Eastleigh by-election: Two takes and a few questions

The Eastleigh by-election last week saw the best ever vote for the far right UK Independence Party (UKIP) and a very poor vote for the left-wing Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC). Five years into the economic crisis, just entering a triple dip recession and with major cuts to benefits about to be introduced the left needs to be doing more to get it’s anti-austerity message across. Here Nick Wrack and Liam Mac Uaid ask some questions which deserve an early reply from the movement.

Liam Mac Uaid

sacredheartofelvissmallot7You’ve probably never heard of the Christian Party (Proclaiming Christ’s Lordship) but in the Eastleigh by election last week their 163 votes was more than the 62 won the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC).  This electoral formation which brings together the two largest groups on the British far left and the RMT was even outperformed by the Elvis Loves Pets Party’s 73 votes. If you were looking for a comprehensive demolition of the far left’s electoral strategy Eastleigh is where you will find it.

The election was won in terms of votes cast by the Lib Dems, who by virtue of holding onto one of their safest seats following the conviction of Chris Huhne and the allegations against Lord Rennard, appear to have avoided Armageddon.

The real winners were the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP). They won 27.8% of the vote picking up support from former Tories, former Lib Dems and new voters. They are now defining the debate on the right, particularly around the issue of immigration. Their voters are racist, anti-immigrant and proud of the fact, something which is finding a resonance among the Tories and , to a certain extent Labour. Miliband is due to give a speech on the subject in the next few days and the Labour supporting Sunday Mirror ran a story this weekend “Butlin’s is hiring hundreds of foreign workers in recruitment drives throughout ­Eastern Europe while turning away unemployed Brits.” This is the angle one expects from the British National Party or the Daily Mail.

While UKIP’s public profile is mostly based on immigrant bashing and hostility to the European Union it has a wide range of reactionary policies. These range from climate change denial; large scale use of nuclear energy; a 40 per cent increase on defence spending annually; doubling the number of prison places; restoring grammar schools; teaching children to be proud of the British Empire and even lifting the smoking ban in public places. Alongside the party’s overt racism its leader Nigel Farrage is a frequent deployer of casual misogyny in political argument. Last week in Eastleigh 11,571people voted for this programme.

This means that half way through the life of a government which has pushed through the most serious attacks on the British working class since the 1920s opposition is being articulated by middle class racists. The left is utterly absent from the debate.

If nothing else it means that the time for complacency is over. The ideas articulated by TUSC in its election campaign are shared by a big part or British society. The left’s problem is that it is not seen as having a credible instrument with which to fight for them. It is beyond scandalous that deep into an economic crisis that is impoverishing millions the terms of the debate are being set by racists in blazers. The neo-fascist BNP has been swept aside by the rise of UKIP. The tactics of street mobilisations that helped marginalise it will not work against a mass party like UKIP. If the left takes one lesson from Eastleigh it must be that it has to start pulling together an electoral challenge that will push the debate back onto an anti-capitalist, left of Labour terrain.

Nick Wrack

tusc The Tusc vote in Eastleigh should be a wake up call to everyone involved. I’m sure people worked hard. This is not criticism of the people campaigning but of the strategy adopted. No doubt it will be met with the usual rationalisation that everything is for the best and we just need to carry on doing the same: it was not a particularly good area to stand; the NHA party didn’t do well – true. But wishful thinking is not enough. No. We need a complete change. We need a party that tries to build support for its policies throughout the year, so that if it stands in an election it has built up a profile and standing. Candidates like Daz Procter deserve more than this. The anti-cuts movement, the students, those on workfare, disabled people, pensioners deserve more than this. It is no good the different bits of TUSC campaigning the rest of the year in their own name and then hoping to get a decent vote. We need a party that people can join and help to build. The model followed by TUSC at the moment is leading nowhere. A serious discussion is required.

1 comment

One response to “Eastleigh by-election: Two takes and a few questions”

  1. Roger says:

    Labour supporting Sunday Mirror ran a story this weekend “Butlin’s is hiring hundreds of foreign workers in recruitment drives throughout ­Eastern Europe while turning away unemployed Brits.”
    Nick Wrack

    Is it happenning or is it a fabrication? Do we ignore reality or fit reality to our policies?
    Do we defend existing gains or call for the expansion of the EU further East?
    Out of the millions of jobs created in the short lived corporate housing boom of the last decade, how many went to those from these shores and how many to EU and non-EU citizens?
    What did the Left argue? British Jobs to All and Sundry?
    Without dealing with the corporate agenda of turning people into goods any clown standing with a mere mention of the word immigration will gain votes, in particular where our obsessions are only about race, not class.
    The American labour movement which is what the British one models itself on, never created a national labour party, nor a strong labour movement one has to work out why?


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