From the Dave's Part blog, a guest post by an SPGB member.
We don't want your vote. We don't want your vote if you think
socialism means nationalisation, higher taxation, welfare state,
council estates, national liberation, legalising marijuana or anything
of that sort. In short, we don't want your vote if you think we need to
keep and act within existing capitalism.
On the other hand, if you do want a sociaty of common ownership and
democratic control; a worldwide co-operative commonwealth; the
emancipation of labour from the chains of capital; then we're your
people, because that's all we stand for.
Well, there's a further catch, because all we're doing is holding
the banner aloft. If you want to make socialism happen you've got to
prepared to do the work yourself - we're not leaders, and don't want to
be. If you need someone to lead you into the promised land, some other
bugger'll lead you straight back out again.
That's the choice in this election in a nutshell. A choice between
confusing the issue, like whether it's better to be dominated by
British capitalists or European ones; whether it's better to only allow
capitalists to exploit us for a third of our waking hours, rather than
a half; whether the state is the one that extracts profits from our
labour, or private employers; or, making our demands crystal clear.
If you call yourself a socialist, why do you want to waste time
trying to figure out how to make capitalism run better, anyway? The
power to change the world lies in your hands, you don't need to be
bound by accepting things as they are – the point is to change them. If
a majority decided to remake the world, no force on Earth could stop
them.
A vote for the Socialist Party is a vote that says you are ready to
act to make this change. A signal to your fellow socialists that they
are not alone. A signal to your fellow workers that some people take
the actual idea of socialism seriously, rather than relegating it to
some bedtime fairytale never-never for after the work of running
capitalism is done.
Let's end on William Morris: “One man with an idea in his head is in
danger of being considered a madman: two men with the same idea in
common may be foolish, but can hardly be mad; ten men sharing an idea
begin to act, a hundred draw attention as fanatics, a thousand and
society begins to tremble, a hundred thousand and there is war abroad,
and the cause has victories tangible and real; and why only a hundred
thousand? Why not a hundred million and peace upon the Earth? You and I
who agree together, it is we who have to answer that question.”