By now some of you will have grown weary of listening to the
mainstream candidates in this General Election. They have waffled on and on about
public spending, public services, jobs, crime, and how things will get better, if
only we put them into power. They all talk about money – spend more, spend
less, tax it, borrow it, lend it, find it - but they never talk about where it
comes from. They never talk about the basic rules by which it is used. They
just assume that money is being made, and that they can adapt their policies to
the rules of the money-making game. That is, they assume capitalism. They
defend a society in which the majority of the population must sell their
capacity to work to the tiny handful who own most of the wealth. They defend a
society in which things can only happen if there is a profit to be made. In
short, they subscribe to the law of no profit, no production. The Socialist
Party is the only party whose sole object is the replacement of the present
social, economic and political system (capitalism) with a fundamentally
different system (socialism). Politics today involves the mass of the
electorate choosing at periodic intervals professional politicians as
representatives who will govern them for the next few years. At election times
it often suits politicians to make sympathetic noises about issues, but after
the elections are over the same politicians can usually find "practical
considerations" that make them have "re-appraisals" of previous
"policy statements". This cynical manipulation is rife throughout the
capitalist world.
Elections are ultimately about which class is to control
political power. Capitalist political control is essential to the continuation
of capitalism as, while this does not give them control over how the capitalist
economy works, it does give them control over what laws are made and over the
deployment of the armed forces. As long as society is divided into owners and
non-owners of the means of producing life, different sectors of the capitalist
class will support different types of governments, including right-wing ones,
left-wing ones, centrist ones, or whatever, depending upon their needs for more
or less governmental intervention. Corruption among sections of their class,
wishful thinking that a stronger state may guide the economy out of serious
recession, friendlier taxation policies, or the needs for improved state
subsidies, are just a few of many variables influencing the owning class to at
times support leftwing brands of government. The capitalist class are not able
to sustain any form of government to operate their plundering ventures in the
money trick that gives some those rations called wages and others those riches
called profits, not even dictatorships, without the support of the
wealth-producing working class. Besides producing socially necessary wealth,
the working class operates the administration of the state, carries its guns,
and provides at times its direct support in the form of votes in open
elections. Workers therefore need to be hoodwinked.
While there are historical reasons for the existence of the
separate parties into which these career politicians are organised, the
differences between them are superficial and often sham. All of them stand for
capitalism, its wages system and its production for profit. The capitalist
class are not particularly concerned over which of them wins as long as one of
them does (even if they don’t like one party to stay in power too long in case
the politicians involved overdo the cronyism and the corruption). It doesn’t
matter to workers either, even if many are tempted to choose
the “lesser evil” – Tweedledum in preference to Tweedledumber – generally
perceived by critics of capitalism to be the Labour Party despite its dancing
to the tune of capitalism every time it has been in office.
One thing is certain, whichever candidate or party wins will
bring about no significant changes to the way things are. And in between
elections we will have little or no say in the important decisions, the 'real
issues' that concern us. Because of the way things are organised at present,
none of us are allowed to take part in the really important decisions that affect
us – the ones about our schools, about health and housing, peace and pollution,
and the distribution of wealth.
The Socialist Party seeks an alternative to this insane
set-up and calls for a truly democratic society in which people take all of the
decisions that affect them. This means a society without rich and poor, without
owners and workers, without governments and governed, a society without leaders
or the led. Socialist society would consequently mean the ending of buying,
selling and exchange, an end to borders and frontiers, an end to force and
coercion, waste and want and war. Today we have the technology, the resources
and the know-how to satisfy everyone's needs. That fact is well established. Fellow
workers, replace the lies of the politicians with the trust in your own power.
Unite with the workers of all lands to take over the planet for all. Is it not
high time that we took back control of our destiny from the profit-mongers and
the masters of war?
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