September 21, 2024

Labour’s right-wing needs us – but we do not need Labour.

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Keir Starmer shills for establishment power – they own him. They own all the corporations, land and apparatus of the materials economy too. They make the laws, buy the judges and control the media. They set the curriculums and frame the debates. They get to tell you what to think, what to believe and what to buy. To quote the late, great George Carlin:  ‘It’s a big club – and you ain’t in it!’

Starmer eschews systemic reform, preferring an insiders promotion. Unlike Corbyn (a lifelong activist) Starmer’s career aims are wholly incompatible with socialism. Socialism holds that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should belong to all – the 1% disagree!

Moral principle delegitimises the prevailing oligarchy – which is why corporate spivs like Tom Watson, Starmer and The Guardian smear socialists as anti-semites and thugs. Morality is an intrinsic super-power of socialism and thus kryptonite for the establishment. This is why the corporate media restricts debate within the economic and political jargon of the status quo.

Labour’s right wing insists we cannot argue for socialism because the electorate don’t like it. But by offering no moral case for it they ensure voters never will – which is exactly the political stasis that right wingers want.

Mainstream environmentalists also downplay moral arguments – preferring the less controversial lexicons of economics and technology. While babbling about solar panels and ‘green new deals’ they unwittingly reinforce the status quo and deprive themselves of moral authority.

Thanks to the abuse of morality by the religious right and other cultural perversions  – moral imperatives and thus socialism are unfashionable and will remain so until rehabilitated with rational arguments. Keir Starmer and the Labour right will never make these arguments.

Regardless of the crises of today and the catastrophes awaiting tomorrow – the careerist cabals within Labour are content and complacent. They hated Corbyn because he had moral authority and threatened change – the defeat of the Corbyn project is an invitation for Labour to indulge in amoral snoozing for more decades of Blairism.  

The battle for Socialism will never be won within Labour while the party remains institutionally allergic to morality. Starmer just plays Westminster games and deploys spin doctors. With the departure of Corbyn, the hollowness of the Labour right has been brutally exposed.

The good news is that there is no reason to remain in Labour and every reason to leave. The tribalism and the branding don’t matter – what matters are the principles and the will to make and win a moral argument. Without these things there can be no socialism and with them there will be no stopping it.

The UK is crying out for a new political movement. A party willing to unapologetically make the moral case for Socialism. What on earth is stopping us?

Are we  so brow beaten by the establishment that we have lost the courage to speak on our own? Is it beyond us to organise? Who did all the work of propelling the likes of Chuka Umunna, Stephen Kinnock, Margaret Hodge and all the other right wing Labour MP’s into Westminster anyway? Why should Labour activists work for them and be rewarded with treachery and abuse – when they can work for themselves: for principles and people they actually believe in?

Labour has become hypnosis – we stare as battles sway left and right – but nothing really changes. Those wanting another spin of the wheel have forgotten what the point of being in Labour was in the first place.

A courageous and united left can win the argument for socialism – or battle over a dead political brand.

Labour’s right wing parasites need the slumbering giant of Socialism to remain within the tent…but socialists do not need them.


 Since 2013 I have worked between 4-6 hours a day on this Ad-Free site: trying to give a voice to those without the power or agency to speak out for themselves and uncovering truths that well paid journalists in the corporate media dare not utter.

I am a home schooling parent on a low income – paying for the domain, web hosting and security entirely out of my own pocket.  

If you found this article useful and could spare us a few shillings to help keep our lights on, it would be very much appreciated.

Thank you in solidarity with all our readers. John Lynch, Editor.     


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