Posts Tagged ‘ConservativeHome’

Private Eye on Johnson’s Appointment of Neocon as Anti-Extremism Chief

April 14, 2021

A few weeks ago the Labour left staged an event on Zoom in which a series of Labour MPs and activists, including the head of the Stop the War Coalition, explained why socialists needed to be anti-war. They stated that after going quiet following the debacles of the Iraq invasion, Libya and elsewhere, the Neocons were being rehabilitated. There was therefore a real danger that the ideology behind those wars was returning, and Britain and America would embark on further imperialist, colonialist wars. And now, according to this fortnight’s Private Eye, for 16th – 29th April, 2021, Boris Johnson has appointed Robin Simcox, a Neocon, as head of the government’s Commission on Countering Extremism. Simcox is a member of the extreme right-wing Henry Jackson Society, firmly backing the wars in the Middle East. He also supported the rendition of terrorists to countries, where they would be tortured, as well as drone strikes and detention without trial. And when he was in another right-wing American think tank, the Heritage Foundation, he objected to White supremacist organisations also being included in the American government’s efforts to counter violent extremism.

The Eye’s article about his appointment, ‘Brave Neo World’, on page 14, runs

Robin Simcox, appointed as the new head of the government’s Commission on Countering Extremism (CCE), has neoconservative view that will themselves seem pretty extreme to many observers. He replaces Sara Khan, the first head of the CCE, which Theresa May set up in 2017 as “a statutory body to help fight hatred and extremism”.

Simcox was researcher at the neoconservative think tank the Henry Jackson Society (HJS), before leaving for the US to become “Margaret Thatcher fellow” at the conservative Heritage Foundation. He was also a regular contributor to Tory website ConservativeHome, writing there in 2011 that David Cameron was wrong to criticise neoconservatives “what has been happening in the Middle East is proving the neocons right” (ie that invasions could build democracies.

In a 2013 study for the HJS, Simcox argued: “Rendition, drones, detention without trial, preventative arrests and deportations are the realities of the ongoing struggle against today’s form of terrorism; they are not going to disappear, because they have proved extremely effective.” Rendition meant the US and UK handing terror suspects over to nations such as Libya or Egypt so they could be tortured for information. He complained that politicians “failed to adequately explain to the public” why these methods were needed and were “failing to explain that the complexities of dealing with modern-day terrorism meant that not all roads lead to a court of law”.

Simcox spent many years looking at Islamist terrorism, but at the Heritage Foundation he argued that making “white supremacy” the subject of a “countering violent extremism policy” was mostly driven by “political correctness” and could be “overreach”, regardless of the terrorist acts by white racists in the UK, US and elsewhere.

Simcox has been appointed interim lead commissioner of the CCE, possibly because bring him in as a temp means his recruitment wasn’t subject to the same competition and inspection as a permanent appointment.

Johnson has therefore appointed as head of the commission an extreme right-winger, who supports unprovoked attacks on countries like Iraq and Libya. The argument that these invasions were intended to liberate these nations from their dictators was a lie. It was purely for western geopolitical purposes, and particularly to remove obstacles to western political hegemony and dominance of the oil industry in the region. In the case of Iraq, what followed was the wholesale looting of the country. Its oil industry was acquired by American-Saudi oil interests, American and western multinationals stole its privatised state industries. The country’s economy was wrecked by the lowering of protectionist trade tariffs and unemployment shot up to 60 per cent. The country was riven with sectarian violence between Sunni and Shia, American mercenaries ran drugs and prostitution rings and shot ordinary Iraqis for kicks. The relatively secular, welfare states in Iraq and Libya, which gave their citizens free education and healthcare vanished. As did a relatively liberal social environment, in which women were to be regarded as equals and were free to pursue careers outside the home. And western intervention in the Middle East created an environment leading to the further, massive growth in Islamist extremism in al-Qaeda and then Daesh. And this has led to the return of slavery. This was Islamist sex-slavery under Daesh in the parts of Iraq under their jackboot, while Black Africans are being enslaved and sold by Islamists in slave markets that have reappeared in Libya.

Domestically, Simcox’s appointment is also ominous. He clearly doesn’t believe in human rights and the protection of the law. Just as he doesn’t believe in tackling White supremacist extremism, even though at one point there were more outrages committed by White racists than Islamists.

His appointment is part of continuing trend towards real Fascism, identified by Mike over at Vox Political, of which the Tories proposed curtailment of the freedom to demonstrate and protest in public is a major part. At the same time, it also appears to bear out the Labour left’s statement that the warmongers responsible for atrocities like Iraq and Libya are coming back. And I fear very much that they will start more wars.

The people warning against this and organising to defend real freedom of speech is the Labour left, whatever the Tories might say about ill-thought out legislation designed to outlaw ‘hate speech’. We need to support left politicos like Richard Burgon, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Diana Abbott and Apsana Begum. The last three ladies, along with former head of Liberty, Shami Chakrabarti, held another Zoom event as part of the Arise festival of left Labour ideas, Our right to resist – the Tory attacks on our civil liberties & human rights, in March. We need to support the Stop the War Coalition, because I’m afraid the Tories and the Blairite right in the Labour party will start more wars.

Blair lied, people died. And Johnson lies as easily and as often as other people breathe. If not stopped, the Neocons will start more wars and more innocents will be massacred for the profit of big business.

Tweezer’s Brexit Party Woes for Euro Elections

April 23, 2019

Another piece of woe for Tweezer. Not only are Labour 10 points above them in the polls, but according to yesterday’s I, over half of all Tory activists are planning to vote for the Fuhrage’s wretched Brexit party in the European elections. They want to send May a clear message to get lost.

The article by Nigel Morris, ”Over half of Tory activists’ plan to support Brexit party’ in the paper’s edition for 22nd April 2019, on page 8, ran

Almost 60 per cent of Conservative activists are planning to switch sides and vfote for Nigel Farage’s new Brexit Party in next month’s European elections, a survey has revealed.

Mr Farage predicted that his party would “sweep the board” in the UK part of the contests expected on 23 May, claiming it was attracting large numbers of Tory and Labour voters alike.

Amid growing predictions of a Conservative meltdown at the ballot box, the senior MP Sir Graham Brady will warn Theresa May that 70 per cent of her MPs want her to step down by the end of June.

The 1922 Committee of Tory backbenchers, which is chaired by Sir Graham, will meet tomorrow, when Parliament returns following a truncated Easter break.

It is understood that they will discuss whether the party’s rules can be changed to bring forward a challenge to her leadership.

The scale of the grassroots backlash over the Prime Minister’s handling of the Brexit process was revealed in a survey for the ConservativeHome website.

It found that 61.7 per cent of Tory members intended to support the Brexit Party in the elections , which will take place if Mrs May fails to win a Commons majority for her Brexit proposals within the next five weeks.

Just 23.1 per cent said they were still loyal to the Conservatives.

Paul Goodman, the website’s editor, described the findings as “the most astonishing we have ever published.”

He suggested that a “really bad result” next month for the Tories could lead to Mars May being forced out of office.

The findings reinforced a Survation survey for the Mail on Sunday in which 40 per cent of Tory councillors said they prepared to support the Brexit party.

Just over half -52 per cent – said that they would vote Tory, but that figure would rise to 65 per cent if Mrs May was replaced by Boris Johnson.

Mr Farage said yesterday: “Westminster has just underestimated how the country feels about this.”

He claimed his new party already had more than 60,000 registered supporters paying £25 each – with a new recruit signing up every 12 seconds.

There was also a report in a box on the same page that Conservative members of Derbyshire County Council had last week informed Tory HQ that they would not deliver leaflets or canvass for Tory candidates next month.

While it’s fun watching May destroy the Tories almost single-handed, there are also serious problems with this. Farage, and presumably his new Brexit Party, are far-right neoliberal privatisers. They may not be as openly racist as Batten’s UKIP, but Farage himself was dogged with very credible allegations of racism and Fascist sympathies, and UKIP under his aegis was still beset with scandals about racism and connections to far right groups.

And Mike has rightly pointed out that we shouldn’t wish Tweezer gone, because her replacement would probably enjoy a honeymoon period in which they would destroy the welfare state even further and privatise the NHS, selling it to some American megamillionaire like Trump.

So we should just hope that Tweezer remains in power, and continues the Tory meltdown, ready for the replacement of the entire party by a Corbyn Labour government at the next elections.