Saturday, November 23, 2024

The Ukraine missile crisis: Putin’s shadow war against the west finally breaks cover

Simon Tisdall
THE GUARDIAN
Sat 23 November 2024 


President Putin announces an attack on Dnipro, Ukraine, last Thursday, in response to strikes on Russia that used US and British long-range missiles.Photograph: Sergei Ilnitsky/EPA


The unprecedented firing by Ukrainian forces of British-made long-range Storm Shadow missiles at military targets inside Russia last week means the UK, along with the US, is now viewed by Moscow as a legitimate target for punitive, possibly violent retaliation.

In a significant escalation in response to the missile launches, Vladimir Putin confirmed that, for the first time in the war, Russia had fired an intermediate-range ­ballistic missile, targeting the Ukrainian city of Dnipro. Putin also said Russia now believed it had the “right” to attack “military facilities” in countries that supply Kyiv with long-range weapons. Though he did not say so specifically, he clearly meant attacks on the UK and US.

Yet in truth, Britain and its allies have been under constant Russian attack since the war began. Using sabotage, arson, deniable cyber-attacks and aggressive and passive forms of covert “hybrid” and “­cognitive” warfare, Putin has tried to impose a high cost for western support of Ukraine.

This largely silent struggle does not yet amount to a conventional military conflict between Nato and its former Soviet adversary. But in an echo of Cuba in 1962, the “Ukraine missile crisis” – fought on land, air and in the dark-web alleyways and byways of a digitised world – points ominously in that direction.

Concern that Russia’s illegal, full-scale 2022 invasion of Ukraine would trigger a wider war has preoccupied western politicians and military planners from the start. The US, UK and EU armed and bankrolled Kyiv and placed unprecedented, punitive sanctions on Moscow.

But US president Joe Biden remained cautious. His primary aim was to contain the conflict. So the convenient fiction developed that the west was not fighting Russia but, rather, helping a sovereign Ukraine defend itself. That illusion was never shared by Moscow.

Biden can do nothing now to halt the war. He had his chance in 2021-2022 and blew it

From the outset, Putin portrayed the war as an existential battle against a hostile, expansionist Nato. Russia was already big on ­subversion. But as the conflict unfolded, it initiated and now appears to be accelerating a wide array of covert operations targeting western countries.

Biden’s decision on long-range missiles, and Moscow’s furious vow to hit back, has placed this secret campaign under a public spotlight. Russian retaliation may reach new heights. But in truth, Putin’s shadow war was already well under way.

Last week’s severing of Baltic Sea fibre-optic cables linking Finland to Germany and Sweden to Lithuania – all Nato members – is widely regarded as the latest manifestation of Russian hybrid warfare, and a sign of more to come.

Some suggest the damage was accidental. “Nobody believes that,” snarled Boris Pistorius, Germany’s defence minister.

Such scepticism is based on hard experience. Last year, Finland said a damaged underwater natural gas pipeline to Estonia had probably been sabotaged. And an investigation in Nordic countries found evidence that Russia was running spy networks in the Baltic and North Sea, using fishing vessels equipped with underwater surveillance equipment. The aim, it said, was to map pipelines, communications cables and windfarms – vulnerable targets of possible future Russian attacks.

Earlier this month, a Russian ship, the Yantar – supposedly an “oceano­graphic research vessel” – had to be militarily escorted out of the Irish Sea. Its unexplained presence there, and previously off North Sea coasts and in the English Channel, where it was accompanied by the Russian navy, has been linked to the proxi­mity of unprotected seabed inter-connector cables carrying global internet traffic between Ireland, the UK, Europe and North America.

Suspected Russian hybrid warfare actions on land, in Europe and the UK, are multiplying in scope and seriousness. They range from large-scale cyber-attacks, as in Estonia, to the concealing of incendiary devices in parcels aboard aircraft in Germany, Poland and the UK.

Western spy agencies point the finger at the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence agency (which was responsible for the 2018 Salisbury poisonings). Naturally, all this is denied by the Kremlin.

It gets even more alarming. In the summer, US and German intelligence agencies reportedly foiled a plot to assassinate top European defence industry executives, in an apparent effort to obstruct arms supplies to Kyiv.

Putin’s agents have been blamed for a wide variety of crimes, from assassinations of regime critics on European soil, such as the 2019 murder in Berlin of a Chechen dissident, to arson – for instance, at a warehouse in east London this year – to the intimidation of journalists and civil rights groups, and the frequent harassment and beating of exiled opponents.

Last month, MI5 head Ken McCallum said the GRU has ‘a sustained mission to generate mayhem on British and European streets’

National infrastructure, elections, institutions and transport systems are all potential targets of hostile online malefactors, information warfare and fake news, as Britain’s NHS discovered in 2017 and the US in 2016 and 2020 during two presidential elections.

Some operations are random; others are carried out for profit by criminal gangs. But many appear to be Russian state-organised. Such provocations are intended to sow chaos, spread fear and division, exacerbate social tensions among Ukraine’s allies and disrupt military supplies.

In January, for example, a group called the Cyber Army of Russia Reborn caused significant damage to water utilities in Texas. Biden administration officials warned at the time that disabling cyber-attacks posed a threat to water supplies throughout the US. “These attacks have the potential to disrupt the critical lifeline of clean and safe drinking water,” state governors were told.

Alerts about Russia’s escalating activities have come thick and fast in recent months. Kaja Kallas, the former Estonian prime minister and newly nominated EU foreign policy chief, spoke earlier this year about what she called Putin’s “shadow war” waged on Europe. “How far do we let them go on our soil?” Kallas asked.

In May, Donald Tusk, Poland’s prime minister, accused Moscow of repeated acts of sabotage. In October, Ken McCallum, head of MI5, said the GRU was engaged in “a sustained mission to generate mayhem on British and European streets”.

Nato’s new secretary-general, Mark Rutte, a former Dutch prime minister, added his voice this month. Moscow, he said, was conducting “an intensifying campaign of hybrid attacks across our allied territories, interfering directly in our democracies, sabotaging industry and committing violence … the frontline in this war is no longer solely in Ukraine.”

It remains unclear, despite these warnings, how prepared Europe is to acknowledge, first, that it is now under sustained attack from Russia and is involved, de facto, in a limit­less, asymmetrical war; and second, what it is prepared to do about it at a moment when US support for Nato and Ukraine has been thrown into doubt by Donald Trump’s re-election.

When the foreign ministers of Poland, Germany and France – the so-called Weimar Triangle – plus the UK, Italy and Spain met in Warsaw last week, they tried to provide answers. “Moscow’s escalating hybrid activi­ties against Nato and EU countries are unprecedented in their variety and scale, creating significant security risks,” they declared.

But their proposed solution – increased commitment to Europe’s shared security, higher defence spending, more joint capabilities, intelligence pooling, a stronger Nato, a “just and lasting peace” in Ukraine and a reinforced transatlantic alliance – was more familiar wishlist than convincing plan of action. Putin is unlikely to be deterred.

Far from it, in fact. Last week’s missiles-related escalation in verbal hostilities has highlighted the Russian leader’s flat refusal to rule out any type of retaliation, however extreme.

His mafioso-like menaces again included a threat to resort to nuclear weapons.

Putin’s very public loosening of Russia’s nuclear doctrine, which now hypothetically allows Moscow to nuke a non-nuclear-armed state such as Ukraine, was a tired propa­ganda ploy designed to intimidate the west. Putin is evil but he’s not wholly mad. Mutual assured destruction remains a powerful counter-argument to such recklessness.

Putin has other weapons in his box of dirty tricks, including, for example, the seizing of blameless foreign citizens as hostages. This kind of blackmail worked recently when various Russian spies and thugs were released from jail in the west in return for the freeing of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and others.

Putin also has another nuclear card up his sleeve. Greenpeace warned last week that Ukraine’s power network is at “heightened risk of catastrophic failure”. Russian airstrikes aimed at electricity sub-stations were imperilling the safety of the country’s three operational nuclear power plants, the group said. If the reactors lost power, they could quickly become unstable.

And then there is the possibility, floated by analysts, that Russia, by way of retaliation for Biden’s missile green light, could increase support for anti-western, non-state actors, such as the Houthis in Yemen. In a way, this would merely be an extension of Putin’s current policy of befriending “outlaw” states such as Iran and North Korea, both of which are actively assisting his Ukraine war effort.

All of which, taken together, begs a huge question, so far unanswered by Britain and its allies – possibly because it has never arisen before. What is to be done when a major world power, a nuclear-armed state, a permanent member of the UN security council, a country sworn to uphold the UN charter, international human rights treaties and the laws of war, goes rogue?

Putin’s violently confrontational, lawless and dangerous behaviour – not only towards Ukraine but to the west and the international order in general – is unprecedented in modern times. How very ironic, how very chastening, therefore, is the thought that only another rogue – Trump – may have a chance of bringing him to heel.

Biden can do nothing now to halt the war. He had his chance in 2021-2022 and blew it. His missiles, landmines and extra cash have probably come too late. And in two months’ time, he will be gone.

On the other hand, Trump’s warped idea of peace – surrendering one quarter of Ukraine’s territory and barring it from Nato and the EU – may look increasingly attractive to European leaders with little idea how to curb both overt and covert Russian aggression or how to win an unwinnable war on their own.

Putin calculates that Europe, ­prospectively abandoned by the US, fears a no-longer-hybrid, only too real, all-out war with Russia more than it does the consequences of betraying Ukraine.

Cynical brute that he is, he will keep on clandestinely pushing, probing, provoking and punishing until someone or something breaks – or Trump bails him out.

 UK

Jeremy Corbyn Calls for Ticket Levy on Corporations to Save Grassroots Music Venues

“With global giants and corporations inserting themselves into venue sponsorship deals, it is only fair that we ask them to pay the levy to ensure the security of Britain’s grassroots music venues and artist pipeline for many years to come.”
Jeremy Corbyn

By Jeremy Corbyn’s Peace and Justice Project

Jeremy Corbyn has called on the government to urgently intervene in the plight faced by Britain’s struggling grassroots music venues by legislating to implement a small ticket levy on concerts held at large music arenas and stadiums such as The O2 and EE Wembley Stadium in London, AO Arena in Manchester and OVO Hydro in Glasgow.

Corbyn’s calls for urgent action follow May’s Department for Culture, Media & Sport report on grassroots music venues, which recommended the implementation of a small ticket levy on all arena and stadium concerts in the UK.

In April 2023, the Peace & Justice Project, which was founded by Corbyn, launched its Music For The Many campaign to promote and protect Britain’s grassroots music venues through the introduction of a ticket levy. This week, it has issued a warning to the new Labour government that inaction will lead to the closure of many more music venues and theatres in communities in Britain.

Jeremy Corbyn MP said:

“Time is running out for Britain’s grassroots music venues.  

For too long, there has been a cloud of uncertainty hanging over many of these invaluable spaces. The government’s positive response to this year’s DCMS report is welcome, but they must act now to secure the long term and sustainable future of our grassroots music venues.

The report recommended the implementation of a small ticket levy on arena and stadium concerts. With global giants and corporations inserting themselves into venue sponsorship deals, it is only fair that we ask them to pay the levy to ensure the security of Britain’s grassroots music venues and artist pipeline for many years to come.

The government should legislate to this effect as soon as possible, as well as ensuring that no additional costs are inflicted on artist earnings or fans purchasing tickets.”

 

Trump’s Path to Dictatorship

 – Real Democracy Movement

“Let’s make this shocking result into an opportunity. While defending democratic institutions, we should campaign for a new constitution, a political system that can express the direct will of citizens rather than corporate power.”

By the Real Democracy Movement

Dictatorship makes its appearance in all sorts of guises, even through the ballot box, as Americans are likely to find out sooner rather than later. Donald Trump’s decisive victory, courtesy of the Democrats’ lame, arrogant campaign, is the start of a dramatic, historic overturning of the country’s constitution.

Given Republican control of the Senate, and probably the House of Representatives as well, plus the right-wing majority on the Supreme Court, the scene is set for Trump to remake the US state in his image.

He intends to accumulate vast new powers for the Oval Office at the expense of other institutions, which were originally designed to produce so-called constitutional “checks and balances”. State officials who stand in the way will be purged. Armed forces will likely be deployed to carry out mass deportations of immigrants.

Black citizens, who largely stayed with the Democrats on polling day, will now fear the loss of hard-won voting and other rights, while women across the United States are certain to lose what’s left of their reproductive rights. Media and other critics will be targets as Trump’s cronies start the search for the “enemy within”, as he called opponents during the election campaign.

Charges against twice-impeached Trump relating to the insurrection in January 2021, when his supporters set out to kill Congressional leaders to stop formal approval of Joe Biden as president, have already been dropped. Trump has promised “retribution” against those who have wronged him and has set up a loyal group of advisers to enforce his demands.

“We’ve already been in a process over the last 10 years of democratic decay,” said Daniel Ziblatt, a professor of government at Harvard University and co-author of .How Democracies Die. “This election will just hasten that decline.” He added:

“The electoral road to breakdown is dangerously deceptive. People still vote, and elected autocrats maintain a veneer of democracy while eviscerating its substance. Many government efforts to subvert democracy are ‘legal,’ in the sense that they are approved by the legislature or accepted by the courts” – Daniel Ziblatt

Fascist dictator Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933 by way of the ballot box. The Reichstag, the German parliament, then passed enabling legislation that created the notorious Nazi regime. Trump’s former chief of staff John Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general, said that, while in office between 2016-2020, the president-elect suggested that the Nazi leader “did some good things.”

Just as happened in pre-war Germany, the big corporations have lined up behind the new regime, led by Elon Musk and much of Silicon Valley. They will control the elimination of climate regulations and pave the way for Trump’s trade war plans based on high tariffs against foreign imports. Putin will be encouraged to end the war against Ukraine – on Moscow’s terms, while Trump will stand by if Israel, as seems likely, depopulates northern Gaza and attacks Iran.

Naturally, most Trump supporters are unaware of this agenda. The vast majority of Trump voters were motivated by grievances such as falling living standards, high interest rates and inflation, as exit polls showed. A significant group were also driven by a concocted fear of mass immigration, fuelled by Trump and his even more sinister running mate, J.D. Vance who is but a heartbeat away from the presidency itself.

So how come that Trump — who was impeached twice, convicted of some crimes and charged with others, judged liable for sexual abuse and fined hundreds of millions of dollars in a civil fraud trial — was able to vanquish Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party?

Analysis of the turnout, which was one of the highest of the last 100 years, showed that most of the nation’s 3,000-plus counties swung rightward compared with 2020. The Republican shift appeared across rural border communities in Texas, the wealthy suburbs of Washington, and even normally Democratic counties in New York City.

Despite throwing $1 billion dollars at the campaign, the Democrats had nothing to say to ordinary Americans. Historically a liberal capitalist party, they lost the support of major unions like the Teamsters whose members were drifting towards Trump over issues like the cost-of-living, high interest rates and job insecurity.

“I will say this,” one House Democrat told the Washington Post. “The Democratic Party has a major working-class voter issue. It started a decade ago as a working-class White issue. It’s now gotten even worse and spread across racial lines.” Harris never addressed these issues, just as Hillary Clinton failed to do in 2016 when she was defeated by Trump. So the Democrats came across as an elitist, celebrity-infused party which was entitled to power while Trump tuned into genuine grievances and invented others.

The Biden-Harris support for the far-right Israeli regime’s genocidal war against Gaza and its attacks on Lebanon also turned off a group of younger voters as well as a substantial Muslim minority, who declined to back the Democrats. Trump was allowed to pose as a champion of the oppressed, while Harris came across as the champion of a cultural, prosperous elite. No contest.

In a post-mortem discussion by senior Washington Post columnists, Ruth Marcus said: “I suspect this was more about voters’ anger and unhappiness about their own situations, and about their own perceptions of themselves as victims, including of an elite that disdains them, than it is about Trump himself.

“We are an angry and divided country. A country where too many people are willing to blame immigrants for all sorts of woes. A country that is furious about prices that are not still rising at unacceptable rates but that are too high. A country where too many people somehow find this strongman with his authoritarian impulses attractive as a leader. A country where — and I think we have to consider this as well — too many people are not able to countenance the notion of a Black woman as president.”Ruth Marcus

Scott Jennings, a right-wing CNN political analyst, has called the overwhelming vote for Trump “the revenge of just the regular old working class American, the anonymous American who has been crushed, insulted, condescended to”. In contrast to the Democratic Party, Jennings has his finger on the pulse of the anger felt by working class people who felt ignored by the Harris campaign.

What is happening in the United States is not an isolated process. Italy is ruled by a regime with close ties to fascism, while Hungary is a dictatorship in all but name under Victor Orban. In Germany, the Social Democratic Party-led coalition has collapsed while the neofascist AfD is ready to challenge mainstream parties at next year’s election. In Austria, the far-right, pro-Moscow Freedom Party won 29% of the vote at the recent election.

The widespread rise of populist, authoritarian regimes signals an historic crisis of representative democracy, a concept that first took shape in the US Constitution of 1787. Behind that is a fundamental problem – the inability, let alone the unwillingness, of the present state to deal with pressing issues like poverty, climate chaos and peace.

In the late 20th and early 21st century, neoliberalism found its allies in Bill Clinton and Tony Blair, who concluded that corporate-led globalisation was beneficial in every respect. Deregulation on a vast scale set the scene for an unprecedented free rein for financial markets and free-wheeling transnationals. Economic downturns were said to be a thing of the past – until the reality check of the 2008 financial crash put a stop to such nonsense.

So, for example, climate warming has spiralled out of control because the corporations as a whole – not just the oil corporations – resist any serious measures when they lobby at the environment summits to water down agreements. The neoliberal state is a set of institutions that puts markets, low taxation and partnerships with big business above public goods and services.

In the UK, Labour’s embrace of market-shaping investment funds while punishing older people, low paid workers, students, the disabled and those who use public transport, is a case in point. The Reform party under Nigel Farage, a devoted Trumpist, came second in nearly 90 seats, most of them Labour, at the July election. The authoritarians are waiting in the wings here too.

The linked crises of democracy and the state are clearly a danger to our hard-won rights and freedoms. To see only defeat in the Trump electoral victory is to shed tears for the fundamentally broken political and social system that lies behind the anger and frustration of those who fall for far-right demagogy, wherever it rears its ugly head.

A broken system requires bold solutions. So let’s make this shocking result into an opportunity. While defending democratic institutions, we should campaign for a new constitution, a political system that can express the direct will of citizens rather than corporate power. A system of popular assemblies, outlined in our recent manifesto and taken up by speakers at our powerful 2 October event, offers a way forward.


  • This article was originally published by the US-based Real Democracy Movement on 7 November 2024.
  • The Labour Outlook Editorial Team may not always agree with all of the content we reproduce but are committed to giving left voices a platform to develop, debate, discuss and occasionally disagree.
Hundreds of organisations protest violence against women across France
France


More than 400 French organisations have called for demonstrations across France on Saturday to protest violence against women. The mass mobilisation comes amid the widespread shock caused by the Pelicot mass rape trial, in which some 50 men are accused of raping Gisèle Pelicot at the behest of her husband while she was unconscious.



Issued on: 23/11/2024 
By:  FRANCE 24

08:57
Demonstrators hold a banner reading "feminists in a fight against feminicides and patriarchal violences everywhere and all the time" as they take part in a protest to condemn violence against women, in Paris, on November 23, 2024. 
© Stephane de Sakutin, AFP


Demonstrations are planned in dozens of cities, including Paris, Bordeaux, Marseille and Lille, two days before the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on Monday.

In Paris, the procession is due to leave at 2pm local time from Gare du Nord in the direction of Place de la Bastille.

The protest against all forms of violence – including sexual, physical, psychological and economic – takes place amid the Pelicot mass rape trial, in which some 50 men are accused of raping Gisèle Pelicot while she was unconscious, having been drugged by her husband.

The Pelicot trial "shows that rape culture is rooted in society, as is violence against women", said Amandine Cormier, from Grève féministe (Feminist strike), during a press conference in Paris on Wednesday.




"Patriarchal violence is practiced everywhere – in homes, in workplaces, in places of study, in the street, in public transport, in healthcare establishments – absolutely everywhere in society," Cormier added.

Trade unions are also taking part in the marches.

05:02

"Successive governments have made many promises, but the resources allocated are not only insulting but decreasing, [and] political action is almost non-existent," deplored the signatories to the call for action, who want to see a "real surge" in efforts to combat the violence.

In November 2017, a few months after his election to the Élysée Palace, President Emmanuel Macron declared equality between women and men a major priority of his term, with a "first pillar" to be the fight "for the complete elimination of violence against women".

An emergency number, 3919, for women victims of violence has since been established and special bracelets can now be worn by men who have a restraining order against them that will alert the woman if they come within a certain distance.

These measures have been welcomed by women's rights associations. But they deem them insufficient to tackle the severity of the problem and urge the government to do more.

04:51Gisèle Pelicot arrive au tribunal d'Avignon, le 10 octobre 2024 © Christophe SIMON / AFP
UK 

Yvette Cooper’s praise for Italy’s deportation scheme will fuel far right


Keir Starmer previously said Labour is ‘very interested’ in Italy’s racist deportations scheme


Yvette Cooper and Keir Starmer at the National Crime Agency looking to clamp down on refugees (Pictures: Flickr/Number 10)

By Tomáš Tengely-Evans
Friday 22 November 2024  
 SOCIALIST WORKER Issue

Labour home secretary Yvette Cooper has praised a deportation scheme pushed by Italy’s fascist prime minister Giorgia Meloni.

She claimed on Friday it was “very different from the really chaotic Rwanda scheme” pushed by the Tory government.

Italy’s scheme holds refugees who are deemed to come from a “safe country” in Albania to process their claims. The fascist-led government has expanded the list of “safe countries” from 15 to 21—it now includes the brutal dictatorship in Egypt.

The first deportations took place last month. Refugees picked up by the Italian coast guard were shipped to the island of Lampedusa.

Here, Italian authorities “screened” them and singled out men from “safe countries” to deport to Albania. And once in Albania, the refugees were taken to a former air force base in Gjader.

Human rights groups slammed the deal as a breach of international law, but the European Union and a host of mainstream politicians have tacitly backed it.

Cooper said Labour wanted to fast-track deportations of “people who are arriving from predominantly safe countries”. “What Italy is looking at with Albania is being able to take those fast-track decisions,” she said.

“It is just for predominantly safe countries, so this is very different from the really chaotic Rwanda scheme.

“The previous government spent £700 million in the two and a half years it was running in order to send four volunteers to Rwanda.”

Weyman Bennett, Stand Up To Racism (SUTR) co-convenor, slammed mainstream politicians for fuelling the rise of the far right. “The Italian scheme is driven by racism and division and no politician should have anything to do with it,” he told Socialist Worker.

“There are 300 new Reform UK branches being formed and they are not just targeting just Conservative seats.

“The beneficiaries of this rhetoric will be the right and Reform UK.”

Weyman said Labour’s talk of “stopping the boats” ignores what forces people to cross the English Channel. “What’s driving people is bombs, bullets and pestilence—and there is no attempt to deal with those things,” he said. “The solution is safe and legal routes, not scapegoating.”

Many anti-racists were hopeful when the new Labour government scrapped the Rwanda deportations scheme and shut the Bibby Stockholm prison barge in Dorset. That was due to pressure from anti-racist campaigners—and, in the case of the barge, protests by refugees themselves.

But Labour said its move was on the basis of “efficiency”—and paints immigration as a problem to be managed.


Starmer is ‘very interested’ in Giorgia Meloni’s racist immigration scheme
Read More

Cooper has promised to deport 14,000 migrants by the end of the year. And she says that Labour wants to “smash the criminal gangs” that traffic some people across the English Channel.

But the people-smugglers only exist because of Britain’s and the European Union’s racist border rules. If refugees had safe and legal routes to Britain and Europe, they wouldn’t be forced into the hands of organised criminals.

Every time politicians have ramped up border security, it has only forced people seeking a new life to use ­deadlier means. And every time refugees drown or freeze in the back of a lorry as a result, politicians respond with calls for a tougher security—which only ensures yet more deaths.

More than half of those travelling by small boats come from war-torn and dangerous countries such as Afghanistan, Iran, Eritrea, Syria, Iraq and Sudan.

Labour promised “change” to millions of working class people who’d suffered under 14 years of Tory austerity and racism.

Instead, Starmer’s ministers praise a fascist government in Italy for making the deportation flights run on time.

Labour’s scapegoating will only fuel the likes of Nigel Farage, Reform UK and the far right. Anti-racists have to keep demanding safe and legal routes—and an end to scapegoating of refugees and migrants—under Labour.Support Stand Up To Racism


UK

Awaiting the Horizon Post Office Public Inquiry report –  a failure to implement recommendations may feed reactionary populism


 

NOVEMBER 22, 2024

On October 28th, Carol Riddell a subpostmistress in Sunderland, died at the age of 73, worried about money to the very end. She and husband Alan had experienced 24 years of pain and worry after being accused by auditors of theft, and after being forced to pay back thousands of pounds in shortfalls caused by Horizon. Carol did not receive the compensation due before she died.  At the Horizon Post Office Inquiry on November 5th, Chair Sir Wyn Williams made the solemn announcement of her death – on the symbolic date which, fireworks aside, is supposed to enshrine the importance of parliamentary democracy.

The Inquiry ended its final and seventh evidence session on November 14th.   Sir Wyn has now retired to write his report due in mid-2025. Here, campaigner Rosie Brocklehurst, who has followed this story over the past 14 months for Labour Hub, examines what the Inquiry may tell us about institutional and Government dysfunction. She also weighs up the value of lengthy, expensive public inquiries into wrongdoing, particularly when evidence shows recommendations are often accepted by successive Governments but then nothing happens. Finally, she asks, does lack of individual accountability or timely and appropriate redress for victims, actually feed into the phenomenon of rising populism? A Labour Hub long read.

As Secretary of State for the Department of Business and Trade (DBT) from February 2023 until the last election, new Tory leader Kemi Badenoch was involved in the Government’s response to the Horizon Post Office Scandal. Among her controversial actions was the dismissal in early 2024, of Henry Staunton as Chair of the Post Office. 

The sacking, ostensibly for reasons of poor performance in the one year he had been in post, also concerned the appointment of an independent non-executive director (SiD). Staunton had turned down her pick.  He had clashed with the by-now-notorious Ben Foat, General Counsel at the Post Office, and taken away an ambiguous message on spending from a Permanent Secretary at the Department for Business and Trade, Sarah Munby, to mean that compensation delivered by the Post Office should be slowed down to coincide with the next General Election.

Badenoch has a reputation for reacting badly to anyone who crosses her, and following the press leak of his sacking which she declared was nothing to do with her, delivered a televised, vitriolic report to the House. She furiously tore into Staunton and later, when he put up a mild defence in the ‘business’ media, returned to Parliament to claim Staunton was being investigated for bullying.  

It was in fact Post Office CEO Nick Read (who is officially no longer in post and is leaving the beleaguered former “most-trusted ‘brand”, in March next year) who was being investigated. Chapter and verse of this was embedded in a ‘Speak Up’ whistleblowing report produced by the previous Head of HR at the Post Office. She in turn had left her role after signing one of those ubiquitous, non-disclosure agreements, used widely by lawyers to suppress the truth.  True to form, Nick Read commissioned another lawyer at yet more public expense – a female KC, to investigate, who produced what was subsequently widely criticised by post office campaigners as a ‘whitewash.’ It exonerated Read.

The dysfunction of Government as the shareholder of the Post Office, like the institution itself, is exemplified by this catalogue of self-interest by elites and the people who appoint them. A former Business Department Permanent Secretary Sir Alex Chisholm, who has long been mentioned as a person of interest by the compassionate peer and campaigner for subpostmasters, James Arbuthnot, was finally brought before the Inquiry to explain why he failed to stop the hundreds of thousands of pounds being spent fighting Sir Alan Bates’ Group litigation (GLO) in the High Court in 2019, when it was clear he knew that miscarriages of justice had occurred. This is the man who agreed Paula Vennell’s award of a CBE and also welcomed her into the Cabinet Office when she left the Post Office, despite all he knew about her. In November, the Inquiry failed to ask him about his symbolic myopia and his well-paid career continues unabated. Sir Alex Chisholm is now Chair of EDF, the energy company.

The irony remains, that the bullying accusation made in full public glare against Staunton, came from a Badenoch, whose own reputation was rooted in the fear and loathing she allegedly inspired in her ministerial staff.  At the time Badenoch came to the House early in 2024, accusations of bullying had also dogged Liam Byrne MP, the powerful and effective Chair of the cross-party DBT Parliamentary Committee. Some of his Labour colleagues felt this to be a one-off, the unfortunate outcome of a higher standard of work ethic he set for himself and his constituency staff, to assist him on his path to redemption from 2010’s “I am afraid there is no money” error of judgement. That gave Osborne the excuse for years of austerity. 

Whatever the cause of Byrne’s silence, it goes some way to explain why he failed to challenge Badenoch on the floor of the chamber on the Staunton bullying accusation. Staunton himself comes over as an amiable old buffer who had unwittingly fallen into a nest of vipers. Bewildered and caught between the crosshairs of veteran politically astute sharpshooters, he failed to successfully win through. Badenoch scored a hit and used it to assist her ride to become the elected leader of the Tory party.

Badenoch also attempted to claim credit for a proposed £100,000 compensation scheme for those subpostmasters eligible for the Horizon Shortfall Scheme.   Some insiders say the idea for the scheme came from Kevin Hollinrake MP, the Post Office Minister, not Badenoch, but it was Badenoch who wrote to Jeremy Hunt, then Chancellor, to seek approval for it. Hunt rejected it on the grounds that it was not value for money and asked for other options to be investigated.  However, in a letter, Hunt had previously reassured a subpostmaster constituent that he would do everything in his power to secure swift, full, and fair redress. There is no more stark display of the contradiction between public perception of what Government says it wants to do and what it has failed to do for subpostmasters.   

At the Horizon Public Inquiry, Badenoch opined that “it was as important to be seen to be doing the right thing as it was to actually do the right thing.”   

Jason Beer KC, counsel to the Inquiry questioned her true meaning. She stood her ground, emphasising that there would be no respect for politicians if they were not seen to be doing the right thing, as well as doing it.  It seemed to escape her notice that the Tories had lost the election on July 4th because not only had Government not done the right thing a great deal of the time, but they were also increasingly perceived not to have done the right thing. 

But, we need to ask, can public perception of what is right be prioritised over meaningful and ‘right’ action, if there is no transparency at all about the actions actually being taken behind the scenes? 

Badenoch’s own actions, particularly the disconnect between public promises and government inaction on the Horizon Shortfall Scheme, point to a much deeper issue – one of political theatre, and relates to the familiar ‘smoke and mirrors’ politics – where appearances are maintained, but substantial change never happens.

This failure to act feeds into a broader sense of disillusionment and pertinently leads us to ask if public inquiries in the UK will always fail to deliver on their promises and to ensure vital change to our democratic processes.

The Role and Cost of Public Inquiries in the UK

Public inquiries are generally established to ensure accountability, transparency, and reform in the wake of major failings. However, their overall impact remains in question, particularly when recommendations are accepted but rarely implemented. In the UK, the Horizon Inquiry, and others, such as the Grenfell Tower Inquiry, have involved significant financial costs, with inquiries over the past four years running up a total cost exceeding £400 million.

Nick Wallis, the journalist who has probably done most to raise awareness of the Horizon Post Office scandal, revealed that by March 2024 the Inquiry had cost £48 million. Also this year, we find there have been an astonishing 18 public inquiries in progress. These inquiries represent a massive commitment of resources, yet their outcomes often seem limited in scope. While they bring critical issues to light, they frequently fail to catalyse tangible reforms.

The Disconnect Between Public Trust and Government Accountability

The 2024House of Lords committee report into Inquiries, Public Trust and Accountabilityhighlights a growing disillusionment with the process. The committee noted that many inquiries’ recommendations are accepted by the government, but implementation rarely follows:

“Implementation monitoring does already take place, but informally and therefore ‘the challenge is that it is ad hoc.’ This does not imply that public inquiries do not lead to change… There are some instances that we can point to where inquiries have led to positive change… Nonetheless, we heard from many witnesses that there are widespread problems with recommendations not being implemented. We heard that if the recommendations from the inquiry into deaths at the Bristol Royal Infirmary had been comprehensively implemented, then the events investigated by the Mid-Staffordshire Hospitals Inquiry may have been less likely to have occurred, in the view of an experienced firm of solicitors.  A lack of implementation is not just a problem for statutory inquiries. Witnesses told the Committee that if the recommendations from the inquest into the Lakanal House fire had been implemented, then the Grenfell Tower fire may have been less likely to have occurred.”

This failure to act on findings is eroding public trust in Government institutions. The House of Lords committee looking into Inquiries and enhancing trust does not make direct reference to failure of Inquiries to change things and populism. Would it ever be so bold? The clear, underlying message reveals inquiry recommendations are rarely followed by Government action, and this is contributing to a broader sense of dissatisfaction among the public.

Compensation delays remain for the vast majority of claimants. For too long there has been a war of attrition between paid lawyers within the DBT, a procrastination of the most maddening complex process, overseen by the negating Treasury who hide behind the arras.

It was reported last summer that £450 million had been spent on lawyers for paying out just £180 million in compensation.  The paid-out figure has increased since the summer, but nevertheless, the compensation levels given out mostly go nowhere near to bringing people back into the position they would have been in, if they had not been caught up in this horrific miscarriage of justice. 

Many people who have followed this story from a distance will recall Badenoch’s announcement in September 2023 of £600,000 for convicted subpostmasters.  Many victims reported being stopped in the street by those in their community who had heard about it. One said: “Expect to see you on a world cruise shortly then!”   The level of understanding about what these subpostmasters went through leaves a lot to be desired.  Badenoch failed to say to the media at the time that fewer than 100 subpostmasters out of over 900 convicted had had their convictions overturned. So much for doing the right thing. The cheek of the woman is astonishing.  

It took until May 2024 for Parliament to exonerate subpostmasters and, until October, for letters to arrive from the Ministry of Justice to allow those exonerated to actually start their claim.  It  may seem a lot, but £600,000 goes nowhere near the amount that should be paid to those subpostmasters who lost their livelihood over 24 years, were stigmatised, spat at in the street, could not get jobs, could not go to some countries on holiday even if they could have afforded one, because of their criminal record, were made bankrupt, homeless, can never get a new mortgage, lost their health, friendships, and had families torn apart. 253 deaths of subpostmasters, many without proper redress, litter the path of this scandal.  

Public inquiries in the UK often reveal uncomfortable truths, but when it comes to implementing changes, the political will seems to dissipate. As a result, citizens begin to question the utility of inquiries: are the recommendations unfeasible, or is the real problem the inability of Government institutions to take action?

The cost of public inquiries, combined with their slow pace, leads to a growing sense of frustration. It’s like opening a wound in full public glare, traumatising, resurrecting memories long suppressed. Failure to implement recommendations undermines trust in the institutions responsible for driving change.

The gap between public promises and meaningful action segues into feelings of powerlessness and alienation, which populist movements often capitalise on.

The rise of populism is of course a global phenomenon seen across many democratic societies. ‘Leaders’ who claim to speak for the “forgotten people” often present themselves as outsiders who can ‘fix’ the system, (‘clean out the swamp’) even if their solutions are simplistic or authoritarian. In this climate of disillusionment, populist rhetoric can easily gain traction by offering the promise of immediate action, even when it comes at the cost of undermining democratic values and institutions.

The failure to implement recommendations from public inquiries as outlined in commentaries in the House of Lords document, contributes to the widespread perception that the Government does not work for the people. This feeling of alienation is particularly strong among those who have been directly affected by the failings under investigation. Public inquiries, rather than restoring trust, often ‘highlight the chasm between official narratives and real-world outcomes.

When recommendations are accepted but not implemented, citizens begin to feel that the Government is incapable or unwilling to address systemic problems. This disillusionment is particularly acute for marginalised groups, who often feel that their concerns are ignored. The sense that the government fails to deliver on its promises or fails to hold those responsible accountable, leads to a deeper belief that nothing ever changes, no one is ever held accountable, and the political system serves the interests of the powerful rather than the public.

This creates fertile ground for populist movements. Leaders who promise to restore power to the people, challenge the elites, and dismantle the established systems can tap into this anger and frustration. In many cases, billionaire populists such Elon Musk and Silicon Valley’s Peter Thiel, have exploited these feelings of discontent by presenting themselves as figures who can reshape the system in favour of the people, even while their own business interests may run contrary to the public good. Similarly, in the UK, the nod to populism has come from Boris Johnson and from Liz Truss whose Tufton Street friends were funded in part by such billionaires and has been given more encouragement from new MPs in the Reform Party by wealthy Richard Tice and Nigel Farage.

Exploitation of Public Anger

Reactionary populism, like any uncurbed pathogen, will thrive on a sense of being unheard – a condition that resonates. Directed by the dishonest, it can lead to hate-filled societal unrest, as we saw in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s and as we have witnessed in recent months in Southport and on display in the USA on January 6th, 2020. With Trump elected, there is, undoubtedly, much more horror to come.

Political commentators such as Yanis Varoufakis and Thomas Frank  argue that populism arises when people feel they have been betrayed by the political system, which has been co-opted by the interests of the wealthy and powerful. Varoufakis notes that growing economic inequality and political alienation contribute to a sense of hopelessness among the public, making them more susceptible to populist rhetoric. Frank, in his work on the rise of Trumpism, highlights how a sense of betrayal – by both parties in the political system – creates fertile ground for populist movements that promise dramatic change, but often only exacerbate existing problems. Andrew Urie, in his 2021 LSE blog believes populism to be an “energy” that can be reactionary and progressive.  He also interestingly mentions “the regulatory state” – a function of democracy into which public inquiries may comfortably fit:

“As Frank points out, the horrific outcome of the 2016 conjuncture was that Trump, via the advice of the reactionary populist strategist Steve Bannon, outfoxed the Democrats by manipulatively presenting himself as the voice of the deindustrializing working class. Naturally, Frank is astute enough to recognize that this turned out to be nothing more than an insincere, opportunistic bid to secure the support of some desperate, misguided people, some 6 to 9 million of whom had previously voted for Obama. As Frank notes, the key leadership task that Trump embraced with ‘enthusiasm’ resided in dismantling the ‘regulatory state’, which remains one of ‘the few institutions in Washington designed to help working class Americans.’”

What Can Be Done?

To make some inroads into addressing these issues, Governments should make regulators of banks and public utilities more effective, instead of letting them off the hook (or deregulating as Reeves seems to want to do with city financial institutions) and of course, make public inquiries far more effective. Their powers need to be increased.

Statutory public inquiries may compel witnesses to attend, but they need also to work with Governments abroad to compel those who run away from responsibility to ensure they attend. (Jane McLeod a key Post Office General Counsel, left for Australia in 2020 and refused to attend the Inquiry).  They also need to work in tandem with a better resourced police service, so that prosecution of suspected culpable ‘actors’ in these scandals, can be speeded up.  

We must start with an unequivocal commitment to act on the recommendations made by all Inquiry reports and ensure that findings lead to genuine and palpable reform. The Government must also work to restore public confidence in the process by demonstrating accountability. Inquiries should not be seen as political theatre, but as a means of genuine redress for those affected.

Ultimately, the power of populism is fuelled by a sense of disillusionment, but this can be counteracted if the Government learns how to listen well to the victims of scandals, and hears the silent roar of the wider populace, as was documented in petitions, letters to newspapers and media reports and in a general upswelling of genuine human feeling of solidarity, in response to the ITV drama on the Post Office scandal last January 1st. It must hold itself accountable, and act decisively when faced with such issues that present such a threat to the very fabric of what we call democracy. It must be made in the interests of what is right – not what is shaped to appear to be the right thing by disruptive, main-chance politicians, interested in manipulating the alienated populace, but largely driven by a desire for power for personal advancement.  We have to hope that it is not too late.

Rosie Brocklehurst is a journalist and press officer (retired) who worked for the Labour Party, LWT, the BBC and several charities.

Image: Wallasey Post Office. Author: Rodhullandemu, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.

UK

Ofgem price hike intensifies pain for pensioners and poor, say campaigners

 

NOVEMBER 23, 2024

The energy regulator Ofgem has announced a rise in the energy price cap in January for a second consecutive time, raising bills by 1.2% and bringing the average household energy bill to £1,738.

The announcement comes at the end of a week in which the Government’s own figures suggest that 100,000 pensioners in England and Wales could be pushed into poverty by its decision to cut winter fuel payments.

Caroline Abrahams, charity director at Age UK, called the cap rise “the latest in a series of blows for pensioners living on a low or modest income.”

Greg Jackson, CEO of Octopus, opined that pensioners could always stay warmer “by snuggling up on an electric blanket for a while.” But charity leaders have already warned that people will be “going to bed in hats and coats” this winter.

Simon Francis, coordinator of the End Fuel Poverty Coalition, commented: “The decision to introduce a price cap change in the middle of winter was taken by Ofgem in 2022 and was described as an inhumane policy at the time. No wonder it has been opposed by campaigners ever since as households will have to find more money to keep themselves warm at the worst possible time. Already the average household will have paid around £2,500 extra for their energy than had we not been so exposed to volatile energy markets.

“To make matters worse, the new Government has cut back the levels of support available to some of the most at risk households. It is so vital the ministers bring in more support for vulnerable households this winter and speed up plans to bring in a social tariff for next winter – a move that is backed by the vast majority of voters.”

Warm This Winter spokesperson Caroline Simpson said: “It’s freezing this week and now we have another price cap rise which is devastating to the 6.5 million in fuel poverty and all of us who will be paying 66% more on energy than we did before the start of the  energy crisis.

“We desperately need to get on with the job of  ramping up our supply of homegrown, renewable energy, which is abundantly available to us on this windy island and a properly funded programme of insulation and ventilation to upgrade our leaky homes.

“Homegrown renewables are the only way we will cut our bills for good but whilst that kicks in we also need commitment from the government that vulnerable households will be supported with their energy bills this winter and next with a social tariff funded by the energy sector’s vast profits. In this day and age, nobody should be afraid to turn on the heating because they can’t afford to pay for it.”

New figures from the Warm This Winter campaign have found that almost half of those polled are worried about how they will stay warm this winter, with 46% worried that they may need to rely on the NHS this winter. Over 65s are the most concerned group with half worried about how they will stay warm.

Campaigners warn that the official statistics are likely to underestimate the suffering caused by the decision to means-test winter fuel payments. Those missing out on Winter Fuel Payments this year include 1.2m pensioners in absolute poverty and 1.6m disabled older people.

As part of the long term solution to cold damp homes, the Warm This Winter data shows that nearly three quarters of the public want the UK’s worst homes to be prioritised with a properly funded insulation and ventilation scheme.

But until the Government’s Warm Homes Plan is introduced, energy bills remain around 65% higher ( about £700 per average household) than in winter 2020/21 – a fourth winter of the energy bills crisis driven by our over-reliance on expensive gas.

As the first cold snap of the 2024/25 winter hits home, data analysis by academics has found fuel poor households are using dangerously low amounts of energy during freezing weather. Some of the UK’s poorest households use 21% less energy during cold weather than other households, leaving them exposed to potentially dangerous cold damp homes.

This has also led to calls to reform the Cold Weather Payments so they are paid out when the Met Office predicts the temperature in the next 24 hours is likely to fall to -4C or below, rather than paid after a cold snap as is the case at present.

As well as short term measures to tackle high energy bills, six out of ten people actively support a fully-funded nationwide insulation and ventilation programme to create healthy, energy efficient homes that will also make bill payers less exposed to energy shocks. Experts have calculated it could save households up to £400 on yearly energy bills.

Jan Shortt, National Pensioners Convention (NPC) General Secretary said: “Given that we already have freezing weather across the country, it is inevitable that those without the support of the Winter Fuel Payment will be suffering in cold homes – many afraid to turn the heating on at all. 

“The NPC is concerned to learn that the wait for those applying for pension credit is extended to 10 weeks as the extra staff being brought into the DWP will not be trained until the new year.  This delay will take those applicants who need their winter fuel payment now to at least February. We genuinely fear that some may not survive to see February and their delayed payment.”

Commenting on Ofgem’s price cap announcement, Friends of the Earth campaigner, Sana Yusuf, said: “Yet another increase in energy prices shows just how vulnerable we remain to the volatility of global gas pricing. We need a decent plan for upgrading our heat-leaking homes, which are largely the reason energy bills remain high and why too many people are freezing in cold, damp conditions again as we move into the colder months.

“The rise in inflation this week, driven primarily by climbing energy prices, shows why upgrading our homes goes beyond lifting people out hardship and protecting the planet – it makes economic sense too, as it will leave people with more of their hard-earned cash to spend. That’s why in its forthcoming Warm Homes Plan, the government must go much further and faster, by committing to spend £6bn a year on a national insulation programme, targeted in the areas most in need first. It’s only with this level of investment that we can end the scourge of cold homes for good.”

A large-scale insulation drive to bring the homes of 31 million people up to standard would cut household bills by 20% or around £150 in 2024. For the worst homes this saving rises to just less than £400. It would also reduce  pressure on the NHS as cold homes cost the NHS around £500m per year, and bring  down new cases of childhood asthma by 650,000, according to Citizens Advice

Meanwhile, in the short term, three-quarters of people want a social tariff for older and disabled people and two-thirds also feel that it should be part -funded by the wider energy industry who have raked in over £457 billion in profits since the start of the crisis. 

Image: https://www.flickr.com/photos/cj_collective/6992454230 climatejusticecollective Licence: Attribution 2.0 Generic Deed CC BY 2.0