From the September 2015 issue of The Socialist Standard
Clause Four Resurfaces
As we go to press, it is with the Labour Party leadership battle 
raging and its four contenders spouting all manner of promises to secure
 votes. At the forefront of this contest is the long-serving and perhaps
 unusually principled left wing MP, Jeremy Corbyn. For a Labour MP, he 
is as radical as they come and a genuine throwback to the days when 
Labour was considered by many in Britain to be ‘socialist’. His attack 
on everything Blairism has come to represent, his stance on nuclear 
weapons, the Palestinian-Israeli conflict and many social issues, has 
won him much support, a lot of it from other parties on the left.
In early August came news that Corbyn was championing Labour's old 
Clause 4 – its supposed socialist commitment to common ownership of 
production, distribution and exchange. ‘Corbynmania’ kicked in almost 
overnight, with social media sites buzzing with news that ‘socialism’ 
was back on the agenda, whilst the rightwing press, big business and big
 Labour donors have done all in their power to discredit him and 
anything to do with old Labour.
Liz Kendall, another Labour leadership contender and avid Blairite 
said: 'Life has moved on from the old Clause 4 in 1994, let alone 2015. 
We are a party of the future, not a preservation society.' Big Labour 
donor and businessman Assem Aklam, who swelled Labour’s coffers with 
£300,000 in donations, said he would stop funding the party if Corbyn 
became leader, announcing that he would not back a 'dead horse'.
Fabianism
Nostalgic workers, who mourn the demise of Clause 4 in the 1990s, 
would do well to remind themselves of its authors and who they actually 
were – the Fabian Society – and what they actually thought about the 
working class. Perhaps the closest we come to a definition of the 
Fabians is Engels' description of them as 'a clique united only by their
 fear of the threatening rule of the workers and doing all in their 
power to avert the danger.' What danger? A danger that had been 
prophesised by the ILP when they wrote 'that should there be a workers' 
revolt in Europe, there is nothing save a narrow strip of sea between us
 and what would then be the theatre of a great human tragedy.'
With Engels description in mind, however, we can begin to set Clause 4
 in its real context. For it was penned in November 1917, when news of 
the Bolshevik takeover in Russia was still making news in Britain, when 
there were uprisings in Germany, Hungary and Ireland, when the 
Bolsheviks were arguing the case of peace with Germany, when workers all
 over Europe were war weary and sick of the social problems the war was 
creating, when crime rates in Britain were spiralling and when the 
ruling elite were beginning to realise that the Britain the soldiers 
would return to would not be, as Lloyd George had promised, 'a land fit 
for heroes'.
The fear of insurrection amongst the ruling elite – amongst whom the 
Fabian Society considered themselves – was real enough. The Fabians had 
in fact felt such qualms for thirty years, seeing in the working class 
not a mass of exploited workers, impoverished workers, in whose united 
strength resided their own emancipation, but rather a seething mass of 
potential revolutionary fervour that must be contained at all costs.
In the 1890s, Beatrice Webb could expect 'no hope from these myriad 
of deficient minds and deformed bodies – what can we hope but brutality,
 madness and crime?'  Two decades later, her views had not changed, for 
she saw unions as nothing but 'undertrained and underbred workers'. 
Bernard Shaw even toyed with a solution – 'sterilisation of the masses' –
 an idea later to be taken up by Churchill and Hitler.
From the outset, the Fabians did not wish to abolish capitalism and 
thus remove themselves from their privileged positions. They wanted to 
reform capitalism, to soften some of its harsher effects, to make 
capitalism worker-friendly. They wanted peaceful, gradual change from 
capitalism to what Shaw was to describe as 'state socialism'.
Rejecting the Marxian view that the state was a manifestation of the 
domination of the capitalist class, the Fabians believed the state to be
 impartial, neutral, to be used by anyone who could take power. However,
 the idea of the workers taking control was anathema to everything they 
stood for.
Their idea of socialism was one in which the state was controlled by 
experts and professionals 'like themselves' – trained in the new social 
sciences. They were, it appears, technocrats, believing that the 
technical administration of society should take the place of party 
politics. They certainly did not believe that the upsurge of protest 
against capitalism could be led by a class-conscious majority intent on 
social change in their own interest.
Moreover, the Fabians did not care who took their ideas on board and 
even harboured the notion of selling their wares to the Conservatives 
and Liberals.
They were arrogant, held the workers in contempt, feared them and 
were more than guilty of the charge of blatant class collaboration. 
Neither was Clause 4 written out of a genuine sympathy or empathy with 
the workers and with a view to changing the existing social system. It 
was penned to assuage, to pacify that section of society that was 
beginning to nurture the idea that it was time it took matters into its 
own hands.
Clause 4 was penned in an attempt to persuade that section of society
 that posed a threat to the ruling class that their lot could be 
bettered if they put their faith in an elite, an intellectual vanguard, 
who would work on their behalf in parliament and at a time when workers 
elsewhere were attempting to change society themselves, even if this was
 proving to be without any foresight.
State capitalism
Clause 4 did not mean socialism, only ever state-run capitalism, the 
nationalisation of capitalist industry, which would continue to be run 
according to the dictates of the profit system, only by a 
state-appointed board, not by private capitalist firms.
The 'common ownership' clause, which would eventually be reproduced 
on every Labour Party membership card was nothing short of a Fabian 
blueprint for a more advanced, as they saw it, form of capitalism, and 
with its adoption the Labour Party became the foremost advocate of state
 action to control and humanise the operation of private enterprise – 
which has nothing to do with socialism, because the profit system and 
its myriad shortcomings still exist and workers are always subject to 
the worst excesses of its contradictions.
To be sure, the idea of 'socialising' the means of production and 
distributing wealth was by no means a new idea in 1918. The notion had 
been mooted by previous Labour Party conferences and, although the idea 
attracted a lot of support, it never appeared in the party's 
constitution. Whilst many a delegate regarded themselves as socialist, 
it was believed that such a blatant expression of 'socialism' would be a
 vote-loser.
This is an important point, as it shows that the Labour Party then, 
as now, was not so much interested in promoting ideas that threatened 
the hegemony of the capitalist class, but in securing the most votes. 
What made it possible, and indeed urgent, that the Labour Party should 
adopt Clause 4, without it being an electoral liability, was the 
radicalisation of workers brought about by war. But the time would come 
when Clause 4 was seen as an electoral liability.
Electoral liability
In 1955, Labour had lost 1.5 million votes compared with the 1951 
election. Conservative seats rose from 319 to 345 seats and Labour's 
share fell from 293 to 277.  At the 1959 election, Labour lost a further
 196,000 voters, whilst the Tory tally rose by 448,000. One Labour 
commentator, Douglas Jay, speaking of nationalisation, said: 'We are in 
danger of fighting under the label of a class that no longer exists.'
After the 1959 defeat, the then Labour leader Hugh Gaitskell decided 
there had to be some serious changes in Labour Party policy.  At a 
specially summoned post-election conference, previous defeats were 
discussed. Gaitskell declared: 'In my opinion capitalism has 
significantly changed, largely as a result of our own efforts and the 
changing character of the Labour Party. Importantly, he argued, Labour 
had lost votes through its identification with common ownership – Clause
 4'. Conference listened quietly, but cries of derision greeted his next
 words: 'Standing as it does on its own, this clause cannot possibly be 
regarded as adequate ... it implies that the only precise object we have
 is nationalisation, whereas we have many other socialist objectives.'
Although Gaitskell's idea to drop Clause 4 was supported by many, including Bevan, it was quickly rejected.
Seemingly, it was Mrs Thatcher who eventually brought the question of
 Clause 4 back to the debating table, when she decided to privatise 
anything that stood still long enough to be privatised.
In 1983, the Labour Party manifesto claimed that common ownership 
would be expanded. The following year, the party conference passed a 
resolution on a show of hands that reaffirmed: 'Clause 4 Pt 4 of the 
Labour Party constitution is the central aim of the Labour Party,' and 
called for 'repossession of all parts of the public sector privatised by
 the Tories.'
At the 1985 conference, Roy Hattersley asked for support for a 
resolution on 'the need to extend social ownership and democratic 
planning into a significant number of key organisations, in banks, 
manufacturing, new technology and the service sector.' Conference 
obliged. It also supported a resolution which called on 'the next Labour
 government to return all privatised services ... and all privatised 
industries to public ownership, and to repeal any privatisation 
legislation.'
By the time of the 1987 election, though Labour pledged to take back 
only BT and British Gas under 'common ownership', neither company would 
be in line to be nationalised. Instead, existing shares would be 
converted into new bonds, including varieties of ‘deep bonds’, designed 
to be attractive to institutional shareholders. Again, at the 1987 
conference, the NUM moved a resolution to renationalise all industries 
privatised by the Tories. The union block votes were wheeled in and the 
motion was lost 3,869,000 to 2,397,000 votes. Within a few short years 
there was a gradual acceptance of Tory ideas that would continue.
Another nail in the coffin of 'common ownership' through 
nationalisation was the support for increased share ownership. Bryan 
Gould, Labour's campaign manager in 1987 argued, in an amazing piece of 
Tory logic: 'The idea of owning shares is catching on and, as 
socialists, we should support it as one means of taking power from the 
hands of the few and spreading it more widely.'
Enter Tony Blair
After three successive defeats at the polls, many in the Labour Party
 were now intent on burying Clause 4. One thing was certain, argued new 
Labour leader Tony Blair – if Labour was to stand a chance of winning 
the next election, Clause 4 as it stood had to be ditched. Blair 
declared this to be his intention at Conference 1994 and the party's new
 Clause 4 appeared in March 1995 in time for a specially summoned 
conference on April 29th.
The vote was put to the membership whether Clause 4 should be 
reworded. Jarrow CLP became the first to vote in favour of holding on to
 the original Clause 4, but only three more would oppose it.  Blair's 
new version won the day. A discussion document – Labour's Objectives: 
Socialist Values in a Modern World – had been available before the vote.
 If Labour Party members had studied it – Clause 4 aside – many would 
probably have resigned in the belief that it was penned by Margaret 
Thatcher. The document explained that the idea of common ownership only 
came about because 'there was a genuine revulsion at the sheer anarchy 
and exploitation associated with the free market of Victorian 
capitalism.' The reference to 'Victorian capitalism' was a clever piece 
of trickery, giving the reader the idea that capitalism in the 1990s was
 no longer 'anarchic' and was now worker-friendly.
And what of the new Clause 4? Again we could see regurgitated the 
same old lie that 'The Labour Party is a democratic socialist 
party'...which aims to put 'power, wealth and opportunity in the hands 
of the many' which was something Thatcher had claimed privatisation was 
doing. This startling new 'socialist' objective claimed 'we work for a 
dynamic economy' in which ' the enterprise of the market and the rigour 
of competition are joined with the forces of partnership and cooperation
 to produce the wealth the nation needs.' Little wonder the Sun could 
announce (of Blair) 'He speaks our language.' Little wonder that when 
Labour took power, Thatcher could proudly inform a gathering of the Tory
 faithful that Tony Blair was her 'greatest achievement'.
It was a mammoth achievement for the Tories, so much so that Labour continued to lurch further to the right year on year.
Never was socialist
For over a hundred years this journal has been arguing that Labour 
was never socialist. Even with Clause 4 being held up as a sign of its 
commitment to real change in the interest of the many, it has always 
been a party of capitalism and, in office, ever willing to serve as the 
executive arm of the capitalist class, never hesitant to use the might 
of the state to club the workers into submission whenever they became 
uppity, whether using troops to break strikes, creating the Special 
Patrol Group, internment in Northern Ireland or supporting and indeed 
initiating myriad conflicts throughout the world, from World War I, 
right through the Vietnam War and up to the invasion of Iraq and 
Afghanistan. For over 110 years, Labour has hoodwinked the workers, and 
endlessly led them down the blind alley of reformism, always mindful 
that its real allegiance was to the master class who own and control 
society.
Make no mistake. A Labour Party under Jeremy Corbyn would make no 
departure from the historical record. Its task would be primarily to try
 to make capitalism – a system based upon the exploitation of one class 
by another – work in the interests of the exploited. Labour, under 
Corbyn, would not really control the economy, it would control him. The 
historical record shows that if the dictates of capital demanded, the 
workers would have to be lied to, betrayed and made out to be villains 
of the peace and a threat to the economic interests of the country. No 
Labour leader to date has failed to be cast in a mould created by the 
capitalist class, no matter how noble their intentions.
If workers are really attracted by ideas of common ownership they 
would do well to realise that a party which has stood uncompromisingly 
and unwaveringly for real common ownership and, more, real democratic 
control of the earth's natural and industrial resources, is still in 
existence – the Socialist Party.  Moreover, you will find no aspiring 
leaders within the Socialist Party, slugging it out and making rash 
promises to the membership, only a membership of equals in which Party 
affairs are decided democratically by the membership.
Neither are we keen on reforming capitalism or prostituting our 
principles on the high altar of opportunism as Labour has been doing 
since its inception and will continue to do even with Corbyn as leader. 
We seek the abolition of capitalism and all it represents, replacing it 
with a system of society in which money has been abolished, class 
antagonism eradicated and in which each person has free access to the 
necessaries of life.
************************************************************
Clause IV of the Labour Party Constitution, as originally drafted in 1918 and subsequently amended
Objects
1. To organise and maintain in parliament and in the country a political Labour Party.
2. To cooperate with the General Council of the Trades Union 
Congress, or other kindred organisations, in joint political or other 
action in harmony with the party constitution and standing orders.
3. To give effect as far as possible to the principles from time to time approved by the party conference.
4. To secure for the workers by hand or by brain the full fruits of 
their industry and the most equitable distribution thereof that may be 
possible upon the basis of the common ownership of the means of 
production, distribution, and exchange, and the best obtainable system 
of popular administration and control of each industry or service.
5. Generally to promote the political, social and economic 
emancipation of the people, and more particularly of those who depend 
directly upon their own exertions by hand or by brain for the means of 
life.
Inter-Commonwealth
6. To cooperate with the labour and socialist organisations in the 
commonwealth overseas with a view to promoting the purposes of the 
party, and to take common action for the promotion of a higher standard 
of social and economic life for the working population of the respective
 countries.
International (Gaitskell amendment in 1959?)
7. To cooperate with the labour and socialist organisations in other 
countries and to support the United Nations and its various agencies and
 other international organisations for the promotion of peace, the 
adjustment and settlement of international disputes by conciliation or 
judicial arbitration, the establishment and defence of human rights, and
 the improvement of the social and economic standards and conditions of 
work of the people of the world.
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