Today
a letter from IDS, Michael Howard, Lord Lamont and l Lord Lawson to
the Telegraph show the crisis of hegemony coming to the institutions
of the British state, When two former Tory Leaders and two former Chancellors
criticise financial institutions as biased we know that a crisis is
coming.
The
political elite have long avoided criticism of financial institutions
that support the neo-liberal agenda. Today's letter shows a deepening
crisis in the civil war for the future of the Tory Party. Nothing
will be the same again, whatever the result next week the crisis of
hegemony is here. We have seen the destruction of the reputation of
the Police over Hillsborough, and Orgeave is to come. The political
elite have been brought to a new low over the case of Parliamentary
expenses. The BHS amongst many other scandals has revealed the teak
nature of large scale business. The sexual abuse scandal in the BBC
and rumours of a Parliamentary Sexual abuse cover up pour fuel onto
the flames of doubt.
A
middle class, public school educated stock broker in these
circumstances acts as a pied piper and fool the working class into
turning their anger on the immigrant, the refugee and the scrounger.
Whatever happens on June 23rd things are rotten in the
British state.
The
Italian Marxist Gramsci talked about a “crisis of hegemony”
Gramsci
used the analogy of ‘the modern prince’ to describe the role of
the political party. He saw parallels between the tasks that
Machiavelli had outlined in his book The Prince, regarding the
creation of a new, modern Italian state and the 20th century goal of
a socialist revolution. By prince he does not mean a state leader or
a dictator, he is referring to the task of leadership within the
political sphere, in this sense ‘Prince’ could be translated
in modern terms as ‘political party’”. The
political party that the working class needs is one that coheres and
forms itself as an institution within the class movement, fighting
for hegemony and producing potential leaders for state power after
the revolution. The party itself is not merely an expression of class
interests on an economic level because although; “it is true that
parties are only the nomenclature for classes, it is also true that
parties are not simply mechanical and passive expression of those
classes, but react energetically upon them in order to develop,
solidify and universalize them.”
Perhaps
we are on the edge of such a crisis..a crisis of hegemony. I am
beginning to sense a dead heat in a weeks time between Remain and
Leave. Perhaps that is the final tipping point who knows. Marx and
Engels writing in the 19th century long thought that the
crisis of capitalism would come in the West in America, in Britain in
Germany. Perhaps we are at that point. The crisis of late capitalism.
Perhaps I am just tired and raving early in the morning. Perhaps I am
correct...and there are seven days to go...........what if the Tories
fall and Corbyn is in power by September. The effects of unintended
consequences continue to fascinate me and I can see Gramsci's
smile... a Brexited UK would enable a government to nationalise many
industries..unintended consequences indeed......
No comments:
Post a Comment