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IN THESE days, when capitalist Britain is being
rocked by the world economic crisis and the disaster
of its imperialist policies in Iraq and Afghanistan,
the death of a failure, ex-Tory leader Edward
Heath, has given an opportunity for all the Tories
in the House of Commons to rally round to try
and shore up the ship of state by presenting Heath
as a colossus, a political giant
and as one of the main leaders of the 20th century.
Prime Minister Blair said in the House of Commons
that Heath was a man of vision, principle
and integrity, adding He was magnificent
. . . a prime minister our country can be proud
of.
Blair placed himself immediately on the opposite
side of the barricades to the working class, which
fought Heaths policies tooth and nail, and
which brought down the Heath government in 1974
when he went to the country asking who ruled,
the government or the trade unions?
The reply was the trade unions, and Heath went
out of office and was removed as leader of the
Tory party by Thatcher.
He came into office in 1970 to fight the trade
unions, and brought in anti-union laws and industrial
courts to decide wages and conditions.
Under his rule the Pentonville Five dockers were
jailed for illegal secondary action picketing
the Midland Cold Store but were released
when the TUC was forced to call a 24-hour general
strike. Heath came unstuck when he took on the
miners, and was brought down in 1974.
This would-be hammer of the working class is Blairs
man of vision, principle and integrity .
. . magnificent. . . a man our country can be
proud of. Thus, one Tory hails another.
Tory leader Howard echoed Thatcher, calling Heath
one of the political giants of the 20th
century, a description that would have evoked
gales of laughter if used when Heath was alive,
when relations between himself and the Thatcherites
could be summed up as mutual loathing.
Thatcher, in the House of Lords, however made
a more interesting point on the failed Tory leader.
She said: As prime minister, he was confronted
by the enormous problems of post-war Britain.
If those problems eventually defeated him, he
had shown in the 1970 manifesto how they, in turn,
would eventually be defeated.
In fact, Heath promised in his 1970 election manifesto
to take on and destroy the trade union power of
the working class in Britain.
In a famous speech to the United Nations he said
that the main danger that we faced
was not war between nations but wars between peoples,
that is civil wars.
It is this civil war that he stoked up in Britain.
He met his Waterloo in 1974. The miners strike
forced him to call a general election, when his
opponents in the Tory party maintained that he
should have proved who ruled the country by calling
out the army and declaring martial law.
He lost the election, was knifed by Thatcher,
and Labour was forced to repeal his anti union
laws.
In 1979, the Tories were returned and the whole
power of the state was mobilised for five years
to take on the NUM. This war was launched in 1984,
when massive coalstocks had been established and
Thatcher was sure that the TUC would not intervene.
Heath prepared the way for Thatcher, no doubt
this is why Blair celebrates the magnificent
Heath.
Thatcher was brought down by mass opposition to
her attempt to introduce the Poll Tax, leaving
a battered, discredited and demoralised Tory party
in her wake.
This left the reorganised Labour party right wing,
led by Blair, to carry forward the Thatcherite
banner. He however, has already experienced his
Poll Tax with the combination of his
privatisation campaign and his war in Iraq.
The working class must now conclude the whole
period of massive class struggle since 1970 by
bringing down the Blair government and going forward
to a workers government and socialism. This
will show that the great statesmen
of the bourgeoisie were in fact the political
pygmies of a broken system.
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