reading.
Republican Sinn
Fein:
West
Belfast: Geraldine
Taylor, 427 votes (1.3%)
Mid Ulster:
Brendan McLaughlin, 437 votes (1.0%)
Upper Bann: Barry Toman: 386 votes (0.9%)
East Londonderry: Michael McGonigle, 393 votes
(1.2%)
Fermanagh South Tyrone: Michael McManus, 431 votes (0.9%)
West Tyrone, Joe O Neill, 448 votes (1.1%)
Dissident Provos:
North Antrim: Paul
McGlinchey, 383 votes (0.9%)
Newry and Armagh: Davy
Highland, 2188 votes
(4.4%)
Fermanagh South Tyrone: Gerry McGeough, 814 votes (1.8%)
Other Republican
Independents:
South Down: Martin
Cunningham, 434 votes (0.9%)
Foyle: Peggy O Hara, 1789 votes (4.4%)
Workers Party:
West
Belfast John
Lowry (Workers Party) 434 Votes (1.26%)
East Belfast- Joe Bell (Workers Party) 107 votes (0.35%)
South Belfast Paddy Lynn (Workers Party) 123 Votes (0.40)
North Belfast John Lavery (Workers
Party) 139(0.46%)
Lagan Valley John Magee (Workers
Party) 83 Votes (0.19%)
South Antrim Marcella Delaney (Workers Party) 89Votes(0.23%)
Socialist Party:
South Belfast Jim Barbour
(Socialist Party) 248 Votes (0.81%)
East Belfast Thomas Black (Socialist Party)
225 Votes (0.75 %)
Labour:
South Down Malachi
Curran (Labour) 123 Votes (0.26%)
Socialist Environmental Alliance:
Foyle Eamon McCann (Socialist Environmental Alliance) 2045 Votes
(4.5%)
People before Profit:
West
Belfast Sean
Mitchell (People before Profit 744 Votes (2.17%)
It is clear from
these results that there is little or no support for those Republicans who
cling to the old certainties that the Provo
movement once clung to. Indeed it is extraordinary that the group we refer to
above as the Provo Dissidents only realised within the last year what
the implications of the Good Friday Agreement were. Did they really believe the
Provo internal
propaganda that they were moving the struggle forward by recognising the
police, decommissioning the IRA (P) and implementing pro-capitalist policies
when in power?
Republican Sinn
Fein's complaints that they were denied proper coverage in the media is really
a pathetic attempt to hide the reality that they have little support from
Republicans within the nationalist community. Their obsession with "English"
as in their statement of Friday 9th of March, 07, "To consolidate English
rule" and "by unscrupulous English governments." is a blatant
attempt to appeal to a reactionary form of nationalism playing up people's
dislike of the English, a view shared by many people worldwide. But what about
not only British Imperialism but also world imperialism? And it ignores the
reactionary nature of the ruling classes in Scotland
and Wales who have embraced
imperialism, as indeed did the Ulster
bourgeoisie. But their position is fundamentally wrong because they ignore or
downplay the class struggle. They have forgotten every thing James Connolly
wrote about, especially the bit about the flags and post boxes! "Imperialism
would still rule you" The national question will be solved with the victory of
socialism and not before.
Both the Workers'
Party and the Socialist Party performed poorly and in some cases it looked as
if only their relatives voted for them. Splendid isolation may protect the
purity of one's politics but seemingly cuts no ice with a working class deeply
divided and stuck into two sectarian camps. Ignoring or downplaying the reality
of the sectarian divisions by abstract appeals to class unity in party
statements and papers without actual action and unrelated to actual conditions
on the ground is just another form of left liberalism. Both these organisations
are in grave danger of simply becoming sects.
But from a socialist
perspective there were some bright spots. The vote for Eamon McCann in Foyle
showed the value of campaigning on real issues following long sustained work on
class politics. While the IRSP has strong reservations about the stance of the
SEA on key issues such as imperialism, the national question, and broad fronts
we applaud their work on key class issues. That is also probably why the People
Before Profit got such a comparatively high vote in West
Belfast. They emphasised the issue of water charges, which will
affect every working class family if implemented. That obviously has struck a
cord with much right across the sectarian divide. That discontent must be built
upon.
The vote for Peggy O
Hara was extraordinary given that there was no electoral experience from her
team but the enthusiasm and dedication of her workers tapped into an emotion
that needs to be built upon. The alliance between the IRSP/32CSM [32 Counties
Sovereignty Movement] and Concerned Republicans shows what can be achieved
among Republicans on a platform that dealt with key issues of concerns for
republicans but avoided a knee jerk anti Sinn Fein bashing approach. The
comparative success of the Peggy O'Hara campaign has led some republicans to
believe that a new Irish republican alliance (Ira) can be build as a political
party. Such a venture would ignore the ideological differences that exist
between the existing forces. For its part the IRSP will continue to do what it
has been doing over the past 11 years, while others stood on the sidelines,
building a credible left revolutionary force advocating the Connolly/Costello
road to revolution. The gradual build up organisationally of the IRSP in Derry over the last five years undoubtedly added to the
vitality of the Peggy O'Hara campaign. It has established a base that can be
built upon. Now the IRSP need to push positive policies, approaches and ideas
from an anti-imperialist and socialist perspective rather than get diverted
down cul-de-sacs.
The overwhelming
victory of Sinn Fein is not a cause for despair for republicans or socialists.
Rather it is an opportunity for the left to take stock and also take advantage
of the stance and compromises that that organisation will have to make to
exercise power. In the south of Ireland
nearly one third of the electorate vote for a range of parties and individuals
that can be broadly classified as "left". As the economic conditions worsen in
both parts of Ireland, as
witnessed by the loss of 900 hundred jobs in the Munster area announced last week, the
discontent of the masses will become evident. Already a number of rises in the
interest on mortgages in both parts of Ireland has dramatically increased
the cost of living for thousands. Spiralling house prices in the North has
meant that four out of five houses now sold go to property speculators. Dublin house prices mean that locals cannot afford to buy
in Dublin.
Young married couples are finding it increasingly difficult to secure suitable
accommodation. The privatisation of public utilities and the cutting back of
all the gains of the working class over the past [thirty] years is on the
agenda of all capitalist Governments. The coming election in the South will
make no fundamental changes regardless of which coalition is stuck together.
The new Government will carry out the policies of globalisation at the bidding
of the capitalist classes.
Now is the time for
the left and republican left to build alliances that can channel the coming
discontent into political advances for the working class. The door is now
opening for the resurgence of the left because with new administrations looming
in the North and South with no essential differences in policy but to implement
pro-big business policies the left can now become, in the unions and on the
streets, and hopefully in the electoral field, a real opposition to the pro-capitalist
policies of the new regimes.
[Originally
published in The Plough, Vol. 4-
No 7, Monday 12th March 2007, E-mail
newsletter of the Irish
Republican Socialist Party]
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