Thursday, October 31, 2024


Lithuania: “For us, the fear of being occupied is more real”


October 29, 2024Labour Hub Editors


Trade union organiser and activist Jurgis Valiukevičius talks to Simon Pirani about the new workers’ movements in Lithuania, emigration and immigration, and about how sympathy for Ukrainian resistance has opened up space for discussions about the meanings of nationalism and anti-imperialism. A Labour Hub long read.

Simon: Please tell us about the labour movement in Lithuania. What are its strengths and weaknesses? What form does it take (trade unions? workplace organisations? and so on). Are there links between the labour movement and other social movements?

Jurgis: The labour movement in Lithuania has been weak, but we have seen some positive tendencies during the last ten years: there have been more strikes and a bit more militancy.

Union membership has been low: around 8-10 % of the workforce are union members. Since the economic transformations that were implemented after Lithuania assumed independence from Soviet Union in 1990, union membership steadily decreased. Most of the factories closed down, and there were no more large industrial sites where traditional union activity could take place.

In the Soviet Union, unions tended to function as welfare providers, distributing social welfare such as housing and vacations. When there were problems with the workers’ rights, they were used to writing complaints to the Communist Party branch in their workplace, or solving matters directly with the factory directors through paperwork and official negotiations.

Once the state control of the production process disappeared, there was no official that the union reps could complain to, which left the unions defenceless. At the same time, most of the union leaders were not equipped with organising skills. And the new business class that was emerging at that time, came out of shady mafia-style groups with connections to the central government.

I have previously published (in English) stories of worker resistance that took place around these times. Workers would guard their factories from being dismantled by the new owners until they received compensation for unpaid wages. In the most radical cases, people would do hunger strikes.

Stopping production does not make much sense if your factory is going bankrupt. So the only way to force some kind of reconcialition was through using your own life as a defence of last resort of valuable property.

You could say that the workers managed to put some political pressure on the government officials to intervene. Around 2001, the government created a bankruptcy fund, out of which workers could expect to get back some of their salaries if their company became financially insolvent. However, most of these struggles were rather reactions to the privatisation process and did not produce positive experiences of collective power. Most of the people who took part in these struggles felt disillusionment with political and social activity. The effect on people was further disengagement from mass organisation such as unions or political parties.

And what about more recent times?

During the last decade, union membership stabilised, and new union iniatives were started, that are trying to organise precarious workers, as well as look for connections with the broader left movement and the non-governmental organisations (NGOs).

The most militant are the teachers. They have been on strike once every four years. Also they organise more publicly oriented protest actions that stimulate public discourse and popularise ideas about striking. In 2019 they occupied the education ministry for a month. Teachers slept in the ministry while waiting for collective negotiations.

In 2023 they organised a strike march: teachers made a “pilgrimage” from all corners of Lithuania, walking on foot and visiting every little town’s school. All these actions helped this particular union of teachers, the Lithuanian Education Employees Trade Union, to grow. Many of its strongholds are in rural areas.

In 2019 a new union, G1PS or First of May Labour Union, was established. This is the union I represent and work for. The organisation was established after successful protests against liberalisation of the labor code in 2018. This union organised in the service, cultural and IT sectors as well as some workers for sales platforms (for example, Uber or Bolt).

While this union is fairly young and small in numbers, it has a different model: every worker can become a member despite of their profession. It provides free consultation on labour issues. In five years, it has set up six branches – some are based in single workplaces and some are oriented towards sectors, such as the platform couriers.

In general, the main obstacles to building a more militant and active labour movement are not only economic and ideological, but also legal. The Lithuanian strike law is one of the most restrictive in Europe. It forces workers to go into negotiations before legally acquiring a right to strike. It can take up to two years to pass through the negotiations, and the union cannot change its demands in that time. As a result, most negotiations end without much results, and strikes are rare.

Currently, the unions have been calling for the strike law to be liberalised, and there are expectations that the next government will put this question on the agenda.

What about the Lithuanian economy? As far as I understand, in recent years it has largely been integrated into the EU, and trade with Russia has been reduced. How have these changes affected working class people?

The Lithuanian economy has been completely transformed over the last 30 years. From being dominated by light industry in Soviet times, now it mostly consists of small and middle sized companies in the services sector, IT, logistic and financial markets.

The two richest men in Lithuania are the owner of the Maxima shopping chain, and the owner of Girteka, a logistics company. Both economic sectors profit from precarious work conditions – in the shops women comprise most of the workers, and in logistics, migrants dominate the workforce of drivers.

Apart from that, Lithuania has a large agricultural sector: the main export is grain. While there are some industrial sites, these are mostly post-soviet relics that survived the transition of the 1990s. Every major city has its own “free economic zone”, which is typical for an eastern European country trying to attract foreign capital.

Our financial market is fully dominated by Scandinavian banks. We don’t have a national bank. There is an institution named like this, but it only provides analysis and some policy proposals for the government.

The economy’s trajectory has been towards integration into EU markets. The war in Ukraine and economic sanctions that followed after the Russian attack shifted business even more towards EU markets. The geopolitical situation on one hand slowed down foreign direct investment. On the other hand, the government is trying to attract military industry – there are deals made with German and Ukrainian industrial companies to open new factories in Lithuania.

With deindustrialisation, the working class has been feminised and deskilled. If you asked today’s supermarket workers about their personal history, many of these women had previously worked in a factory with some higher qualification. They lost their jobs in 1990s and could not find anything that would fit their education. Then they found work in the shops and supermarkets that sprung up during the early 2000s.

Furthermore, there has been a large-scale emigration, to Ireland, the UK, Germany and the US. In the last three years, the level of migration has stabilised, and there are more people coming to Lithunia than leaving. However, most of the immigrants are not local people returning, but Ukrainians, Belarussians and Russians arriving for the first time.

The working class become more mixed, and stratified by nationalities and by legal status. The workforces of the construction and logistics sectors, and the sales platforms, are dominated by migrants at the moment, which creates tensions and stimulates nationalist political tendencies.

I have several questions about the war in Ukraine, and Lithuanian people’s attitude to it. First, may I ask you about refugees. I believe that now there are a substantial number of refugees from Ukraine, Russia and Belarus in Lithuania. How are they treated by the government? How is their life in Lithuania? How have Lithuanians reacted to their arrival?

The official position of the government has been that migrants from these countries are not the same and we cannot apply the same rules to everyone. You could say that Ukrainians have the easiest access so far. Yet, as the Ukrainian government is trying to get back their men to serve in the army, the positions of Lithuanian government has been somewhat changing – there is more talk about the need to bring the Ukrainians back to defend the country. Yet, this would create a big problem for the business, as Ukrainian comprise an important segment in the workforce by now.

The Belarusian diaspora is very big, but less outspoken. There is a long common history between Belarusians and Lithuanians. We have a Belarussian university in Vilnius that moved here after [Belarusian president Alyaksandr] Lukashenka banned it in Minsk. And the main Belarusian opposition organisation led by Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya has its office in Vilnius. But Belarusians are treated in ambivalent manner – because of the 2020 protests, they were at first supported and loved, but once the war started in Ukraine, they have been looked at with more suspicion.

It is true that in Lithuania there are many secret agents of the Kremlin and of Lukashenka. And yet for ordinary people, the suspicion mostly translates into problems of getting asylum or documents. There are horrific cases of politically active Belarussians being sent back to Belarus, straight into the hands of the KGB [security police], just because they worked in some state company years ago.

You commented in your article for Posle.Media on the way that establishment and liberal forces in Lithuania often find it convenient to use ordinary Russians as a target for prejudice, and/or claimed that ordinary Russians are responsible for the brutality of the Russian government. You also said that, since the all-out invasion of Ukraine by Russia, this has changed. Can you give us an update?

I think that, in terms of ideologies, divisions are made by our political elites between “civilisation vs brutality”. As we align ourselves with the “civilised” part of the world – in the broadest sense the “west” – we tend to draw the other side as hopelessly bestial and undemocratic. There is constant eagerness to paint the Russian society as brutal and bestial – it makes us feel more European and democratic.

Additionally, I believe that a large part of the support of our political elite for Ukraine comes not out of anti-imperialist positions, but is rather manifested as implicit hatred towards Russia as a country. There is a repetitive message in media that Ukrainians are fighting our war against Russia.

This is basically the dominant discourse in all of the media and political life. But opinions in the population are rather more mixed.

We just had parliamentary elections on Sunday (27th October). The unofficial winners of these elections is a party that came in third place – a fringe right-wing party which is led by a long-time parliamentarian [Remigijus Žemaitaitis], who got to be famous because he was accused of anti-semitism. He certainly made anti-semitic statements in parliament, before the 7th October [2023 attack on Israel by Hamas], that’s true. But later, the accusations of anti-semitism and an impeachment process against him made him into an “anti-establishment” figure. He perfectly exploited this sentiment, mobilising “protest” votes – a sort of Trump-style Lithuanian edition.

You can also hear more scepticism towards Ukrainians and support for Ukraine. However, the parties that tried to exploit this sentiment did not win any major vote in the Parliament election. Actually, the main politician who advocated pro-Kremlin positions just announced that he is ending his political career: he did not manage to get a parliament seat.

Earlier on, in the spring of this year, we had a presidential election in which one candidate, who expressed somewhat nostalgia for Soviet Union, got around 50,000 votes in all Lithuania. He won the largest percentage in the regions where Russian and Polish minorities are predominant. The media took this as a proof that we have “a Russian threat” in our own country – although this candidate was, I think, the only one that managed to translate his leaflets and visit these regions during his campaign.

What about the agreement recently made between Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine, that Ukrainian men eligible for conscription should be returned to Ukraine? The background to this, as you know, is the difficulties that Ukraine is having in fighting the war with Russia, without conscripting more people to the army. Has there been a reaction to this in Lithuania?

This agreement has not been forced into law – I think that economic interests have halted the implementation of this policy. As I mentioned before, the Ukrainian working class is well integrated into workforce and whole sectors would stop functioning if one day all the men would be sent back to Ukraine.

However, some of the political parties aim to deliver such policies. It takes shape in “unofficial” steps. For example, there are many Ukrainians whose passports expire – and once your passport expires, your visa is also no longer valid. And if you go to the Lithuanian migration department, they will tell you that you have to go to Ukraine to get your passport. What it means is that you will never come back from Ukraine: if you are fit for the army, you will be conscripted.

I know more and more people who are asking themselves what to do. A large number of migrants might fall into this grey zone, and live without documents or decide to join the army.

To help people in western Europe understand, could you say something more generally about the attitude of Lithuanians to Russian aggression in Ukraine and elsewhere, and to the political evolution of the Putin regime towards dictatorship in recent years? I will explain my question in this way. A few months ago I met up with an old comrade and friend of mine, a lifelong socialist activist. He criticised me for writing articles, in which I said that Ukrainians had a right to defend themselves, arms in hand, against Russian aggression. He said, “you are in danger of supporting NATO”. I said that I believed that Russian imperialism, and not NATO, was the primary cause of the war in Ukraine.

And I added (roughly): “People in the Baltic states, and elsewhere in eastern Europe, see the world very differently from people who live in Mexico, and elsewhere in central America. The imperialist power they are worried about is not the same one. I bet you that, after Russia invaded Ukraine, workers in the Baltic states breathed a sigh of relief, that their governments had joined NATO.”

After that, I read in your article in Posle that NATO membership indeed has a very high approval rating among Lithuanians. Please comment.

Yes, your comment is quite right. For us, anti-imperialist critique means that not only the US or “the west”, but also others, can be imperial powers. This simple idea seems to be very hard to understand for some of the left in western countries. And I get it – for many people in Lithuania it is quite hard to grasp the idea that not only Russia has imperial interests.

Yet, in a strange way, the western left maintains the same western-centric view, even when it comes to critique colonialism and imperialism. I think this should not be the way: we should learn to listen and respect each others’ histories and positions, even if it contradicts our theories. It is one of the sad illnesses of dogmatism on the left – trying to fit the world into theory. I think it should be the other way around, or that there should be some kind of interaction between the two.

Our countries’ histories have been shaped by the Russian empire more than by the western countries. It is only 30 years since we began to function as independent states. I have read a lot of critique of nation-states and nationalism, and I see many problems in our countries with nationalistic ideas. However, in my view, the difference between most of the western countries and the eastern European countries is that the west has never been occupied by other countries in modern times.

You had fascism, revolutions, and some dictatorships – but it always was your own history. For our societies, the fear of being occupied by some other country is more real. So when Putin claims that the current borders in eastern Europe are not rightful and they should be changed – this is a clear sign of danger for us.

I think that nationalism should also be criticised by putting it into this historical and geographic context. There is this idea that eastern European societies are more nationalist. In Italy I even heard negative opinions about Ukrainians that they are too nationalistic, because they bring their country’s flags to protests. It seems that those who express such opinions cannot understand different contexts and histories: there might be a big difference between a person bringing an Italian flag to a protest in Italy, and a person bringing a Ukrainian flag.

Eastern European societies have lived under occupations for most of the time, and, sadly, but nationalism is one of the easiest tools of mobilising against such powers. I am saying this not to propose that we should all embrace nationalism, but only to understand that you cannot measure everything according to one history. This just destroys any kind of possibility for dialogue and solidarity.

I would also like you to share, for readers in western Europe, your thoughts about Lithuanian history. Many people here forget that Lithuania spent the whole 19th century as a Russian colony, just as many countries spent long periods as British colonies. How do people in Lithuania see that now?

Yes, since 1795, the territories that we now call Lithuania was under Russian empire up until 1918. Also, the serfdom was formaly stopped only in 1861, however, the peasants were not given the land (which caused several uprisings). And then again from 1945 to 1990 we were part of Soviet Union.

While speaking about this history, I neeed to say that sadly, this historical experience of occupations does not easily translate into a broader understanding of different colonisations. Our school curriculum and general ideas about history still see “our experience” as somewhat exceptional. Maybe this is unavoidable for such a small country – to always fixate on ones country’s history. However, in terms of finding solidarity, there is some potential to look for connections with other experiences of colonisation.

There is of course a big difference among Lithuanians around racism. And probably racist beliefs are the ones that blocks any kind of more global understanding of colonisations and imperialism.

What about the Soviet Union? In our discussions in the labour movement in western countries, it seems to me that the “campist” position of those who oppose Ukraine’s right to resist Russian aggression is basically a continuation of those who saw the Soviet Union as the epitome of anti-imperialism. The roots of this are political ideas that back in the 1970s and 80s we called Stalinist. I remember having arguments with members of the Communist Party in the UK, back then, who defended the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact as having been necessary, for the defence of the Soviet Union. How is all that viewed in Lithuania, by your generation?

My generation is the one that has been born after the end of the Soviet Union, and our opinion about this system has been shaped more by state propaganda than by any kind of real experience. In the most general terms, the Soviet Union is kept alive as a “horror story”, which should push you to believe that today you live in a truly equal and free society – which is some propagandistic bullshit.

I would say that, according to age, you could divide the Lithuanian population roughly into three groups. I already mentioned my group: people for whom the Soviet experience is less important in their political backgrounds. These are people that tend to align themselves with “European values” – human rights, the LGBTQ movement, and so on.

Then there are people who grew up in the Soviet Union, but took part in the protests and experienced the independence movement of the late 1980s and early 1990s. Most of these people tend to be very sceptical of any kind of left politics, and are supporters of the conservative side. And while it is not a monolithic strata, I think this group is often mobilised mainly by stories about “if you elect such-and-such a person, the Soviet times might come back”. This rhetoric is used by the conservative parties and usually it also has some class-ist overtones – the idea that democracy is threatened by the poor, the so-called homo sovieticus (those, that were left behind).

And lastly, there is a generation that lived most of their lives in the Soviet Union. This generation is fading away. While they survived very horrific times of war and deportations under Stalin, they also saw the growth of cities, the industrialisation of agriculture, and also some kind of liberalisation of life under Khrushchev and Gorbachev. They experienced all the modernisation of the state that was done in Soviet times.

This is also the generation that has been most disillusioned by the reforms and the changes that took place after independence. Maybe their pensions got cut, maybe they lost their jobs and could not change their profession because they were already in their late 50s. Also, for most of them, the factories, companies and cultural centres that surrounded them, or were even built by their own hands, have been destroyed by the privatisation.

They are full of anger and disbelief in the current system, which easily translates into nostalgia for Soviet times. However, I believe that such nostalgia should be read not as direct support for the Soviet system, but as disillusion with the current system.

To what extent is there active support, and solidarity with, Ukraine’s fight against Russia in Lithuania? How is it expressed (for example, volunteers going to fight, aid to civil society organisations, other actions)?

There are a couple of strong volunteer organisation that were started after war began in 2014, and grew with the current escalation. At the moment, the support is at a lower level. And there is a process of disagreement about, how much support can we give? And yet, Lithuanian society is still very positive about supporting Ukraine, as this is seen a crucial element for our own national security.

There is an idea, that if Ukraine falls, we would be next. I am not sure whether there are real grounds for that fear, and I also believe that the right wing uses it to mobilise support for their political programme. However, I cannot say that such a threat is impossible. Specifically, if the US government changes its policy on Ukraine, than our situation might become serious quite soon.

The Israeli assault on Gaza over the last year has galvanised millions of people, including socialists, in western Europe. There have been big demonstrations against the supply of weapons to Israel by the western powers. In London, a group of us have gone on some of these demonstrations with banners and posters saying, “From Ukraine to Palestine, Occupation is a Crime”, and trying to underline the fact that Ukrainians, like Palestinians, have the right to resist aggression. We have met with a great deal of sympathy from other marchers. How do these issues look, from your point of view?

As I mentioned before, the support towards Palestine has been very limited, but with some positive changes recently.

The main obstacle to support is not that the population does not understand the situation in Palestine, or in Lebanon. The problem is that Israel has very strong ties with Lithuanian institutions, and that can affect the position of the political elite. And so Lithuania has voted against any kind of support for Palestine in the UN. Also, the media portrays the genocide as a conflict between the “civilised” Israel and “terrorist” Hamas. In this way they are trying to align Israel genocide with Ukrainian resistance against Russia: this is a very wrong and stupid alignment.

After all, so much depends on the US. Among the political elite, the main fear about expressing support for Palestine is that it might trigger the US to weaken its support for Lithuania. You can see that the same logic works with Ukraine, which also votes against Palestine at the UN.

Despite all this, there have been protests against Israeli aggression, organised by local activists together with migrant communities. They have been far smaller than the ones that were organised to support Ukraine. However, I see that there is a bit more space to discuss the Palestinian question and there are more people who are willing to listen.

I hope that in the future there will be more politicians who will be brave enough to denounce the genocide that has been carried out by the Israel government and the right wing movements in Israel.

Thank you for taking time to answer my questions in such detail.

Simon Pirani is honorary professor at the University of Durham, and writes a blog at peoplenature.org, where this post first appeared.

Image: Lithuania in European Union Source: This W3C-unspecified vector image was created with Adobe Illustrator This SVG file was uploaded with Commonis Author: TUBS, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

Military boot-prints and the environment

OCTOBER 20, 2024

If the world’s militaries were a country, they would have the world’s fourth largest national carbon footprint. Martin Franklin reports.

There are currently over 120 military conflicts around the world, involving over 60 states and 120 non-state groups.  The highest number of state-based conflicts since 1946 were recorded in 2023.  While the first casualty of war may be truth, it’s closely followed by humanitarian suffering and environmental destruction. 

The environmental impacts of war include pollution from damaged infrastructure such as burning oil facilities, toxic or explosive munitions left after conflict, the destruction of water and sanitation infrastructure and human displacement creating refugee movement and encampments that put pressure on resources such as timber and water.

Images of environmental damage following years of trench warfare during WW1 show the results of industrialised warfare. Today weapons have massively increased destructive capacity, with the potential for complete annihilation or creating a world of wastelands until recently only seen depicted in dystopian science fiction.

The Vietnam War was a turning point in the use of mechanised weaponry aimed at the environment. The US military sprayed defoliants across the country resulting in contamination still affecting Vietnamese communities today. Agriculture was targeted; napalm and the ploughing of jungles were used to undermine the Viet Cong.  

Today environmental targeting is becoming routine and normalized. Ukraine and Gaza offer examples, the latter a particularly stark one.

The war in Ukraine has destroyed forests, agriculture, industrial and civilian infrastructure.  The resulting toxic pollution and disruption to ecosystems will have a lasting regional effect.  The Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station has become embroiled in the conflict, constituting a dangerous breach of norms around nuclear safety

Gaza, a densely populated strip of land around a quarter of the size of London (365 square kilometres), has, since October 2023, experienced one of history’s heaviest conventional bombing campaigns. By April 2024 it was estimated that Israel had dropped over 70,000 tons of bombs, surpassing the bombing of Dresden, Hamburg, and London combined during World War II. Agriculture and water supplies, sanitation and other civilian infrastructure have been targeted. These and other Israeli actions have created a humanitarian crisis.  The assault on Gaza is estimated to have generated 60 million tonnes of CO2 and reconstruction could double that figure. Pollution from the conflict will afflict the area for years to come.

Since Vietnam, the environment has been accorded protection and incorporated into international humanitarian law under the Geneva Convention. Red Cross guidelines for militaries have been taken up by the UN’s International Law Commission. UN bodies, including the Security Council, have focused attention and concern on the environmental impacts of conflicts.

This is positive progress, but conflicts are often complex and involve many actors, making it hard to identify responsibility for environmental damage which itself is challenging to quantify. In addition to these technical / legal problems is the presence of resistance and inertia from states and the military. 

Nuclear weapon states including the UK and the US reject Protocol 1 of the Geneva Conventions. The protocol prohibits means of warfare which cause widespread damage to the natural environment, which nuclear weapons will inevitably do.

Though efforts to hold belligerent actors to account for humanitarian and environmental harms increase, it is becoming common for states to ignore UN resolutions and international law when engaging in military operations.

Military emissions were excluded from the 1997 Kyoto Protocol and exempted in the 2016 Paris Agreement.  The provision of data on military emissions is voluntary along with any commitment to reducing them. Most countries refuse to report emissions as do many companies supplying military equipment.  

It is estimated that the total military carbon footprint amounts to approximately 5.5% of global emissions. If the world’s militaries were a country, they would have the fourth largest national carbon footprint in the world.  Even when not engaged in conflicts, militaries have a big environmental footprint.  Aircraft, tanks and other hardware use a lot of fuel and military supplies involve long global supply chains. Any decisions to increase military expenditure or activity mean increases in greenhouse gas emissions.

The UK is a leading military power. Its budget is amongst the largest in the world and it is one of the world’s top exporters of weapons and military equipment. The arms industry exercises considerable influence on governments to resist monitoring and accountability for emissions. 

Military forces are inherently destructive and, like all responses to the environmental crisis, progress is slow in building accountability for environmental harms.  The environment has been a neglected victim of war, but vital work is being done by organisations such as the Conflict and Environment Observatory to inform legal and policy initiatives to reduce environmental harm and raise public awareness. 

Martin Franklin is a member of the Islington Environment Forum steering group. With thanks to Doug Weir from the Conflict and Environment Observatory.

Impact: Impact of War on the Environment. Author: Sayedqudrathashimy1991, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.

Tom Belger 29th October, 2024,
GMB workers assembled in Westminster in October 2024. Photo: GMB
GMB workers assembled in Westminster in October 2024. Photo: GMB

The national secretary of the GMB union has warned that workers in energy and manufacturing must be put front and centre of decision-making over the net zero transition, and sounded the alarm over a “homogenisation” of MPs coming from an “increasingly narrow slither of society”.

But he also hit back at Reform MP Richard Tice’s claim GMB workers were “standing up against the madness of net zero”, saying the union’s priorities were about “making sure it delivers” for workers whose interests he claimed Tice did not represent.

Ahead of a meeting between more than 100 members of the Labour-affiliated union and MPs on Tuesday in Parliament, Andy Prendergast said it was “really important” workers in affected sectors, from energy to energy-intensive industries like steel, bricks, ceramics and glass, were involved in discussions that shape policy.

In an exclusive interview with LabourList, he said: “Very few MPs have got backgrounds in manufacturing, engineering, energy. We just feel it’s absolutely vital that when decisions are made about these hugely important, vital industries, that people working in them are actually put front and centre of that process.”

“There is a real concern when you look at Parliament of a degree of homogenisation. All of the figures show that very clearly.

“That’s one of the reasons why so many people react very well to someone like Angela. It’s actually nice to see someone talking about care who’s been a care worker. It’s nice to talk about someone who talks about benefits having been on benefits.

The reality of this country is 93% of people went to state school; a majority of people have to work out a necessity; they don’t live a million pound houses’ they don’t pay private school fees or have huge inheritance tax bills. The discourse is fundamentally twisted against us.

“What would be nice is if sometimes when we talk about energy, we talk about energy with energy workers,  in Parliament; when we talk about care, we talked about care workers. Instead, we are finding there’s an increasingly narrow slither of society from where politicians come. While there are some great ones who really do a good job, I think we have to be concerned about that.”

Andy Prendergast of the GMB.

The union has occasionally been at odds with Labour in the leadup to the election over its green agenda, sounding the alarm over job fears.

Steven McCue, a former British Gas engineer and now GMB convenor at the company, told LabourList that the introduction of hydrogen into Britain’s existing gas network could begin now to help save jobs, with industries like steel reliant on gas. “We have to be honest and say gas in going to stay in the pipes.”

But Prendergast added that the union was “quietly confident” about what the government’s agenda more broadly meant for the union’s priorities, with “very positive” positions in many areas.

“Where we are is a million miles forward on where we were simply a few months ago in the last administration. When you look at GB Energy, industrial strategy – we’ve got some really good stuff that frankly we’ve been crying out before for a very long time.

But he added: “There’s often a difference between the message being thought to have landed, and the actions that come off the back of it giving you the confidence that it genuinely has.

“Whether the funding and whether the breadth lacks the ambition we need to see – I think there is a question on that.”

Read more of our Budget 2024 coverage:

The Creation Of Thatcher’s Dark Legacy

There is a tendency to overlook the reason why successive UK governments continue with their relentless political attacks on disability benefit claimants, reports Mo Stewart, whose critically acclaimed book Cash Not Care: The Planned Demolition of the UK Welfare State was published by New Generation Publishing in 2016, and exposed the inevitable public health crisis to be created by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP).

As we all celebrate the publication of John Pring’s new bookThe Department, and reel at the disturbing content of it, it should be remembered that this government-induced persecution of those in greatest need was all predicted a very long time ago. For the past 15 years, I have been writing for the chronically ill and disabled community to identify for them via published research the planned public health crisis created by UK social policy reforms. It was my ambition to alert them to the preventable harm adopted by successive social policy reforms which had one goal in mind, which is the eventual demolition of the welfare state, identified long ago as being ‘Thatcher’s dark legacy’.

The adoption of neoliberal politics by Thatcher was the beginning of the end for the welfare state as, by definition, neoliberal politics is the ideology that supports free market competition with an emphasis on minimal state intervention. Previously confidential Cabinet minutes can make disturbing reading, with the Thatcher administration identifying in 1982 the ultimate political ambition to remove the welfare state, to be eventually replaced by income replacement health insurance similar to the system in the US.

Thatcher was a fan of the US President Ronald Reagan, who was president for most of her time in office, and one researcher identified him as being “Thatcher’s political soulmate”. The adoption by Blair of American social and labour market policies was the continuation of Thatcher’s ideology and her devotion to the American social security system.  

The difficulty with this political ambition was that the welfare state was embedded within the public psyche, so removing the psychological security provided by the welfare state would take a long time. The Thatcher Cabinet recommended the adoption of ‘disability denial’ for successive social policies and the introduction of ‘the politics of fear’ which, clearly, has worked very well. This is why the chronically ill and disabled community live in fear of DWP disability benefit assessments, which were designed to create preventable harm to remove the past psychological security once provided by the UK welfare state.

Every administration since Thatcher has continued to work towards this political ambition, so don’t look to Labour to stop this relentless state persecution of those in greatest need because the past social security safety net has been removed, and Starmer’s team have no intention of reinstating it.

Let’s not forget that the press and media are co-conspirators in this relentless political attack against the chronically ill and disabled community. People like Iain Duncan Smith takes full advantage with his column in the Telegraph, where he continues to refer to disabled people “languishing on benefits”, seven years after he ceased his role as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, as he continues to promote ‘Thatcher’s dark legacy’. This is the man who doesn’t agree that those in greatest need don’t need to work, even though access to the DWP Support Group is identified following a brutal DWP assessment as being for those permanently unable to work due to poor health.

However, on this Labour no longer attempt to suggest there is any significant difference between their social policies and those of the Conservative Party. It is disturbing to witness Labour’s apparent support for the Centre for Social Justice, which is the right-leaning and very influential think-tank created by Iain Duncan Smith in 2004, who openly boasts that the Centre’s research is often adopted by the government to create social policies.

Indeed, when making a (disturbing) major policy speech in January 2023, the former Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Jonathan Ashworth, felt the need to make his speech at the Centre for Social Justice with, it seems, no comprehension of the message which that would send, as reported by the Disability News Service. Thankfully, Ashworth is no longer an MP having lost his seat in the July election, but it seems he has been appointed as the Chief Executive of Labour Together, a significant think-tank, so don’t anticipate any political support for disability benefit claimants any time soon. His support for the Centre for Social Justice has been continued by the Labour front bench, with Liz Kendall and Stephen Timms hosted by the Centre at the recent Labour Party conference, with claims that Iain Duncan Smith is now ‘consulting’ with Labour regarding future social policies. If true, this is disturbing, but where is the political objection?

With social policies adopted using a fiscal priority while disregarding health and wellbeing, every successive neoliberal administration since Thatcher demonstrated that they were ideologically motivated to destroy the UK’s lifeline of support. The chronically ill and disabled community who are unable to work were identified by successive neoliberal administrations as being an unacceptable financial burden on the state in order to stigmatise disability benefit claimants, and to successfully discredit the concept of the welfare state.

Evidence of psycho-coercion began, as political rhetoric replaced facts with fiction when creating a ‘climate of hostility’. Over time, the chronically ill and disabled community would suffer preventable harm, severe mental distress and financial hardship due to political ideology, which identified the need to remove this state financial burden and to persecute disabled claimants who make demands on social security funding – the embodiment of ‘Thatcher’s dark legacy’.

There is a tendency to overlook the fact that it was the Blair’s New Labour administrations that recommended that disability benefits should be made as difficult as possible to access, betraying millions of working class Britons who had voted for them, and the UK moved further towards becoming an authoritarian state influenced by right-leaning neoliberal politics.

Social policy reforms were supported by the two main political parties and were guided by American corporate advisers Unum Insurance since 1992. They influenced future UK social policies as demonstrated at the Labour government’s 2001 conference to examine Malingering and Illness Deception, which recommended that a bio-psychosocial assessment model should be used to identify ‘malingering’ claimants of disability benefits, which encouraged the future creation of the Work Capability Assessment (WCA) adopted by the DWP to limit access to disability benefit. Unum Insurance continue to escape all accountability for recommendations which were adopted by successive UK administrations, and were destined to create the preventable harm of chronically ill and disabled service-users when unable to work, who are routinely identified by DWP ministers as being ‘economically inactive’.

Adopted by the Coalition administration in 2010, austerity measures added to the growing number of social policy reforms, highlighted when the Brown New Labour administration introduced the Employment and Support Allowance as the new long-term disability benefit, which condemned those in greatest need to endure the WCA, and guaranteed that the past psychological security of the UK welfare state would be successfully demolished, creating a public health crisis in its wake.

To distract attention from the predictable negative impact of the planned austerity measures,  the Coalition administration put every effort into discrediting disability benefit claimants, with their derogatory comments guaranteed to be reproduced by the media. Continuing and enhancing ‘Thatcher’s dark legacy’, the past psychological security of the welfare state was transformed and continued by every successive administration.

Now that the purchase of private health insurance is increasing, it won’t be too much longer before ‘Thatcher’s dark legacy’ becomes a reality in the UK. Thatcher would be very impressed.

Cash Not Care is published by New Generation Publishing. For more information about the book visit: www.independentliving.co.uk/guest-blog/cash-not-care-reviewed/ 

Mo Stewart is the research lead for the Preventable Harm Project  Website: www.mostewartresearch.co.uk

Image: https://www.flickr.com/photos/lccr/2865509591. Creator: The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights. Licence: Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)

Nigel Farage set to speak alongside Steve Bannon

FARAGE HAS ABANDONED HIS UK CONSTIUENCY FOR THE U$A

Yesterday


Tickets are priced between $500 to $30,000
.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage is set to speak alongside far-right former Trump advisor Steve Bannon who has just been released from jail.

The arch Brexiteer, who has been accused of not giving a toss about his constituents in Clacton since being elected in July, making repeated trips to the U.S. in order to support Donald Trump, will now be heading to New York in a few weeks, so that he can headline the New York Young Republican Club gala dinner on Wall Street on December 15th, the Mirror reports.

Tickets are priced between $500 to $30,000. Speaking at the event along with Farage is Bannon, who was jailed for failing to cooperate with an investigation into the January 6 Capitol attacks.

The Good Law Project slammed Farage for ingratiating himself with the far-right.

Rheian Davis, of the Good Law Project, told the paper: “People should be under no illusions about Farage and the far-right company he is desperately trying to ingratiate himself with. He is leaving his Clacton constituents behind and jetting off yet again to the US share a stage with Steve Bannon just weeks after his release from jail.”

Basit Mahmood is editor of Left Foot Forward



British Electoral Interference in the US

Virtuous, Smug, and Venal

The British cannot help themselves.  They are a meddling island people who conquered huge swathes of the earth in a fictional fit of absentmindedness and remain haughty for having done so.  They have fought more countries they can name, engaged in more wars they care to remember.  They have overthrown elected rulers and sabotaged incipient democracies.  In the twilight of empire, Britain sought, with heavy hearted reluctance, to become wise Greek advisors to their clumsy Roman replacement: the US Imperium.

US politics, to that end, remain a matter of enormous importance to the UK.  Interfering in US elections is a habit that dies hardest of all.  In 1940, with the relentless march of Nazi Germany’s war machine across Europe, British intelligence officers based in New York and Washington had one primary objective: to aid the election of politicians favouring US intervention on the side of Britain.  As Steven Usdin noted in 2017, they also had two other attached goals: “defeat those who advocated neutrality, and silence or destroy the reputations of American isolationists they deemed a menace to British security.”

Much of this is also covered in Thomas E. Mahl’s 1998 study Desperate Deception: British Covert Operations in the United States, 1939-44, which was initially scoffed at for giving much credence to Britain’s role in creating the office of Coordinator of Information, an entity that became the forerunner of the Office of Strategic Services, itself the forerunner to the Central Intelligence Agency.

Mahl was, it was revealed in 1999, on to something.  In a dull yet revealing study written at the end of World War II documenting the activities of the British Security Coordination office, an outfit established by Canadian spymaster Sir William S. Stephenson with the approval of US President Franklin D. Roosevelt, activities of interference are described on a scale to make any modern Russian operative sigh with longing envy.  Those roped into the endeavour were a rather colourful lot: the classicist Gilbert Highet, future novelist of dark children’s novels extraordinaire Roald Dahl, and editor of the trade journal Western Hemisphere Weekly Bulletin, Tom Hill.

During Stephenson’s tenure, the office used subversion, sabotage, disinformation and blackmail with relish to influence political outcomes and malign the America Firsters.  (How marvellous contemporary.)  It cultivated relations with such figures as the 1940 Republican nominee for president, Wendell Willkie.  It also offered gobbets of slanted information to media outlets, often produced verbatim, by suborned pro-interventionist hacks.  In October 1941, BSC provided FDR a map purporting to detail a plan by Nazi Germany to seize South America, a document the president gratefully waved at a news conference. (The study claims its authenticity, though doubts remain.)

The Democrats are currently receiving the moral and physical aid of volunteers from the British Labour Party, who are throwing in hours and tears for a Kamala Harris victory in various battleground states.  Their presence was revealed in a now deleted social media post from Labour’s head of operations, Sofia Patel, noting that somewhere in the order of 100 current and former party staff were heading to the US prior to polling day to campaign in North Carolina, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Virginia.

On the other side of the political aisle, Nigel Farage, now Reform UK leader and member for Clacton-on-Sea, has spent much time openly campaigning for Donald Trump.  Hardly surprising that he should complain about UK Labour doing what he has been doing habitually since 2016.  Walking political disaster and former Conservative Prime Minister Liz Truss, historically the shortest occupant in that office, also put in an appearance at the 2024 Republican National Convention to offer what limited support she could.

Trump’s campaign team has taken umbrage at the efforts of Labour Party staffers, enough to file a complaint with the US Federal Election Commission (FEC).  This is not small beer: any opportunity to allege an unfavourable distortion in votes will be pounced upon.  In an October 21 letter to the FEC’s acting general counsel, Lisa J. Stevenson, Trump’s attorney sought “an immediate investigation into blatant foreign interference in the 2024 Presidential Election”. This took “the form of apparent illegal foreign national contributions made by the Labour Party of the United Kingdom and accepted by Harris for President, the principal campaign committee of Vice President Kamala Harris.”

The claim makes mention of another effort in the 2016 elections, when the Australian Labor Party furnished the Bernie 2016 campaign representing Senator Bernie Sanders with “delegates to be placed with the campaign”.  The ALP covered flights and provided participants with a daily stipend.  The FEC subsequently found this to be a provision of campaign services to the Sanders campaign, and determined that it, and the ALP, had violated the foreign national prohibitions.  Each received civil penalties of $14,500.

Patel’s announcement, the claim goes on to argue, seems to emulate the overly enthusiastic ALP model.  As head of operations, “her LinkedIn posts indicate that she is speaking as a representative of the party.”  Her posts supported “a reasonable inference that the Labour Party will finance at least travel and facilitate room and board.”

As regulations stand, FEC rules permit the participation of foreign nationals in campaign activities as long as they remain uncompensated volunteers.  If one accepts the narrow reading of the laws according to the US District Court for the District of Columbia in Bluman v FEC, contributions must be of a non-financial nature.  British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has stated that party staff have travelled to the US to campaign for Harris “in their own spare time”, staying with other volunteers in the process.  By no means is it clear that this did not involve a financial contribution.

Previous public efforts to sway election results in the US by British well-wishers hoping to test the waters have not ended well.  In 2004, the Guardian newspaper launched Operation Clark County, a smug and foolish effort to dissuade undecided voters in the swing state of Ohio from voting for the Republican incumbent, George W. Bush.  The response was one of unmitigated, volcanic fury.  A letter from Wading River, NY captured the mood: “I don’t give a rat’s ass if our election is going to have an effect on your worthless little life.  If you want to have a meaningful election in your crappy little island full of shitty food and yellow teeth, then maybe you should try not to sell your sovereignty out to Brussels and Berlin, dipshit.”  The letter is coarsening in its finality. “Oh yeah – and brush your goddamned teeth, you filthy animals.”  Starmer, beware.FacebookTwitterRedditEmail

Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. Email: bkampmark@gmail.comRead other articles by Binoy.

SWP

Labour’s budget: Rachel Reeves concedes to rich and big business

Chancellor Rachel Reeves needed to show the budget brought enough of a change—but not too much of one



By Tomáš Tengely-Evans
Wednesday 30 October 2024
SOCALIST WORKER Issue 2929

Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivered Labour’s first budget in 14 years on Wednesday

Chancellor Rachel Reeves gave with one hand—and took away with the other—in the budget on Wednesday. And she made sure not to take away very much from the super-rich and big business.

Reeves spent weeks warning of “tough choices” to limit working class people’s expectations. She then gave slightly more than expected—but far from enough to break with 14 years of Tory austerity.

There was no retreat over winter fuel payments or the two-child benefit cap.

Reeves announced that the minimum wage, known as the National Living Wage, will rise by 6.7 percent from April of next year. If you’re 21 or older, you’ll get £12.21 an hour—up from £11.44. If you’re aged between 18 and 20, your hourly minimum wage rate will increase from £8.60 to £10.


But that’s still lower than the Living Wage Foundation’s levels—which are based on “actual living costs”—of £12.60 an hour and £13.85 in London. And many trade unions rightly demand £15 an hour as housing, energy and food costs remain high.

Labour increased the carer’s allowance limit, which gives up to £81.90 per week to people who have to look after old or sick family members. Reeves announced, “Today, I can confirm that we are increasing the weekly earnings limit to the equivalent of 16 hours at the national living wage per week.

“That means a carer can now earn over £10,000 a year while receiving carer’s allowance.”

The budget boosted the NHS’s day to day spending by £22 billion over two years—a small step in the right direction.

The Nuffield Health Trust said this month that “day-to-day spending by NHS England will this year be £12.9 billion higher than in 2023-24” due to growing need. Its analysis warned that “£4.8 billion is not currently covered by NHS England or Department of Health and Social Care budgets”.

“Fully funding that without further cuts to the health department’s unprotected budgets would require a real-terms headline increase of 3.6 percent to £186.4 billion,” it said.

But the money will come with strings attached. Darren Jones, Labour’s Chief Secretary to the Treasury, said that “reform starts immediately”. “That’s not negotiable,” he emphasised to the BBC.

When Labour talks of “public service reform”, it means making public services run more like a business.

The NHS needs a sharp injection of cash—but the last thing it needs is health secretary Wes Streeting’s “reforms”. He’s already said he wants the health service to rely more on the private sector.

Reeves said Labour would increase the schools budget by £2.3 billion next year to “support” its pledge to hire thousands more teachers.

She promised a £1 billion uplift for pupils with special educational needs and disabilities (Send). But budget documents reveal that £1 billion will come from the overall £2.3 billion increase in schools spending.

Labour has front-loaded spending increases, but promises little in the future. Chris Giles of the bosses’ Financial Times newspaper points out, “There is a large spending increase in this financial year. After that spending increases and extra capital spending is small.”

This reflects that Starmer and Reeves are performing a balancing act. On the one hand, they know millions of working class people voted for Labour hoping for some change after 14 years of Tory rule.

On the other hand, they’re desperate to prove to bosses that Labour is a responsible manager of British capitalism.

So, Labour’s budget needed to show there was enough of a change—but not too much of one.

The increases in health and education spending come alongside budget cuts in other departments.

A key plank of Tory austerity—attacks on the welfare state—remains firmly in place with Labour planning to slash £3 billion. Reeves promised to do that by “reforming” the Work Capability Assessment. In practice, that means targeting disabled people who cannot work under the guise of “supporting people back to work”.

Richard Kramer, chief executive of charity Sense, said the decision to go ahead with the previous government’s reforms was “deeply disturbing for disabled people”. And he said it “risks undermining the wellbeing of disabled people” with potentially “devastating” consequences.

Many bosses are unhappy that Reeves increased their National Insurance Contributions (NICs) by 1.2 percentage points to 15 percent from April of next year.

“And we will reduce the secondary threshold—the level at which employers start paying national insurance on each employee’s salary—from £9,100 per year to £5,000,” she added. “This will raise £25 billion per year by the end of the forecast period.”

Bosses will want to make workers pay the price. Paul Johnson of the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) think tank said, “This is a £25 billion tax rise, proportionally hitting harder those employing lower paid workers.

“Probably three quarters or so of the increase will flow through to lower pay.”

That’s not inevitable—but unions have to organise and strike for higher pay to stop that happening.

Keir Starmer and Reeves are desperate to prove to big business that they are no threat to their interests. That means removing—or at least not increasing—barriers to profiteering such as higher taxes on corporations.

That was obvious in the mild increase to capital gains tax (CGT), which the superrich pay on the sale of shares and property.

Reeves said she will raise the lower rate from 10 to 18 percent, while the higher rate will increase from 20 to 24 percent.

She boasted that Britain would still have “the lowest capital gains tax rate of any European G7 economy”.

To keep the rich happy, Labour has refused to equalise capital gains tax with income tax. Earned income, such as working class people’s wages, is taxed at higher rates of 20 to 45 percent.

Equalising the two would raise £16 billion a year—compared to £2.5 billion under Reeves’ plan.

Former Tory donor turned Labour supporter John Caudwell welcomed the budget. The billionaire Phones 4 U founder said, “I am a firm believer that the country needs to be run like a business, and the budget shows some signs that the Labour government has got the memo.”

Cauldwell added that he wants “a root and branch reform of the public sector” including delivering “greater efficiencies”.

Reeves declared that the Labour government’s mantra was “invest, invest, invest” to deliver economic growth.


Tax the rich: five measures that would raise billions for public services
Read More

She changed her “fiscal rules”—the criteria for the government borrowing money—to allow some more long term investments.

Labour claims that boosting growth will lead to better public services. But, as economist James Meadway has pointed out, even 2 percent extra in economic growth would only lead to a £24 billion boost for spending.

“Analysts estimate we’ll need an extra £142 billion annually by 2030 to restore public services to early 2000s levels,” he says.

Most major union leaders did not criticise the budget.

Paul Nowak, TUC union federation general secretary, gushed, “Today’s budget is a vital first step towards the growth, jobs and living standards working people desperately need.

“The chancellor was dealt a terrible hand by the Conservatives—economic chaos, falling living standards and broken public services.

“But with today’s budget she has acted decisively to deliver an economy that works for working people.”

Unison union leader Christina McAnea claimed, “Rachel Reeves has hit the reset button, erasing the Tory shambles and misery of the past.

“This authoritative budget turns the page on the horrible history of the past 14 years.”

But Labour’s strategy is causing tension with some union leaders. FBU firefighters’ union leader Matt Wrack had a much better response. “There are also significant missed opportunities,” he said. “Having the lowest corporation tax in the G7 is not something to boast about.

“It is a symptom of a broken economic model in which profits are prioritised above the needs and safety of the public.

“While a real-terms increase in day-to-day spending should ease some pressures, the government must go further and faster in rebuilding our broken public services.”

Sharon Graham, the Unite union leader, added, “The chancellor’s continued failure to ensure the super-rich pay their fair share is a misstep.

The 50 richest families in Britain are worth £500 billion. A 1 percent tax on the richest one per cent would create £25 billion.”

There is money for far more than what Labour’s offering—but the unions will have to fight for it.

Labour has pledged to scrap the Tories’ Trade Union Act 2016, which imposed undemocratic turnout thresholds in strike ballots.

That will remove one of the greatest barriers to national strikes—and should boost grassroots union members to push for action.