The ruling class of Scotland have long been merged with that
of England and the working-class of Scotland, Wales and England has long been
one homogenous working class. We cannot tag along with, follow behind, or try
to lead these nationalist movements or parties – we must resolutely struggle
against them while propagating socialism. “Self-determination” is a slogan that
can be used to justify any project, no matter how reactionary. It was the call
for self-determination for the national minorities of Yugoslavia in the 1990s
that laid the basis for the bloody civil war. It is the call for
self-determination in eastern Ukraine that is creating the conditions of civil
war there today. “Self-determination” in reality means granting the ruling elite
free rein to set its own economic and political agenda to meet their own needs,
skilfully masked by socialist phrases.
Nationalism is always the tool of the capitalist class. There
was a brief period in history where there existed an identity of interest
between the national bourgeoisie and the working class against aristocratic
feudalism, and hence even Marx recognized nationalism had a progressive role to
play. However, now that the progressive role of the capitalists is long
finished, so too is the progressive role of nationalism. In essence, supporting
nationalism nowadays amounts to a switch from socialist which hold that the
working class is the sole agency for the liberation of humanity, to
nationalism, which effectively is a movement in support of the local “national”
capitalist class.
From being a tiny
inconsequential entity with a few members the Scottish National Party became
suddenly the dominant party in Scotland. How did this startling transformation
come about? Disappointments, defeats and disillusion have been the left’s constant
companions for many a year. The SNP increasingly began to seem like an
attractive and viable alternative to many people given the background of
growing disillusionment with Labour. The SNP was tailor-made for the job of
providing the reformism traditionally offered by the Labour Party. This
trajectory is essentially a product of despair following successive defeats of
the working class and the destruction of large sections of the organised
working class. The SNP has successfully tapped into widespread anger and a
sense of injustice. Nationalism is being fomented now in Scotland in order to
provide an alternative to austerity. A series
of Labour governments have now convinced even some Trotskyists that the Labour is
nothing but a pro-capitalist party, and they are now deserting the Labour Party
like rats from a sinking ship and rushing to fill the life-boat of
left-nationalism. They are blind to the fact that they are jumping from the
frying pan into the fire. They still do not understand or opportunistically
refuse the anti-socialist role of nationalism. The Trotskyist movement naively
simply switched their opportunistic slogan “vote Labour without illusions” to
vote “Independence without illusions.”
Let us also be very clear
and state the patently obvious. Scottish nationalism has no intention of
challenging capitalism.
At present Scottish nationalism and the SNP have the
appearance of a progressive left-wing movement to some honest people who read
the promises of their election policies. Deceived by manifesto pledges, sincere
people will work in and around the nationalist movement only to discover, in
some years’ time, that they have been most cruelly misled, have been wasting
their time and worse – have been advocating ideas which they will then have to
destroy to establish socialist principles. Instead of tragically wasting their
time fostering nationalism those seeking a socialist society must stand firm to
socialism. We must do work to popularise socialism alone in order that people shall
not be side-tracked. Socialism and nationalism are mutually exclusive.
Nationalism abandons notions of workers solidarity and seeks an outcome that
necessitates the dividing of workers, denying any role for English or Welsh
trade union activists. The history of the British labour movement is the
history of the intertwined fates of the Scottish, English, and Welsh working
class, for example, the legendary Keir Hardie was an MP for a London and then
for a Welsh constituency. The links between Scottish, English and Welsh working
people have forged through common struggles and shared experiences a potentially
powerful political force. Rising support for nationalism means Scottish workers
are turning their back on class unity and joint struggle with their brothers
and sisters south of the border, and strengthening reformist illusions that
hope lies in a new constitution and a sovereign Edinburgh parliament.
The left nationalists urge Scottish workers to reject this historic
solidarity with their English and Welsh fellow-workers, on the grounds that it
is impossible to achieve progress at a British level; only in Scotland. But
they are wrong if they think that a more radical, more socialistic agenda will
emerge in an independent Scotland. The new Scottish state would find its policies
constrained exactly the same sort of undemocratic, technocratic, neo-liberal
rules of globalization that left nationalists stringently oppose. As with the
formation of the Irish Republic, the political landscape will be dominated not
by a consciousness of class but of “national interest”. Working people will be
spun the line that sacrifice for the good of the nation is the symbol of
patriotism despite the pain and privation. A new Scottish state would have an
overwhelming incentive, like Ireland, to cut business taxation to gain a
competitive advantage over its larger neighbour and would actively discourage collective
co-ordinated action by workers across all of the nations of the United Kingdom.
Scottish English and Welsh workers do not respond to an abstract appeal for “international
solidarity”, they don’t need one, they act out of their already existing unity.
The fact is that we live in a single state with a single economy and trade
unions have created an organic unity with identical interests and a common
consciousness. Independence will tear the fabric of unity apart. In Britain a
division of the working class along national lines would be a huge step
backwards for the workers movement, even from the weakened state it is
currently in. For though class struggle
is at a very low level, those struggles that have taken place, including in
Scotland, have arisen out of nationwide disputes. The creation of an independent Scotland would
break that unity and make the task of advancing the workers movement more
difficult.
The left nationalists must ask themselves if the possibility
of a few seats in a Scottish Parliament is a worthwhile exchange for an
abandonment of basic socialist principles. Draping themselves in the Saltire
rather than the Red Flag, left- nationalists act as a recruiting sergeants for
the pro-business SNP. During the referendum vote many on the left tried to
disguise the unpalatable policies that the SNP was preparing to implement by
claiming that a Yes vote did not mean support for the SNP and that a move to
independence would not necessarily mean an SNP government. Clearly this was deceitful
as there was no other political party capable of forming a government if the
Yes campaign had succeeded and the SNP’s economic policies and
corporate-friendly pledges would have entailed a race to the bottom for tax
rates on capital and for workers’ living standards in Europe. The
Left-nationalists could merely counter with an idealist social democratic
utopia in a very small state vulnerable to the economic blackmail of the
bankers as we witness in Greece today.
There is an alternative to nationalism and spreading false
hope amongst workers in Scotland. It’s called class politics and it comes with
internationalism and working class unity and being honest with the working
class, even if it’s not what some want to hear, rather than peddle cynical
opportunistic shortcuts up deluded blind alleys to gain some supposed influence
amongst workers. In reality the short-cut to socialism turned out to be a short
cut to nationalism. The Socialist Party reject the idea that Scottish
nationalism (or any nationalism, for that matter) represents a way of advancing
the interests of the working class.
There is no basis for socialists to be advocates of Scottish
independence. All the arguments for
independence are in essence nationalist and pro capitalist whatever the left-wing
gloss than is placed on them. Our opposition to independence is not support for
the status quo but for the unity of the working class. The workers movement
would be weakened by a process where regional capitalist classes try to corner
local resources and endeavor win the workers over to defend them. The task for
socialists in all countries, whether that be Scotland, Britain or Ireland, is
indeed independence - not of nations or of regions - but of the working class. This
class independence, in terms of politics and organisation, is the very
foundation of the struggle for socialism.
It is because Scottish nationalism and the call for independence throw
up yet more barriers to this unity that we urge workers in Scotland to reject
the siren song of separatism
"merchants have no country. the mere spot they stand on does not constitute so strong an attachment as that from which they draw their gains." Thomas Jefferson
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