BOTH THE “CENTRE” AND THE COBWEB LEFT WALLOWED IN FAILURE, WHILE THE FAR RIGHT
EASILY HAD ITS BEST YEAR
~ Rob Ray ~
Reform UK has consistently topped national polls in 2025 as the “anything but
LabCon” choice, with its predictable and often ridiculous incompetence in local
government barely making a dent on numbers. Barring a minor miracle, it will win
big in May’s local elections. Meanwhile its street wing, in the form of Tommy
Robinson’s mob, managed to pull out a record crowd for Unite The Kingdom and
litter every lamp-post from Kent to Yorkshire with the butcher’s apron.
KEIR? HARDLY
Much of the blame for this must be laid at the feet of former human rights
lawyer Keir Starmer, whose journey from McLibel activism to implacable opponent
of left dissent went supernova when his government proscribed a non-violent
direct action group, Palestine Action, as a terror organisation. A monumentally
stupid decision on all counts, not least for his own political future, as for
many, it stripped away their last illusions of Labour as a progressive force.
The impact of Labour’s attitude to the left, its abandonment of promised
policies, and its seething hatred for protest can’t be overestimated in terms of
where it finds itself entering 2026. Starmer’s wing of the party, its eminence
thoroughly greased by Morgan McSweeney, never did understand that over the long
term, if you have no tame corporate media you need grassroots activity. Not for
the election-time door knocking, but for the shield it provides online. When
no-one wants to defend you, because you make it clear you despise them, all that
gets heard is the negative voice.
The impact of this choice, to deliberately insult and alienate its own base, can
be seen in the wake of the Autumn Budget, which did have a few vaguely
centre-left ideas in it, and the Employment Rights Act, which (even watered
down) genuinely does introduce a handful of protections for working people.
Nobody cared. No-one has been jumping in on socials to pat Labour on the back,
not even the old guard of (lower case r) reformists who previously would have
been saying “see, this is better than the Tories”. And as a result, it all goes
one way.
As many predicted when Starmer first started purging Labour’s ranks of
anti-Zionist Jews and rolling back on his leadership promises before the general
election, a total reliance on public exhaustion with the Tories was never going
to hold up, and so it has proven. With a grassroots shattered by its own hubris,
an implacably hostile corporate media, and a public refusing to trust a word
said by party or government, how Labour might pull out of the nosedive is
anyone’s guess. All of which, in tandem with the Tories’ own self-immolation,
has opened the void through which Nigel Farage sauntered.
YOU’RE KIDDING ME …
To his left, meanwhile, all has been chaos embodied by the extraordinary saga of
Your Party. What were they thinking? Freedom has never made many bones about its
position on Corbyn and the ultimate uselessness of the cobweb left, but even we
weren’t predicting such an immediate and comprehensive proof. It’s hard to think
of a critique, sneer, or bald-faced insult that could do justice to the absolute
fucking shambles of it all. Amidst perhaps the most dangerous political
situation of the postwar era, we watched a handful of inflated egos take all the
potential energy created by Labour’s desertion and explode it into little
pieces.
The people I feel most sorry for are those who genuinely, for just a little
while, believed it could go somewhere. Not in a patronising way, but in the
comradely sense of knowing how it feels to have hope in a project and see it
dashed. That is what the likes of good ol’ Corbs, Zara Sultana, and the various
“revolutionary” parties should feel ashamed of: they took the energy and hope of
hundreds of thousands of people and stamped it into the mud, unnoticed amidst
the squabbling and scrabbling for position. There can be no better example of
why we don’t need parties, but to turn outwards and organise the working class
directly — place the horse firmly in front of the cart. Leave that pack of
blithering idiots behind and give up on their decades of abject, piteous
failure.
SAVED BY THE (GREEN) BELL?
The beneficiaries on the left from these twin towers of dung were, of course,
the Greens under their affable, well-meaning and occasionally analytically
shallow new leader Zack Polanski. No word of a lie, it’s been nice hearing
someone be direct and relatively uncompromising in his language while taking on
the press this year. His absolute refusal to play the “how many rights can we
take away from trans people this week” game, in particular, is the sort of
confidence many on the left could stand to learn from.
But, even setting aside obvious anarchist critiques of the inchoate core and
systemic shortfalls of the Green Party project, there are plenty of limitations
on its surge, which already seems to have peaked. The Greens have no friendly
media. Not the Independent, not the Guardian, not even the Morning Star, which
(in the absence of a functional Communist Party offering) has broadly plumped
for Your Party as the home of a more Proper socialist politic.
And the Star is probably correct there — pathetic though Corbs and co. may be,
their platform is at heart red economics, while the Greens are, well, green,
with social democracy largely tacked on as an often uncomfortable
coalition-building exercise. Much like the Lib Dems, green parties are notorious
for opportunism, most notably in Germany where they frequently enter coalitions
with the conservatives. So it remains to be seen how deep its commitments will
run when placed under pressure.
WHAT ABOUT US?
Perhaps I’m being Mr Bias of Cheerleader City, but I think the direct action
movement, particularly that wing of it which refused to simply roll over on
Palestine and proscription, deserves a great deal of praise this year. It’s been
a hard one, in which it became clear long sentences for non-violent dissent are
here to stay, surveillance and repression are on the rise, and money has poured
in to fuel our opponents.
But thousands of people stood up to be counted, knowing they could face prison
terms, knowing they would be mocked and mistreated. There has been a great deal
of bravery on display throughout the year, and everyone involved should be proud
of themselves. Always under the cosh, always few and underfunded, facing up to a
State that increasingly has done away with even the slightest respect for
privacy and human rights — the fact you keep going is frankly incredible.
If 2025 has shown one thing, though, it’s that we’re right. The “practical”
cobweb left and their electoral obsessions won’t save us; they can’t even save
themselves. They’ve been given chance after chance, and shown that even if they
could win power they probably shouldn’t. We need grassroots strength. We need
the force of unified working class communities who can disrupt business as usual
and make those in power sit up. It was direct action this year which, time and
again, rattled the government where the conferences of electoral leftists
produced only a distant gale of laughter.
As we head towards the spectre of a far-right government which will show us no
more mercy than this one, I can only say: keep going. Because they sneer at you.
Because they seek to silence you. There is no greater proof of a government’s
fear than a law designed to stop you from doing what you’re doing. You’re right.
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Images: Radical Graffiti
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