
I got the two copies of my self-published book For A Workers’ Chamber, published with the print on demand service Lulu through the post today. I wrote the book way back in 2018. It argues that as parliament is dominated by millionaire company directors and senior management, working people have been effectively excluded. Blairite Labour is no help, as it has enthusiastically embraced this policy. I therefore argue that what is needed to correct this is a parliamentary chamber composed of working people, elected by working people, following ideas and demands going back as Robert Owen’s Grand Consolidated Trade Union and the Chartist’s assembly of a parliament of trades in the 19th century. The book’s blurb runs
For a Worker’s Chamber argues that a special representative chamber of composed of representatives of the working class, elected by the working class, is necessary to counter the domination of parliament by millionaires and the heads of industries.
It traces the idea of worker’s special legislative assemblies from Robert Owen’s Grand Consolidated Trade Union, anarchism, syndicalism, Guild Socialism, the workers’, soldiers’ and peasants’ councils in Revolutionary Russia, Germany and Austria, the Utopian Socialism of Saint-Simon and the Corporativism of Fascist Italy. It also discusses the liberal forms of corporativism which emerged in Britain during the First and Second World Wars, as well as the system of workers’ control and producer’s chambers in Tito’s Yugoslavia.
It argues that parliamentary democracy should not be abandoned, but needs to be expanded in include a worker’s chamber to make it more representative.
I ordered two copies of my book as I want to send one to the Labour Party. It’s now holding a policy review, and they’ve been asking members to send in suggestions for a policy. I really this idea is quite extreme and Utopian, but I want to send a copy of it to them to remind them just who they were set up to represent and where their priorities should lie. And they definitely do not lie with chasing Tory votes, taking over Thatcher’s policies and dismantling the welfare state, privatising the NHS and enrolling rich businessmen in parliament.
I’d like to send the second copy to any Labour MP or senior figure in the movement, who might be interested in it. Ken Livingstone would be the obvious choice, as he was a strong supporter of workers’ rights and industrial democracy when he was head of the GLC. Unfortunately, he has been forced out of the party due to being smeared as an anti-Semite, simply because he correctly pointed out that Hitler initially supported Zionism and sending Jews to Israel. The German Zionists signed a pact with him, the Ha’avara Agreement, which is documented on the website of the Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem.
I’m also thinking of sending it Richard Burgon, who is now one of the leading figures in left-wing Labour politics. I realise that it is probably too extreme for him, as he’s traditional centrist Labour, wanting the return of nationalisation for the NHS and utilities and a state managed but mixed economy. You know, the standard post-war social democratic consensus until Thatcher’s election in 1979. But I’m also worried about sending it to him in case his enemies in the party use it to smear him as a Commie or Trotskyite, just as they did with Corbyn.
The book is only one of a number of pamphlets and books I’ve self-published. I tried sending copies of them to the press, but didn’t get any interest. If you have any suggestions for any senior Labour figure, or simply ordinary MP or official, who would enjoy reading a copy, please let me know.
Tags: 'For A Workers' Chamber', Anti-Semitism Smears, Claude-Henri Saint-Simon, Company Directors, Conservatives, Corporativism, GLC, Grand Consolidated Trade Union, Guild Socialism, Haavara Agreement, Holocaust Museum, Industrial Democracy, Jeremy Corbyn, Jerusalem, Ken Livingstone, Labour Party, Margaret Thatcher, Marshal Tito, Millionaires, Mixed Economy, Nationalist, NHS Privatisation, Parliament, Peasants, Privatisation, Richard Burgon, Robert Owen, Senior Management, Soldiers, Syndicalism, tony blair, Trotskyites, Utilties, Utopian Socialism, Welfare State, Worker's Councils, Working Class, World War I, World War II, Zionism
September 16, 2020 at 3:02 pm |
Have you sent one to Ian Hislop? You might get a review in Private Eye. Or how about Paul Mason? You could send it to my MP, Barry Sheerman, but I don’t know if it would do any good.
September 16, 2020 at 4:09 pm |
I thought of Private Eye, but it struck me that I’d only be opening myself up to parody and ridicule. They’ve been consistently behind the Blairites and their vilification of Jeremy Corbyn, and something like this book would just be giving them ammunition. They do have a book review column, but it’s dedicated to attacking books that they feel are overhyped and overpraised by the critics. I also thought of sending it to my local MP, Karin Smyth, but I don’t think that’d do any good either. I’m sure she works hard for the constituency and has criticised the Tories’ NHS plans, but I think she’s also basically a Blairite.
I’m afraid I don’t know who Paul Mason is, so if you could let me know a bit more about him, I’d be interested.
September 16, 2020 at 4:51 pm
Paul Mason, former Newsnight Political /Economics reporter, wrote a book documenting Working Class struggles of the past (think it was called ‘Live Working, Die Fighting’), he’s a northerner and a Socialist, supported Corbyn but I think might be backing Starmer now, not sure.
September 16, 2020 at 4:53 pm
Interesting! Thanks, Kev, He sounds worth considering.
September 16, 2020 at 5:01 pm
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Mason_(journalist)