There is a big problem facing the Irish working class.It is an ideological and 
cultural problem.The consciousness and culture of the working class is 
persistently bourgeois. It sees the capitalist system as the natural society. 
Consequently it sees all economic and social problems as solvable within the 
framework of capitalism.It has been under the illusion that it can have an 
indefinite affluent existence under capitalism.It cannot see that most of the 
problems that beset the working class are a product of the inherent limits of 
capitalism. It thinks problems can be solved outside of the need to engage in 
class struggle.Indeed much of the class don't even see themselves as forming 
part of a class.

This is why it supports bourgeois parties such as the Fianna Fail party, the 
Fine Gael party and the Labour Party and their satellites such as the Green 
Party and others.The political and social consciousness of the Irish working 
class is effectively bourgeois. Irish capitalism has a bourgeois working class. 
This is why too the Irish,dare I say, proletariat have a trade union leadership 
that collaborates with the government and the state in general. Indeed the 
Irish state is a neo-corporate state in which the labour organisations are 
integrated into the state. Given the way in which developments are proceeding 
there is no need for fascism. The growing authoritarian neo-corporate Irish 
state fortified by the EU does the job well enough for capitalism. No need for 
fascism. 

The Cowan government has successfully made cut backs in the living standards of 
the working class on an unprecedented scale. Yet there has been little 
resistance from the workers. A few squeaks here and there --nothing 
significant. About a year later the "organised working class" looks like its 
going to mount mass pressure on the government.And even this was of a rather 
limited character.The demands,being made by the leadership of the planned 
protests and strikes, had a distinctly reformist ring to them. It must be 
remembered too that much of the working class is not even "organised" in 
unions.This appalling is a product of disillusionment with these bureaucratised 
labour organisations that,much of the time, collaborate with whatever 
government happens to be in power. It is also a result of the lack of political 
class consciousness of much of the working class.This is partly a result of the 
relatively generous welfare benefits and assistance that has been provided by 
the state.It is intended as a sop that keeps the class quiescent.Many working 
class families contain one or two young adults that are availing of these 
hand-outs by the state. Many of them have been obtaining handouts through fraud 
that render many of them relatively comfortable.But then you have others who 
have worked hard and obtain few,if any,of these handouts. Clearly they cannot 
feel much class solidarity for the scammers (lumpen elements) who have little 
or no interest in working class politics.

Many workers see the Fianna Fail government as incompetent and unscrupless.But 
Brian Cowan has been showing quite some leadership. He has succeeded in pushing 
through massive cuts in the living standards of the working class and only 
meeting with very marginal resistance. Generally speaking "moaning" on the Joe 
Duffy show is about as far as the resistance has gone. The Joe Duffy show is 
the modern substitute for popular resistance.Indeed the Cowan government 
succeeded in demobilising mass protests that were to be mounted over six months 
ago. He is trying it again by engaging in current talks with the trade union 
leadership. Don't they just luv when Brian calls them in to talk with him. How 
they suck up to him.

In short there is really nothing positive that can be said about the working 
class in the Irish Republic. It is bourgeois,egoistic and even reactionary.It 
has little interest in subversive politics and never really questions 
anything.It is not even religious. It is in many ways just nothing.It exists, 
in a sense, from the shoulders down.Formal education is just seen as a matter 
of getting a good job.

It is because of the impoverished character of the Irish working class that the 
radical left in Ireland is correspondingly so weak and impovershied. It is 
almost all cut from the same cloth --little diversity.
Paddy Hackett 


Related Link: http://paddy-hackett.blogspot.com
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