Foreign secretary David Lammy secretary is sucking up to Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance to keep in with US imperialism (Picture: Keir Starmer on Flickr)
The Labour Party is cosying up to the global far rightâs figurehead Donald Trump to maintain Britainâs âspecial relationshipâ with United States imperialism.
Foreign secretary David Lammy was asked on Thursday about Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vanceâs racist remarks. The far right politician said that Britain could be âthe first truly Islamist country that will get nuclear weaponsâ.
In response, Lammy fell over himself to make clear, âIâve met him now on several occasions.â âWe share a similar working class background with addiction issuesâand weâre both Christian,â he said. âI can find common ground with JD Vance.â
Trump picked Vance to be his vice presidential candidateâa move that was made official during the Republican party convention in Milwaukee, which began on Wednesday. It has become a magnet for far right and racist politicians, including Reform UK leader Nigel Farage and Tory former prime ministers Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.
When Lammy was trying to get on under Jeremy Corbynâs leadership, he knew how to make the right noises to appeal to grassroots members. He had called Trump a âneo-Nazi sympathising sociopathâ and âa tyrant in a toupeeâ.
Lammy said that wonât damage the special relationship because Trump âhas the thickest of skinsâ. âIâve spoken to many Republicans as you knowâincluding those who may be his defence secretary to secretary of state,â he said.
Whatâs behind Lammyâs cosying up to Trumpâs team? Â
It stems from the Labour Partyâs commitment to the British stateâand its role as a junior partner to the US since the end of the Second World War.
The right and left of the Labour Party is committed to âLabourismâ, the idea that what happens in parliament is most important to winning changes rather than working class struggles.
While the party may articulate working class peopleâs aspirations, it aims to take the reins of the British state and rule in the ânational interestâ. There is no such thing as a national interest between bankers, bosses, landlords and working class people.Â
But if you want to deliver reforms through the capitalist state, you have to prove that youâre a âresponsibleâ manager of the system. Itâs the politics of ânationâ over class, which infects that Labourite tradition and trade union bureaucracy.
This means cosying up to the British state and bossesâ interestsâand to the US.
Itâs why Labour backs Israelâs genocide of Palestinians. Itâs why the Labour Party has always supported Zionism even before Israelâs creation in 1948, in the hope that it would be an outpost in the Middle East.
And itâs why Lammy shook hands with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu this, giving Israel the green light to escalate its slaughter in Gaza.
As Lammy said, âThe truth of our relationship is that it is a special relationship. We saw how special it was over the skies of Israel and Jordan where our militaries came together to stop those missiles falling on those two countries.â
What Lammy refers to was dangerous escalation in the Middle East between Israel and Iran, not some finest hour. And, more to the point, why does the US have a base in Jordan? Why does Britain have bases in Cyprus which allow it to fly missions over the Middle East?
Lammyâs only worry is that Trump wants too much of a âgo it aloneâ strategy, which focuses on China at the expense of the Middle East and Ukraine.
But heâs hopeful that, by sucking up to the far right bigot, he can influence him. âThere is a lot of rhetoric from Trump, but look at the action,â he says. âHe was the first to give javelins to Ukraine after 2015. He talked about withdrawing from Nato, but he actually increased troops to Nato.
âIn a grown up world, in the national interests of this country, we will work as closely with him as we can and we will seek to influence him where we disagree.â
Thatâs what Labourâs grown up politics meansâslaughter abroad and making working class people pay for it at home.
Letâs build working class struggles and the Palestine and anti-war movements where our strength liesâwe can expect more war from Labour.
Labourâs special relationship with the US
Here are just a few examples of Labour governments backing murder for the sake of the âspecial relationshipâ with the US.
1949:Â The Labour government allows the US to set up permanent military bases in Britain and was key in setting up the warmongersâ alliance Nato.Â
1950:Â The Labour government sends British troops to fight in Korea, a proxy war between US imperialism and Russian imperialism.
Over 1,000 British soldiersâand three million Koreansâdied. As the historian John Newsinger writes, âThe only reason for this military commitment was to maintain the âspecial relationshipâ with the US.â
1951:Â US Democratic president Harry Truman and Clement Attleeâs Labour government overthrow the democratically-elected Iranian government. The CIA and MI5 toppled the liberal Mohammed Mosaddeq, whoâd nationalised British oil interests, and installed the Shah as an absolute monarch.
1964-70:Thereâs a myth that Harold Wilson, the then Labour prime minister, is the âman who kept us out of Vietnamâ. Â
The Labour government didnât send troops to Vietnam. But that was only due to the strength of the left and the Vietnam solidarity movement in Britain, which mobilised mass demonstrations in 1968.
Wilson said as much to US president Lyndon B Johnson in a telegram in 1967. âI would like you to understand our political situation here,â he said. âFor two years, whether with a majority of three or a majority of a hundred, I have been able to hold my party.
âOn the Thursday before (Soviet premier) Alexei Kosyginâs visit I had a hostile vote of 68 on a resolution specifically demanding that Her Majestyâs Government should associate itself with (a UN) appeal to you to stop the bombing unconditionally.
âThe vote would have been much larger if I had not made a short personal appeal not to rock the boat.â
1999:Â In the 1990s the West intervened in the bloody civil wars in the former Yugoslavia.Â
Natoâled by Labourâs Tony Blairâlaunched a vicious bombing campaign lasting 78 days against Serbia.
General Joseph W Ralston, vice chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, was pleased with the policy. He said in September 1999, âDespite the weight of bombs dropped, Serbian civilian casualties were amazingly light, estimated at less than 1,500 dead.â
2001: The USâs real chance to assert its might came after the terror attacks of 9/11, when the US, Britain and Nato launched an invasion of Afghanistan to overthrow the Taliban.
After 20 years, at least a Âquarter of a million killings and trillions of pounds spent on military assaults, the Taliban overthrew the Western-backed government.
2003:Â Tony Blair lied to make sure Britain joined the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 that murdered over a million people.
The Western invasion was an attempt by the US to send a signal to rival powers, such as China, that it was still top dog in the world.
Iraq was the only time a substantial number of Labour MPs rebelled against warâ138 voted to delay the invasion, 84 voted against war.
Once again, that due to the mass movement against the war organised through the Stop The War Coalition.
Source: Socialistworker.co.uk









