Archbishop
Desmond Tutu’s call for the prosecution of Tony Blair at the International Criminal Court in The Hague for war crimes
comes as Labour plans to restore the former prime minister to a prominent
position in the party.
Nobel-prize
winner Tutu’s honourable decision to turn down an invitation to share a
platform with the former Labour leader at a conference on leadership is well
founded.
In
2010 a Dutch inquiry found that the US-UK invasion of Iraq ,
authorised by Blair and George W. Bush, had “no sound foundation in
international law”. In Britain
two top judges also ruled that without UN endorsement, the war was illegal.
But
while the misery in Iraq
continues unabated, those who promoted the 2003 invasion and occupation are
doing very nicely thank you.
Blair
currently owns at least six homes and is said to be worth £20 million. Meanwhile,
Blair’s former spin doctor, Lord Peter Mandelson, is competing with the ex-PM
in amassing a wide-ranging business empire worth millions.
Mandelson’s
international business consultancy has assets of nearly £600,000, according to
the Sunday Telegraph’s Mandrake.
Mandelson advises companies via Global Counsel. He also co-runs a company
called Willbury, which posted a profit of nearly £375,000. He and his partner
have just purchased an £8m home.
The
extent of Mandelson’s wealth is guarded with jealous secrecy. But due to a
change in the House of Lords’ transparency rules, the advisor to autocrats
around the world may come under pressure to declare his company interests.
One
might think that the extraordinarily greedy behaviour of these men who knocked
the Old Labour into what it is today might give pause to those who still cling
to the party – and parliamentary politics - as the only possible alternative to
the ConDem coalition.
Unfortunately
this is far from the case. There is, for example, Guardian columnist Polly Toynbee, who sees the future in a
conservative form of Milibandism. Toynbee
has taken upon herself the role of advising Ed Miliband about how to suck up to
the LibDems. At a debate
about the future of New Labour, at the Edinburgh Book Festival, Toynbee
declared that Labour should be “the party of
conservatism”, of “preserving and restoring”.
Blogger
and political commentator, Gerry Hassan, who
believes in Scottish self-government, rightly pointed out that:
“Four periods of Labour in office and
nine popular mandates since 1945 and the Labour Party hasn’t challenged the
power nexuses and networks of establishment Britain or touched the institutions
of ‘the Conservative nation’, which give succour and support to privilege and
status. Nor has it, with the exception of the Attlee administration,
substantially reduced inequality in any of its periods of office.”
But nonetheless he
shares Toynbee’s hope that Miliband would distance himself from his New Labour
heritage. This is, of course, to ignore the reality of what he said himself:
Labour is part and parcel of the establishment itself.
Despite the forlorn
dreams of those
who cling to Labour as the only alternative to the ConDem coalition, there is
no fundamental difference between Miliband’s economic and political strategy
and that of his predecessors in New Labour.
For
all Miliband and others’ hot air, New Labour was the real architect of the
introduction of the market into the public sector. The only difference between
the Labour and the Coalition is in the degree of austerity they endorse.
Feeding
the illusion that the New Labour leopard can change its spots leaves the door
wide open for Tory backwoodsmen and more sinister forces lurking in the wings. The
serious danger to Cameron is not from Miliband but the Tory far right.
This
prospect makes working for a more advanced form of democracy such as A World to
Win’s strategy of people’s assemblies an urgent political task. It is certainly
more progressive than waiting three years for a chance to vote for Miliband’s
New Labour Mark II.
Corinna
Lotz
A
World to Win secretary
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