| Vote Big Business, Vote Labour |
|
|
|
| Election Spin Blog | |||
|
Spinwatch readers wishing to cast their votes to the best advantage of Big Business may be feeling confused about who to vote for on Thursday. Worry not, Spinwatch presents a guide to the party most favoured by Transnational Corporations. As the Observer Business Editor put it: ''our advice to business leaders is seek a Labour victory, but with this caveat: blair should go as soon as possible and Brown become Prime Minister, installing Ed Balls as his successor in number 11. Better the devils you know.'[1] PR companies working for US Transnational Corporations are offering similar wisdom. The glossy brochure given out to Fleishman Hillard clients on the 'Brown agenda' has a slightly different prediction suggesting that Aladair Darling will become chancellor after Brown, only to be followd by Ed Balls. [2] The guide illustrates the sanguine apporach to New Labour amongst the Trans National corporate class. for further evidence we can point to the support ggiven to Labour by the Sun. Its proporietor Rupert Murdoh only backs parties willing to do his bidding. More extensive, if less impressive, is the list of 63 business leaders who wrote to the Financial times to back Labour. They stated:We back the Government’s investment in science, innovation, skills and business support and we support the continued commitment to cut excessive regulation and in maintaining a competitive position on overall corporate taxation. The future economic success of the country does not lie in plans to cut £35billion in public spending, which would be damaging to the skills, science and business support agenda. Business has always desired one thing above all others - a stable economic climate in which to operate. In Government, Labour has delivered such an environment. Now is not the time to put such hard won stability at risk. [3] Looking through the list one is struck by the lack of intervention by the biggest Companies in the UK, like BP. Often known as Blair Petroleum, their support of the Blair government is assured by rather more direct contacts in the form of the revolving door and day to day lobby contact. But the most interesting thing about the list is its contrast with the supporters of the Conservative Party who wrote to the FT a couple of days later [4]. Their list of 67 signatories included predominantly small or nationally oriented businesses, plus a few Tory ideologues, no longer in the first rank of business like Sir Christopher Gent now only non-exec at GSK. This poor showing by the Tories indicates clearly that they are no longer the favoured party of Transnational Capital. Indeed some commentators have gone so far as to suggest that the Tory policy on immigration, - depriving business of cheap and plentiful foreign workers - makes them 'anti-capitalist'. Nick Cohen argued that: I never thought I'd live to see the day when Rupert Murdoch would order the Sun to attack the leader of the Conservative party for being too right wing on immigration, but it came last week. In the unlikely event that he becomes Prime Minister, Howard will be told in no uncertain terms by Murdoch and the Confederation of British Industry that he must drop his anti-capitalist election promises and I don't believe he will argue back. [5] The final indication of the feeling of the Trans National elite that runs the world economy, was the intervention of Trevor Manuel, the South African finance Minister who said it would be a 'calamity' if Labour lost. Manuel told the Guardian that "It would be a calamity if we had to start afresh at this point. If we want to maintain the impetus on Africa we need firm and experienced hands on the tiller." [6] Manuel, as a representative of the South African governmebnt has high credibility in UK public debate which still associates South Africa with Mandela and resistance to Apartheid. In fact, Manuel, who sat on Blair's neoliberal Africa Commission, is a member of the neoliberal global elite, sitting on both IMF and World Bank committees. As leading South African Activits Trevor Ngwane put it:
people should know Manuel’s record before taking him too seriously. He was a top board member at the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, where he enthusiastically pushed the neo-liberal polices that are the very basis of Third World poverty. In South Africa he has presided over one million job losses, privatisation and a harsh austerity programme, which has reversed many of the promises made when apartheid ended. He is trying to balance his desire to impose policies that please the bankers and multinationals with the fear that these measures are so destructive they will lead to rebellion and riots.It tells us a lot about the Labour Party that the backing it is getting is from the most pro-business, most pro-privatisation forces in Africa. [7] So if you want to vote for the favoured candidate of big business, you should vote Labour. Notes 1.Frank Kane, 'Comment: Trouble Ahead - so business needs Balls', Observer, 1 May 2005 Charles Allen – Chief Executive, ITV plc Nighat Awan OBE – Chief Executive, Shere Khan Group Trevor Beattie – Advertising Creative Director, TBWA/London Graham Benson – Chairman, Blue Heaven Productions Ltd Danny Bernstein – Vice-Chair, Labour Finance and Industry Group Sir Clive Bourne – Chairman, Seabourne Group plc John Boyle OBE – Chairman, Hamilton Portfolio Ltd Dr Jonathan Charkham CBE – Director, Mizuho International plc Alex Cheatle - Chief Executive Officer, Ten Lifestyle Management Ltd John Clarke – Group Chairman, ALHCO Ltd Keith Clarke – Chief Executive, W S Atkins plc Dr David Cleevely – Chairman, Cambridge Enterprise Conference Peter Coates – Chairman, A B M Catering Ltd Sir Ronald Cohen – Executive Chairman, Apax Partners Worldwide LLP D A Couper – Managing Director, Couper Seafoods Ltd Bob Coxon – Chairman, Scott Bader Nigel Doughty – Chief Executive, Doughty Hanson Company Charles Dunstone Professor Sir Chris Evans OBE – Chairman, Merlin Biosciences Ken Gilkes – Executive Chairman, Stort Chemicals Ltd Bill Gleave MBE – Chairman, BGH Ltd Richard Gooding, Managing Director, City Airport Ted Hanley – Managing Director, Aagaard Hanley Ltd Dr Peter Harper – Retired Director, Hanson plc, Lonmin plc, John Laing plc Lord Chris Haskins of Skidby Sir Peter Heap KCMG – Chairman, Labour Finance and Industry Group Lord Clive Hollick of Notting Hill – Director, United Business Media plc Dr Jonny Hon – Chairman, Global Group (Europe) plc Graham Jones OBE – European Patent Attorney, Graham Jones Company George Kessler CBE – Group Deputy Chairman, Kesslers International Ltd Denise Kingsmill CBE Lord Sandy Leitch of Oakley Sonny Leong – Executive Chairman, Cavendish Publishing Ltd Martin Littler – Managing Director, Inclusive Technology Ltd Kevin McGrath – Partner, Reit Asset Management Martin McTague – Managing Director, eGasStation Europe Ltd Michelle Mone – Founder and Co-Owner, MJM International Hugh Morgan-Williams – Chairman, Canford Group plc John Napier – Chairman, Kelda plc Anthony Nelson – Chairman, Gateway to London Eric Nicoli – Chairman, EMI plc Sir Gulam Noon MBE – Chairman, Noon Group Mayank B Patel – Chairman and Chief Executive, Currencies Direct Ltd Nilesh Patel – Managing Director, Shakti Pappadum Lord Paul of Marylebone – Chairman, Caparo Group Rouzbeh Pirouz – Senior Partner, Pelican Partners David Richards OBE – Chairman, Prodrive Ltd Sir Gerry Robinson – Chairman, Allied Domecq plc Bryan K Sanderson CBE – Chairman, Standard Chartered Bank Israr Sarwar – Operations Director, Searchers.com Bharat Shah – Chairman/Managing Director, Sigma Pharmaceuticals plc Khalid Sharif – Managing Director, Ummah Foods Sylvia Sheridan OBE – Executive Chairman, IMS Group plc Ian R Smith – Chief Executive, General Healthcare Group Stef Stefanou – Chairman, John Doyle Group Sir Alan Sugar – Chairman, Amstrad plc Vin Sumner – Managing Director, Clicks and Links Ltd Derek Tullett CBE Chris van der Kuyl – Chairman, 4J Studios Moni Varma – Chairman, Veetee Rice Group Simon Woodroffe – Founder of Yo! Sushi and Yo! Company Chris Wright – Chairman, Chrysalis Group plc Michael Ziff – Chairman and Chief Executive, Stylo plc The above reflects our personal views and not necessarily those of the companies of which we are executives. 4. 'Tories have most specific plans to reduce the red tape burden', Financial Times 27 April, 2005: 16.5. 'Howard's one-way street' Nick Cohen The Observer Sunday April 24, 2005, http://www.guardian.co.uk/Columnists/Column/0,5673,1469194,00.html 6. 'Labour defeat would hit poor - African minister' Larry Elliott, economics editor, The Guardian, Saturday April 23, 2005 http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardianpolitics/story/0,,1468410,00.html 7. 'South African activist rejects Blair’s neo-liberal agenda for Africa' Socialist Worker, 30 April 2005 | issue 1949 http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/article.php4?article_id=6364
|