< http://www.lrb.co.uk/v24/n07/beck2407.htm >
When Capitalism Calls
Andy Beckett
The Protest Ethic: How the Anti-Globalisation Movement Challenges Social Democracy. | 
Demos,
94pp., £9.95, 9 November 2001

About a year ago, during one of the peaks of exasperation at the Government in the 
left-leaning
parts of the British press, I interviewed a member of a think tank close to New 
Labour. For an
hour or so he kept up a fairly convincing defence of the Government. He cited the 
increases
under Blair of certain social security benefits, the reductions in taxes for some of 
the
poorest Britons, the reforming energy of the Administration in general. But then his 
mood
darkened. The problem with New Labour's busy modern brand of social democracy, he 
said, was
that it was still too much about adjusting to the harsh modern world and not enough 
about
challenging it. He looked suddenly frustrated, despite his open-necked shirt and 
confident
insider's manner. He offered an example. 'You won't find a single member of the 
Cabinet with
anything intelligently critical to say about capitalism.'

A few weeks later, I went to a discussion in London about the anti-capitalist 
movements that
were then swelling in many countries. There were a dozen journalists, a couple of 
activists
from the more respectable, charity-centred end of the anti-globalisation spectrum, and 
a quiet,
youngish man from Reclaim The Streets, the direct action group that had become 
prominent in
Britain thanks to its theatrical protests against roads and traffic pollution and big 
business.
The talk, at first, was amicable around the long table. It quickly became clear that 
almost all
the journalists present wanted to be sympathetic to the activists. They were eager to 
hear
first-hand reports of the riot police and the shameful international trade deals at 
Gothenburg
and Seattle. More than that, these journalists - old left-wingers, liberal pundits, 
lapsed
Blairites - seemed to want to understand the new culture of anti-capitalist protest so 
that
they could make common cause with it.

The man from Reclaim The Streets, however, said very little. He sat at the centre of 
the table,
looking down, as weather-beaten and differently dressed and slightly alien as a 
deep-sea
fisherman. Eventually, the conversation turned towards what kinds of alternative to 
the modern
free market the anti-capitalists might prefer. And the man from Reclaim The Streets 
grew
unexpectedly angry. 'It's not our job to suggest alternatives,' he said. He gestured
dismissively at the roomful of potential allies. 'If my colleagues knew I was here, I 
would be
thrown out of our organisation, just like that!'

To many people of more traditional left-of-centre politics, modern anti-capitalism can 
seem
slightly baffling, sometimes infuriating, even a little adolescent. It attracts great
international attention, but its ideas add little to long-established left-wing 
thinking. Its
activists wear brands even as they demonstrate against them. Its most famous manifesto 
of
sorts, No Logo by Naomi Klein, was published by Rupert Murdoch. Yet in the era of 
Enron and
Railtrack, of international recession and the Argentinian implosion, of uninspiring 
reformers,
at best, in office in the rich countries, and questionable relations everywhere between
governments and business, the anti-capitalists appear alone on the Left in their 
ability to
raise the obvious questions about how the world works. As John Lloyd puts it in his 
opening
chapter: 'The global movements' - his term for the anti-capitalist and 
anti-globalisation
milieu - 'have found new ways of exercising political power . . . They can generate 
widespread
public sympathy and a degree of mobilisation from diverse social and ideological 
groupings.
They are able to use networks freely and inventively . . . They are able to generate 
interest
on, sometimes to dominate, the network media in a way that makes conventional political
communication look stale and tired.'

What follows is not a work of praise. Nor is this studious, carefully-written pamphlet 
a call
for Blairites and anti-capitalists to form a coalition. In his acknowledgments Lloyd 
thanks
Anthony Giddens and Charles Leadbeater, among other prominent associates of the New 
Labour
project, for their 'guidance'. There are no such mentions for the main thinkers of the
anti-globalisation movement. As early as the third page, Lloyd declares where his 
sympathies
lie: 'Social democracy . . . requires a healthy capitalist system,' he writes. 
'Capitalism is
currently the only grand economic system available; the issue for social democrats now 
. . . is
how to mould and shape it.' The new protest culture, in Lloyd's view, is a threat to 
this
process of sensible compromise between left-leaning governments and the free market. 
His
pamphlet is one of the first sustained attempts to challenge the anti-capitalists from 
a
leftish perspective. It is also a warning to Lloyd's fellow social democrats, and a
comprehensive briefing - aimed, you suspect, at the more anxious and thoughtful sort of
businessman - about the unruly things that have been happening in recent years outside
international summits and branches of McDonald's.

Lloyd starts by accepting that the anti-capitalists do have some good arguments. 
Globalisation,
he admits, does mean 'the importation of Western culture' into poor countries. The 
institutions
of global capitalism, such as the World Bank, the WTO and the IMF, have become more
aggressively free-market in their 'ideology and practice' in recent decades. In a 
paragraph
that threatens to carry the debate away from him almost before he has begun, he lists 
some of
the anti-capitalists' other causes:

global warming; the destruction of the ozone layer; the denial of modern and affordable
medicines to the ailing of the Third World; the cruelty practised on animals in 
medical and
other experiments; the cruelty imposed on animals raised for their meat; the 
exploitation of
Third-World labour by Western-based multinationals; the homogenisation of food and 
drink by the
spread of chains such as McDonald's, Pizza Hut and Starbucks; the pushing of 
small/peasant
farmers into ruin by the industrialisation of farming imposed by these fast-food 
chains and the
supermarkets . . . the vast sales and murderous potential of the (largely US or 
European) arms
industries . . . neo-imperial invasions in the name of humanitarian intervention . . .
diminishing workers' rights . . . the pauperisation of the developing world.

The sheer reach and bleakness of the anti-capitalist worldview, Lloyd points out, 
makes it
appealing to the media, with its love of apocalyptic predictions and scare stories. 
Likewise,
the public in wealthy countries (Lloyd does not consider anti-capitalism to have much 
of a
following in the Third World) has a masochistic appetite, he argues, for being told 
that the
planet is collapsing and that all conventional politicians are uncaring and corrupt. 
Add in the
anti-capitalists' flair for dramatic protest, and you have a very attractive political 
creed.

It has become common in recent years to think about this protest culture in terms of 
its
modernity: its use of the Internet, its flexible, freelance activists, its 
international
mobility, its youthful participants with their backpacks and trainers. But Lloyd 
compares
anti-capitalism to something much more old-fashioned. Communism, in its confident, 
expansionist
phases, had a similar simple message; a similar ability to spur demonstrations in 
almost any
country; a similar contempt for the inevitable compromises of social democracy; a 
similar
conspiratorial worldview. 'Only in the global movements,' Lloyd writes, 'does there 
survive, in
some form, the sense of a popular current driving to transform the world by ridding it 
of a
system that ruins and oppresses.' And better than Communism, modern anti-capitalism 
has not
made itself vulnerable by offering an alternative to the status quo that can be 
criticised or
seen to fail. As someone who has written extensively about the failure of the Soviet
experiment, Lloyd knows the political usefulness for radicals of not always committing 
yourself
to concrete solutions - knows that the man from Reclaim The Streets may have been wise 
not to
answer questions.

Ultimately, though, for Lloyd the anti-capitalists' tactical strengths are also moral
weaknesses. Their energy and theatricality and political nimbleness are all 
substitutes for the
more patient, more democratic qualities of conventional parties. The protesters, he 
writes, 'do
not have the capacity or responsibility for ordering priorities, reconciling competing
interests among their constituencies, maintaining public accountability or implementing
practical solutions, which are essential characteristics of politics and governance. 
They
cannot be an alternative to democratic government, in spite of claims to the 
contrary.' As the
pamphlet progresses, the language Lloyd uses to expand this argument becomes less 
scientific
and polite. He summarises the anti-capitalists' annual international get-together at 
Porto
Alegre in Brazil as 'a ragbag of declamation, hot air and vapidity'. Discussing the 
protesters'
use of loose networks and occasional violence, he concludes that the only other 
political
grouping using such tactics is 'bin Laden's al-Qaida'.

Some of these charges are more convincing than others. Comparing a determinedly 
secular and
diverse protest movement, which you have just criticised for its incoherence, to a 
collection
of well-organised and possibly cultish religious cells is the sort of excitable 
finger-pointing
that has been depressingly common since 11 September. Similarly, attacking the 
anti-capitalists
for rhetorical vagueness and overkill when conventional politicians currently favour 
phrases
such as 'axis of evil' feels like a case of double standards. Lloyd is on firmer 
ground,
though, when he criticises anti-capitalism for a lack of internal democracy. Some of 
its more
thoughtful veterans have been warning for several years about the tendency of direct 
action
(civil disobedience, if you like) to create hierarchies among those taking part. 
People who are
prepared to take risks, or who possess useful skills, can come to dominate, or even 
have
contempt for, the more cautious and amateurish participants. At the protests against 
the
building of the Newbury bypass during the mid-1990s, for example, there was a time 
when you
would run into students who had just come to join in for the day. But as the months 
went by,
and the protesters' encampments in the woods along the bypass route became more 
fortified
against the incursions of the road builders' security guards and the police, these 
part-time
activists vanished. If you couldn't climb trees and live thirty feet up - or didn't 
wish to -
you were no longer made to feel terribly welcome. In the end, this toughening and 
narrowing of
the anti-bypass coalition failed as a strategy. The roadbuilders hired tree-climbers 
of their
own, and cleared the camps early one morning, when the remaining protesters, 
hard-bitten or
not, were still half-asleep. What resistance there was appeared in the mainstream 
media as two
sets of wiry men grappling in the treetops - not the kind of photogenic mass protest 
that might
earlier have been possible. From this point on, the bypass was completed with 
relatively little
fuss.

There has been further evidence over the last year that when anti-capitalism acts 
tough it
yields diminishing returns. The state, as grimly demonstrated by the killing of an 
activist by
the Italian police during the protests in Genoa, will tend to win any arms race. The 
press,
given the possibility of violence at an anti-capitalist event, will tend to focus on 
that to
the exclusion of everything else. And the broad appeal of anti-capitalism that Lloyd 
identifies
will tend to get lost amid all the smashed windows and tear gas. What this pamphlet 
does not
properly acknowledge, however, is that the increasingly acrimonious stand-off between 
the
protesters and governments is at least as much the fault of the governments themselves.

Well before the events of 11 September, and the heightened suspicion of dissidents 
that has
followed in many countries, social democratic administrations of the sort Lloyd 
admires were
choosing confrontation over negotiation in their dealings with anti-capitalists. It 
was under
Clinton, not Bush, that policemen were sent onto the streets of Seattle dressed like
science-fiction warriors. It was under New Labour, last May Day, that attending the
anti-capitalist demonstrations in London, on a traditional date in the left-wing 
calendar, was
made to feel close to illegal. In fact, there is a long history of social democrats 
acting
intolerantly, and at times brutally, towards those further to the left. From the 
German Social
Democratic Government after the First World War, which let the paramilitary Freikorps 
assault
and murder the country's revolutionaries, to the reforming regime of Eduardo Frei in 
Chile in
the mid-1960s, which allowed troops to fire on striking copper miners, the politically
competitive instincts of supposed moderates have often been as fierce as those of more
obviously ruthless figures. Yet Lloyd still insists on describing modern social 
democratic
administrations as well-intentioned and almost helpless in the face of the 
anti-capitalists:

The measures they take to save or increase jobs, to augment public provision, to 
spread the
benefits of education more widely and improve its quality, to improve public health 
provision,
to combat racism and other exclusions, to strengthen trade unions, to improve 
international
co-operation, to inject an ethical dimension into foreign policies . . . are 
discounted and
seen as meagre. When they seek directly to address the global movements' agenda - for 
instance
. . . when the UK Government played a leading part in cancelling a substantial 
proportion of
Third World debt - it is ignored by many anti-globalisation groups, or dismissed as 
public
relations.

This is truthful and quite eloquent as far as it goes. Lloyd gives a persuasive 
account of the
constant difficulties and criticisms which face modern social democrats in office. But 
he fails
to acknowledge the equally unreasonable scorn heaped on the anti-capitalists' ideas by
conventional politicians. And his argument is incomplete in another way, too. Social 
democrats
have recently been removed from office in several major democracies, most notably 
Italy. Silvio
Berlusconi's new Administration there, what is more, is not simply a conservative 
mirror-image
of its predecessor, but considerably more aggressive and dogmatic. So to some extent, 
the
painstaking deliberations in this pamphlet are out of date: the frictions between 
social
democracy and anti-capitalism have now been replaced by two political forces - you 
could simply
call them capitalism and anti-capitalism - acting in completely opposing directions. 
In Genoa,
besides firing at demonstrators with live ammunition, the Italian police were widely 
accused of
committing assault and torture with official permission.

Lloyd finished writing this polemic last October, according to the acknowledgments, 
and he does
briefly concede that the world has moved on from his initial premise. Yet the 
prescriptions he
gives to governments in the final section about how to neutralise the anti-capitalists 
and
their campaign issues sound excessively optimistic. The countries of the European 
Union 'should
use their influence to draw the US into creating the institutions of an interdependent 
world'.
International corporations should be made to 'shoulder increased responsibility for 
their
overseas plants'. Governments should 'ask for civility from protesters', who 'must 
rule out
violence' and promise not to 'close the venue or blockade the town' where trade 
summits and
capitalism's other important meetings take place. In other words, Lloyd hopes that the 
same
system of government and business that caused the anti-capitalist revolt in the first 
place
can, with some tactical adjustments and an increase in general goodwill, convince 
hundreds of
thousands of activists, who have been protesting for a decade or more on every 
continent -
large anti-capitalist movements exist among the poor, contrary to Lloyd's emphasis, in
countries such as India, Turkey and Brazil - that they should go home quietly.

Maybe this will happen; anti-capitalism, at the time of writing, seems to have lost 
some
momentum. Turnout at major protests has been smaller in recent months, the media less
interested, the riot police and authorities more in control. Some of this is 
attributable to
the flaws in the 'global movements' Lloyd identifies here. But with their 
demonstrations
shunted off the news by the war on terrorism, this pamphlet feels like it is aimed at 
the wrong
target. The real 'challenge to social democracy', to the pursuit of small, benign, 
domestic
reforms in Britain and elsewhere, was never Reclaim The Streets. It was that the modest
energies of such a governing philosophy would inevitably be drawn off at some point by 
world
events - or by the demands of an overbearing ally. The real challenge was the wrong 
kind of
American Presidency.

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