Ted Grant

Appeal against expulsion, Labour Party Conference


Written: September 1983
Source: The Unbroken Thread
Transcription/Markup: Emil 1998/2006
Proofread: Emil 1998


Comrade chair, comrades, this is a sorry day for the Labour Party, that we should be discussing expulsions instead of discussing - as we have been doing and will continue to do in conference - the fundamental way in which we can get rid of the Tories. (Applause)

Our crime is allegedly that we are organised. Solidarity(1) is organised. This movement has now reached a situation where MPs no longer have a divine right to their seats. They are now accountable to re-selection. (Applause) No longer do they have the divine right to elect the leader; the leader is now elected by the whole of the party conference, and that is absolutely correct. But apparently one divine right remains, that is the right of the right wing to be organised. But there is no such right for those who can effectively fight against the right wing.

If we look at our history, we see that it was the traitors of the SDP(2) - Rodgers, Owen, Williams - who first raised the question of a witch-hunt in the Labour Party. In fact one of the reasons they gave for leaving the Labour Party was that Militant was not expelled from the party. There was an enormous campaign from our enemies, in the press, in the media, by the Tories, Thatcher, Tebbit, Howe and all the rest, demanding that Militant should be expelled so that Labour could set its house in order.

Were they grateful when the expulsions took place? On the contrary, they used this to show the disunity in the Labour Party. Is it not an absolute disgrace that four or five NEC meetings before the general election were taken up with discussions about Militant, instead of with preparing a campaign that would be victorious against the Tories? (Applause)

We have it on the word of Jim Mortimer(3) himself last November that a large majority of constituency Labour parties were not sympathetic to the exclusion of Militant. To those I would add the overwhelming majority of the rank and file of the trade unions. They want unity; they do not want to spend years discussing this question.

If we take the situation that exists, nobody can deny that among the best workers in the general election, among the best workers in the local elections, among the best workers at all times in the Labour Party are the supporters of Militant. (Applause and interruptions)

We warned the NEC before the Bermondsey by-election that it would be absolute madness to expel us just on the eve of a by-election. We asked that the hearing should be postponed for a week, a month or as long as they liked. The right wing said that if these expulsions took place that would help to gain a victory. We saw the result in Bermondsey. We have seen the result in the general election, the result of witch-hunting.

My final point, comrade chair and comrades. Michael Foot was expelled from this party. Nye Bevan was expelled from this party. (Interruptions) Mortimer was expelled from the party. (Calls of 'no, no') Yes, it's absolutely true, these were all expelled from the party.

Whatever the result of this vote, whether we gain a victory or whether we are expelled, we shall still continue to work for a Labour victory.

We shall still continue to work to make certain that this Tory government is thrown out, and preferably a Labour government with socialist policies returned. Whatever programme is put forward, Militant, as it has always done in the past, will continue to work for the victory of this movement. There is no way that Marxism can be separated from the Labour Party. There is no way you will succeed with these expulsions. We will be back. We will be restored, if not in one year, in two or three years. We will be back.

At every trade union conference, at every ward, at every GMC, at every shop stewards' committee meeting this question will come up and we will be back. (Applause)

The appeal was lost on a card vote: 4,972,000 to 1,790,000.

Notes

(1) An organisation with its own members, funds and full time organisers, set up by a section of the right wing in the Labour Party.

(2) The Social Democratic Party was formed in 1981 as a result of a split led by the three named labour MPs and Roy Jenkins. All were former Labour Cabinet members.

(3) Jim Mortimer was then General Secretary of the Labour Party. He was himself expelled in the 1930s for supporting CP front organisations.