Lower West Stander
Well-known member
This has nothing to do with optimism or pessimism - it has to do with analysing the situation being face on a national and a global basis. Even the most conservative of economists are predicting an economic recession in the next 6-24 months based on the ongoing trade war between the USA and China - a bubble in stock prices in the USA and Germany - a rapidly growing debt burden in China - slowing growth in the US economy - a contracting German economy (where they are now planning on pumping €50billion of printed money into the economy to try and keep it afloat) - contracting UK GDP - a string of industrialised countries in the neo-colonial world in recession - and Brexit.
As regards the national question - the SNP will and are demanding a independence referendum - Johnson will refuse the referendum - the SNP have hyped this up so much that they will be under pressure to organise a plebiscite of their own (á la Catalonia) - and this will lead to a constitutional crisis. The situation in the North of Ireland is far more serious - the Tories have been the main bedrock of support for Unionists for more than 2 centuries - Johnson has now indicated that he will put a customs border along the Irish sea - this will provoke a massive reaction from the Protestant community in the North who will be whipped up into a frenzy by Unionist politicians - and if Johnson doesn't back down we will see the re-emergence of Loyalist paramilitaries engaging in open sectarian violence (which will provoke a backlash from dissident republicans who have only been waiting for the opportunity to re-ignite the 'war') in the expectation that it will force the British government to act.
The GFA did not solve any of the problems of Northern Ireland - it wasn't a solution. It was a temporary reprieve from the violence by institutionalising sectarianism into the 'peace process' - it will eventually breakdown unless sectarianism and the sectarian parties are undermined. The only way that will happen is through the emergence of an anti-sectarian party of labour that can unite working class Catholics and Protestants around a programme that represents their class interests. The election of Corbyn as leader held out a possibility of such a party developing - more than 4,500 people joined the LP in the North - but the Blairites blocked the LP from standing in the North's constituencies and Corbyn didn't fight them on it. Unless another formation emerges (and it could happen) then the likely outcome is a return to sectarian violence at some point - and that will be the direct responsibility of the British state (and to a lesser extent the Irish state) who have fostered sectarianism in the North for decades for its own interests.
I beg to point out that I have not been 'pessimistic' or 'down' on people who didn't vote for the LP this time (I am not a member of Momentum) - I have pointed out the reasons why working class people chose to abandon the LP and vote for 'get brexit done' - getting these people back into supporting the LP and getting more of those working class people who voted Tory and LD to support LP will be directly related to whether the LP can transform itself from a party of pale pink tory Blairites to a party of the working class putting forward policies that benefit working class people. I have an absolute confidence in the ability of the British working class (just as I have with the Irish working class) to draw the lessons of this period, to develop a class consciousness and to mobilise to defend the interests of working class people - whether that be through the LP or through the emergence of a new formation for working class people.
Who knows? Sounds like we’ll finish up like Venezuela.
That’d be good wouldn’t it?
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