From the Guardian to the Financial Times, from the BBC to
the Daily Mail, from Reuters to the Daily Telegraph, the mainstream media is united
on one point; the likely winner of the Greek elections on Sunday, Syriza, is a ‘far
left’ party. In keeping with the extreme image and hotfoot from page 2 of ‘The
Book of Journalistic Clichés’, Syriza’s leader, Alex Tsipras, is invariably labelled
a ‘firebrand’.
But after you have traversed excursions into Syriza’s roots
as a radical left coalition, you brush up against an inescapably dissonant
fact. That what Syriza is advocating is not ‘far’ or extreme in the slightest,
but moderate, humanitarian and sensible.
Here’s is a list of Syriza’s ‘far left’ policies, culled
from a Guardian
article. The party wants to supply free electricity to people who have been
cut off, give health insurance to the uninsured, food stamps to children and
homes to the (legions) of homeless. In addition, Syriza is determined to
massively reduce Greece’s euro debt of €320 billion and cut interest payments, urging
an international conference debt relief conference, akin to the one that
slashed West Germany’s war debt in 1953. Syriza wants to decrease the tax
burden on ordinary Greeks and increase it on corporations. (Corporate income
tax in Greece, it should be noted, was scythed in half, from 40 to 20%, by the
‘centre-left’ Pasok party in 2001, the year the country joined the Eurozone).
“There is nothing radical, much less revolutionary, in these
policies,” said Greek economist
Costas Lapavitsas in December. “They represent modest common sense and
would open a fresh path for other European countries.” Syriza itself claims its
policies were “standard fare” during the Golden Age of capitalism in the 1950s
and ‘60s. “Instead the leftwingers argue that the centre of gravity in politics
has shifted so much to the right since the advent of Thatcherism that the
party’s proposals now seem radical,” writes one journalist.
And it hasn’t entirely slipped under the radar that Syriza’s
policies are eminently sensible. “At the core of Mr Tsispras’s economic
platform is debt relief, an idea so unthinkable that nearly every mainstream
economist has advocated it,” noted the Financial Times rather sarcastically
earlier this month. The pro-globalisation economist, and former European
Commission advisor, Philippe Legrain, has come out in favour of a Syriza
victory, lauding such an outcome as a “necessary step toward resolving a
crisis that has been festering since 2009”.
But still the epigram ‘far left’ is not given up, and not
because of lazy journalistic habit. Mainstream commentators must brand Syriza
as far left in order to maintain the fiction that the centre itself is not
extreme. It was, after all, the political centre that inflicted the current
sadistic penance on Greece, an austerity package that has resulted in GDP
contracting by 25%, wages falling by a third, and unemployment of 26% and
above. “The human cost has been immeasurable, amounting to a silent
humanitarian crisis,” says Lapavitsas. “Many families scrape by on seniors’
slashed pensions. Crowds jostle for handouts at food banks. Some children are
reduced to scavenging through rubbish bins for scraps. Hospitals run short of
medicines. Malaria has even made a return,” writes the definitively anti-leftist
Legrain.
And all this to make sure that Deutsche Bank, and other
deserving creditors, receive their interest payments.
But Greek austerity is clearly not the first manifestation
of the centre’s extremism. The Iraq War of 2003, prosecuted in part by that
denizen of the centre-ground, Tony Blair, resulted in between 185,000 and 700,000 deaths.
Through deregulation and liberalisation the mainstream was midwife to the huge
economic crisis of 2008, and in response, has inflicted the costs of paying for
it on those least responsible, whilst showering corporations with tax cuts, and
intervening in the market through Quantitative Easing to ensure share
values and wealth of the rich are not depleted. Britain is not Greece but
the number of people accessing three days’ worth of emergency provisions
through food banks in the UK, has increased
nine-fold in a single year and now stands at over 900,000. Internationally,
the same political mainstream has aided and abetted off-shoring by corporations
at every turn (known euphemistically as globalisation), a process that has sent carbon
emissions soaring to their highest ever level, as more and more products
are transported across the globe, at precisely the time that emissions must be
reduced in order to give civilisation a chance of surviving the next hundred
years.
Yet, Syriza is a ‘far left’ party threatening the mainstream
with its ‘suicidal’
policies. In an honest world, Angela Merkel’s CDU, David Cameron’s Conservatives
and Mariano Rajoy’s People’s Party would be labelled the ‘far centre’. Of
course, they won’t; that immediately sounds like a non-sequitur. Which is
precisely why the use of words is so jealously guarded. Nobody wants to spout
nonsense, do they?
Recognising the common sense behind Syriza’s
positions does not mean it will have an easy time in government. Besides
sabotage by the troika, Syriza will find that saving capitalism from itself
will not be an easy task in this financialised era, a far cry from the golden
years of capitalism, when economic growth seemed impossible to stop. The same
dilemmas will face Spain’s Podemos, newly leading the polls in that country,
which likens its policies to mainstream Social Democracy or even Christian Democracy
in the post-Second World War era.
But if a person is asphyxiating under a concrete slab, the
first priority is to lift up the slab and let them breathe. That is what
Syriza can do.
Addendum:
If you want an example of the 'far centre' in all its bizarre glory look no further than IMF chief Christine Lagarde's tribute to King Abudullah of Saudi Arabia
He did a lot for women 'discreetly'. He had this unfortunate habit of beheading people, but, hey, nobody's perfect!
Addendum:
If you want an example of the 'far centre' in all its bizarre glory look no further than IMF chief Christine Lagarde's tribute to King Abudullah of Saudi Arabia
He did a lot for women 'discreetly'. He had this unfortunate habit of beheading people, but, hey, nobody's perfect!