James Keir Hardie was an early democratic socialist, who founded the Independent Labour Party in Great Britain (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Plaque recording the location of the formation of the British Labour Party in 1900. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
Social Democratic political
parties around the world were established with the radical intention of
transforming (by non-violent means) our entire economic, social and political
systems.
Most declared their intention
to redistribute income on a more equal basis, by using such measures as public
ownership of (to quote the British Labour Party programme) “the commanding
heights of the economy”, through creation of a welfare state to support lower-income people, progressive taxation, backing
unionism and a whole raft of other
measures that could be gathered together under the rubric of “socialism.”
Most of these parties were
established and at first led by the working class, or the unions, but it has
been a common experience that by the time these parties succeeded in gaining
office, they had jettisoned most of their original policies.
The British Labour Party was
founded by the unions in 1900; their first taste of power came in 1924, when Ramsey MacDonald became prime minister with the
backing of the Liberals. This government
granted recognition to the Soviet regime in Russia; the Geneva Protocol for
security and disarmament (approved by the League of Nations Assembly on Oct. 2,
1924) was initiated; and they averted threat of violence in Ireland, all
positive measures for the time, but the government fell eventually and Labour
did not take power again until 1929. Macdonald was not up to dealing with the
global depression, so he formed a national government in which only two of his
Labour colleagues were willing to serve. As a result of this betrayal he was
expelled from the Labour Party, but he continued as Prime Minister, essentially
leading a Conservative government, until
1935.
Macdonald was a working class politician ---
he left school at the age of 12 --- but he is generally held in left-wing
circles to have fallen or “the embrace of the duchesses.” Similarly, the Labour
parties of New Zealand and Australia were at first led by working class
politicians who obtained their political education in the union movement, but
eventually, like the British party, they came under the control of a university-educated
elite that was only too ready to accept the negative view of socialism
propagated daily by the capitalist-owned press. And so the great retreat from
socialism as an objective began , working through such figures as Attlee,
Bevin, Gaitskell, Crosland, Healey in Britain, Curtin in Australia, and Fraser
in New Zealand.
These parties could still be
classified as “of the left”, but they have all fallen far short of their original
support for socialism. For example in Canada, no one would ever describe the
various NDP governments that have ruled provinces from time to time as
“socialist”; rather, they have been moderate reformers, concentrating on good
and honest government.
I remember interviewing both
M.J Coldwell, and T.C. Douglas when they were in their political prime, and the
impression they gave me was they would rather drop dead than allow the word
socialism to pass their lips.
However, at the federal
level, the continued existence of the NDP has proven to be of major importance
to Canada as a nation: they have kept alive in the everyday political discourse
notions of equity, fairness, and so on, that are common to the social
democratic view of the world in a way that they do not exist in the federal
politics of the United States.
This is not something that
anyone should jettison lightly by agreeing to subsume the NDP with the Liberals
in some sort of Lib-Dem arrangement, such as a merger. On the other hand, there is not that much
difference between the policies of the New Democrats and those of the more
liberal elements of the Liberal party, so in the current crisis --- which is to
get rid of Harper and his Conservatives --- it is certainly within reason to
propose some kind of electoral pact that would result in the majority opinion
within Canada from taking power after the next election. It has been proposed
that such a pact could have as its centrepiece a joint agreement that electoral
reform should be part of the committed platform.
I don’t think those of us who
still believe in a real socialism as a desirable future need worry that we
would lose too much: after all, the current programme of the NDP cannot be
called socialist, and it would still be open to real socialists within the
party to continue to struggle for a toughening and sharpening of their welfare
and public interest policies.
Next: Coalition government as
a means to creating a national consensus: the example of Scandinavia
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