174 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
174 lines
8.9 KiB
Plaintext
Have we the right to condemn?
|
|
|
|
by 'Black Sheep'
|
|
|
|
He has been jailed for refusing to pay fines, arising from the
|
|
occupation and vandalising of Sheriff Officers premises.
|
|
|
|
He has been arrested on numerous occasions, the most recent being
|
|
during the attack on the 'Pollok Free State' camp against the M77
|
|
by police and Wimpey employees on the 22nd March.
|
|
|
|
He is the first socialist outwith the Labour Party to achieve
|
|
instant public recognition since the days of John McLean, and is
|
|
a proven communicator, whether on TV or Radio, or in speaking
|
|
with working class people.
|
|
|
|
He doesn't drink or smoke, his reputation is intact.
|
|
|
|
So why does he incur such wrath amongst anarchists and other
|
|
revolutionaries ?
|
|
|
|
The answer is simple: the Trafalgar Square Riot.
|
|
|
|
So, why is the Riot so important to the anarchists and why do
|
|
anarchists south of the border know so little of Tommy Sheridan
|
|
since that one glorious sunny day 5 years ago?
|
|
|
|
The story of the riot is well documented in the Acab Press
|
|
pamphlet, "Poll Tax Riot, 10 hours that shook Trafalgar
|
|
Square". Militant members, the stewards of huge marches that day
|
|
in Glasgow and London were appalled at what they saw as the
|
|
degeneration of the massive London march, and the media's
|
|
spotlight on the battle in the square at the expense of news
|
|
featuring 100,000 demonstrating in London and 20,000 in Glasgow.
|
|
|
|
Tommy Sheridan was flown down to appear at the end of the London
|
|
rally and as the 'leader' of the All Britain Anti Poll Tax
|
|
Federation was pitched into the controversy surrounding the
|
|
police attack on demonstrators. Sheridan and Steve Nally, the
|
|
Militant London activist who was the Secretary of 'the Fed.' were
|
|
instructed by the Militant leadership, then led by Peter Taffe
|
|
and the ailing Ted Grant that the riot was a 'godsend' to the
|
|
Tories and would 'alienate' activists from the anti poll tax
|
|
movement. The script was that "200 to 250 of these individuals
|
|
intent on causing trouble" had sabotaged the march (Tommy
|
|
Sheridan BBC 31-3-90).
|
|
|
|
Urged by the 'consensus conspiracy' that passes for news
|
|
coverage, Tommy declared "we condemn it totally" and both he and
|
|
Nally came out with the statement that "our Federation is going
|
|
to be conducting an internal inquiry to try and root out the
|
|
troublemakers" (Sheridan, LWT News 1st April) "...which will go
|
|
public and if necessary name names" (Nally, ITN 1st April).
|
|
|
|
In the months to come there was uproar in the APTF, both at
|
|
federation level and in the local Anti-poll tax groups. Dozens of
|
|
houses in Hackney and elsewhere were raided by riot police. The
|
|
media conducted their populist witch-hunt to identify the
|
|
'ringleaders'. Eventually the clamour died down. Instead of
|
|
resistance to the poll tax disintegrating it was Thatcher's
|
|
government which was rocked and a salutary lesson was learned as
|
|
to 'who your friends were'. The so-called internal inquiry never
|
|
got beyond the drawing board, such was the level of outrage that
|
|
basic solidarity with the marchers attacked by the police,
|
|
imprisoned and in some cases jailed, had been breached.
|
|
|
|
A year later Militant Labour was formed in Scotland, most of
|
|
their members having been expelled from their beloved Labour
|
|
Party. Militant Labour elsewhere took longer to make an impact,
|
|
which in Scotland, especially clydeside, was helped by Tommy
|
|
Sheridan's second place to Labour in the Parliamentary Election
|
|
of 1992, closely followed by his and another victory in the
|
|
Pollok ward in the District Elections of the same year.
|
|
|
|
In Scotland, the media spotlight has continued, as Tommy can
|
|
always provide "rent a quote", especially during the protests
|
|
against water privatisation and a continued guerrilla war against
|
|
the dreaded Sheriff Officers. Recently the attention has dimmed,
|
|
especially with the emergence of the eloquent Lynsey Keenan of
|
|
Earth First connected to the M77 issue. Outside Glasgow, Scottish
|
|
Militant Labour has not made much of an impact with the partial
|
|
exception of Dundee, and the political arena is still dominated
|
|
by Labour with the Scottish Nationalists trying to muscle in.
|
|
Elsewhere in Britain, Militant has not achieved the impact or
|
|
benefits from the organisational stranglehold on the late
|
|
lamented anti poll tax movement, and they are just another
|
|
trotskyite marginalised sect along with the SWP and all the
|
|
others, too numerous and unworthy of mention.
|
|
|
|
Recently in mid February, the Glasgow Anarchists were host to a
|
|
visit by 20 comrades from Tyneside, kindred spirits from a
|
|
similar working class city: Newcastle. As with previous sorties
|
|
by english and welsh anarchists north there is a culture shock,
|
|
and this was shown in their reaction to Tommy Sheridan up on the
|
|
platform in George Square at the start of the M77/ Criminal
|
|
Justice Act Demo. It is hardly surprising that Tommy Sheridan is
|
|
viewed in the same light as Nally and the other Militant Labour
|
|
leaders. In "10 hours" the quotes taken from videos of the
|
|
Trafalgar Sq. riot is followed by the assertion that Militant is
|
|
"an organisation that is opposed to the working class fighting
|
|
back". This may be true in England & Wales, Scottish anarchists
|
|
reserve judgement on this subject. For Scottish Militant, it
|
|
simply appears false.
|
|
|
|
The reason being is that Militant strategy has changed
|
|
considerably from their days as an entrist Tendency. It is
|
|
certainly true that few anarchists can match the Militant members
|
|
from Pollok and elsewhere for their dedication to direct action.
|
|
Nor are they disarmed by the ethic of pacifism, with many arrests
|
|
associated with 'fighting back' literally, or failing to respect
|
|
the property of Sheriff Officers* and their sub-species. Part of
|
|
this stems from their recuitment of young people from the housing
|
|
schemes and the everyday common sense of direct action if you
|
|
have nothing to lose. As mentioned Tommy Sheridan has led by
|
|
example, even after elected to the Council, and faced a jail
|
|
sentence and countless arrests.
|
|
|
|
Of course the appeal of direct action to Scottish Militant Labour
|
|
has to be understood. There have been examples in history where
|
|
Communist Party members took part in such actions, and even the
|
|
SWP at times have to show their 'mettle'. The difference is that
|
|
Militant now places community struggles at the centre of their
|
|
strategy, no longer giving it second billing to workplace
|
|
disputes and confrontation is part of the way people can see
|
|
through the role of Labourism, as defenders of the status quo.
|
|
Even as far as 'controlling' actions, a level of sophistication
|
|
appears to have been adopted. The Alliance Against the Criminal
|
|
Justice Bill, rechristined the Defiance Alliance is a case in
|
|
point. Unlike the front organisation character of the Scottish
|
|
SWP's "Coalition", the Alliance involves ravers, animal libbers,
|
|
anarchists and - especially Earth First. Such was the
|
|
structureless nature of the Alliance, the Scottish Federation of
|
|
Anarchists tried to bring up the formal structure of the
|
|
organisation at the February Alliance conference. Yes, Militant
|
|
are dominant, but such the poor record (outside demonstrations)
|
|
of anarchist involvement it could be a case of - by default.
|
|
|
|
This begs the question. We have a right to be lazy, but have we
|
|
revelled in it for too long. Many anarchists drop out because
|
|
they've 'done their bit', had their youthful rebellion, got
|
|
wasted and waken up to the reality of exploitation from such a
|
|
dreamstate, and in the process collective action goes out the
|
|
window. We have lacked the sophistication to realise that
|
|
politics isn't stuck in a mould, and that we have no right to
|
|
patent direct action as our idea. Possibly, of course, Glasgow
|
|
Militants are a special case, and the charismatic Tommy has
|
|
skills rarely seen in the revolutionary mindset. No doubt, taken
|
|
the longer view, old Bakunin will be proved right again. Lenin's
|
|
teachings are still followed by Sheridan, down to his assertion
|
|
in his recent book that there are working class anarcho-
|
|
syndicalists who understand struggles and the majority are an
|
|
infantile rabble prone to sectarianism and manipulation by the
|
|
State, and he believes all English Anarchists belong to the
|
|
latter camp!
|
|
|
|
Our criticism of Militant will only stand up if we** have a
|
|
voluntary commitment to meet the dedication that their Party
|
|
demands. Anarchist strategy and organisation will have to develop
|
|
- the formation of the Scottish Federation of Anarchists is a
|
|
small step, but isn't enough. Questions will have to answered
|
|
about who anarchism appeals to, why, and why we let ourselves be
|
|
marginalised or out manoeuvred time & time again, by the State
|
|
and by statist revolutionaries. Let's put aside the nonsensical
|
|
assessment that Sheridan is scarred for life due to Trafalgar
|
|
Square, respect his and Glasgow Militant's commitment to direct
|
|
action, match it by our own and, after eating some 'humble pie',
|
|
rediscover a purpose beyond 'playing hard to get' away from the
|
|
theatre of demonstrations.
|
|
|
|
* Baliffs south of the border
|
|
** This criticism may apply to Glasgow Anarchists more than some
|
|
of their English counterparts!
|
|
|