National Climate March 2010

P1010530Occasionally you wish that you had misread something. At today’s March on Parliament for a Zero Carbon Britain there were people wearing T shirts which seemed to have a message about the planet and fuel. Wrong. Their slogan was "the planet is full". Three billion is all it can sustain they argue. No doubt they’ve got some clever idea about what to do with the other three billion but perhaps they can begin reducing global population by leading from the front. Idiots!

imageAnd don’t get me started on the vegans! Is the collective noun a "worthy" or a "plague"? This is their annual proselytising day and they’d make you want to slaughter a pig in front of them, drink its blood and eat it raw.

The demo was actually rather bigger than one might have expected. Maybe in the region of 1500-2000 and given all the students protests, punishment of tax dodgers and general hyper activity at the moment that wasn’t too bad. The NGOs hadn’t mobilised for it this year in any meaningful way and the Cancun talks have not generated a fraction of the interest that Copenhagen did last year.

Jim has lots of photos here, one of which I’ve nicked.

The Campaign Against Climate Change’s Phil Thornhill opened the rally. Phil has often been in the habit of giving a very gloomy prognosis based on the science. Today he was different, wittily sticking the boot into the climate change deniers and the Daily Mail. He called for a green revolution and had much more of an emphasis on social inequality.

imageAt this point the lure of a cup of tea became irresistible and I drifted off mulling over one of the slogans that some people had been chanting – "you have to be green to be red". Actually I don’t think you do. The genocidal Malthusians represent as much of a trend in green thinking as do the vegans. At least one of those choices is completely incompatible with being red.

Mad as hell

Getting a video on this site is a surefire way to the commercial and critical big time. I’ve worked my magic on Caitlin Rose, Burl Ives, Holy Fuck and The Vaselines making them all the household names they are today.

Now it’s the turn of Derry musician Connor Kelly. He’s recorded a superbly furious rant about the state of the world. You can download it for 79p here or check out his Myspace.

There are some rude words and vivid descriptions of what he’d like to do to Brian Cowen and David Cameron. Just what we want.

Uni won’t negotiate, we will escalate

imageWhen 4,000 Cambridge workers came out to support the 1926 General Strike, university undergraduates volunteered as strike breakers on the railways. Well that was a long time ago and the students are on the right side this time reports Jodley from our Cambridge bureau.

All this week, Cambridge university students have been at the forefront of the local resistance to cuts, occupying the Senior Combination Room in the university’s Old Schools. School students from in and around the City have been incredibly important in the demonstrations on the national days of action.

Today the students extended their protest to include a brief occupation of the LibDem controlled City Council Guildhall ‘in opposition to all public sector cuts in order to generalise resistance to the government.’ While Cambridge University management appears to have been trying to bore the students out of occupation by keeping a monastic silence (in keeping with the institution’s origins), the students have consistently developed their protests in fresh and inspiring ways.

Lectures have been held on a host of subjects, including ‘Neoliberalism and privatisation’, ‘Economic Lies and Cuts’, workshops on direct action, experiments in communal living and catering, celebrations with music and tree dressing.

Varsity, not my usual reading matter, has been running an excellent live blog. The response from academics has been excellent, with almost 300 signing in support of the occupation. Under pressure from the occupation, King’s College congregation tacked a little left, formally declaring their “deep concern at the undue haste with which the government is proceeding to enact legislation to change the principle upon which the funding of higher education is based. We believe that these proposed changes have the potential to inflict irreversible damage upon our culture of education, learning and research.”

This morning – under the slogan ‘Uni won’t negotiate, we will escalate’ – saw a blockade of the entire administrative centre of the Old Schools using direct action techniques, that included students perched on step ladders with their necks in D-locks, reminiscent of roads and climate camp protests. This evening, police attempts to evict the occupation were halted by sheer weight of numbers as university academics, students and their supporters in the town came out in force to stand in defence of the occupiers.

The students have been incredibly effective in getting their message out, with Rachel Young putting in a brilliant performance on Newsnight (incidentally exposing David Aaronovitch as a patronising bore – in case there were any doubt). Hapless Tory student James Wakeley voiced the government’s fear that student protestors would link with the wider fight against the cuts.

Image033Key messages of the students came across loud and clear: that the students are in solidarity with all affected by the cuts, and are making links with workers, community and anti-cuts campaigns. On Sunday, occupying students will host a General Assembly for all those who have been inspired by their action against the cuts and the ConDem government. “It is clear that the cuts we are facing go far beyond the student movement and so should the resistance. This large general meeting aims to address the question: “what next?” By bringing together school, sixth form, and university students, academics, workers, trade unionists, pensioners, anti-cuts and community groups we will help to build the movement in Cambridge and beyond.”

And to that list should be added the homeless (Cambridge has one of the highest rates of rough sleeping in UK outside London). The calibre of the student organisation – from direct action, to catering, media work to outreach to other campaigns, political education and debate – has been exceptional. Ambitions are high, and the energy is amazing. It appears that every radical political tradition is being respected, has had something to contribute and a moment to lead. No one owns this movement. “Whose occupation? Our occupation!” “Whose resistance? Our resistance!”

 

Tariq Ali at SOAS occupation

 

Vanguard (gsoh) seeks movement for friendship and hegemony

image“Oh, Christ, not again” could be one’s first response on reading this editorial from the current issue of The Socialist. It might also be one’s second and third response.

The best bit is “Socialist Party members who are officers of the NSSN are proposing that the conference in January 2011 founds the ‘NSSN – all-Britain anti-cuts campaign’ “ Anyone who thinks that the proposal might be defeated probably also expects a fat man in a red suit to fly from his workshop in the North Pole to deliver their presents on Christmas morning.

A more considered response appears here.

Today one of the key questions is how to bring together the different elements of the rapidly growing anti-cuts movement in order to create the most powerful possible opposition so that we can once again defeat the Tory government.

The National Shop Stewards Network (NSSN) anti-cuts conference, taking place on 22 January, has the potential to play an important role in this process. The anti-cuts movement inevitably has many different strands – housing campaigners, pensioners’ organisations, disability rights campaigns and many more – which all have a potentially valuable role to play. Nonetheless, it is essential that they are linked together. The trade unions are best placed to do this. However, unfortunately right-wing trade union leaders only play lip service to this task. The NSSN, with a record of organising militant trade unionists, therefore has a crucial role to play – not in replacing the trade unions – but in acting as a lever to galvanise the struggle.

It has already shown how it can play this role. The NSSN was the first national organisation of the labour movement to organise a national conference in the wake of chancellor George Osborne’s first emergency ‘bloodbath budget’.

It then organised the lobby of the TUC conference which received a tremendous response from the growing anti-cuts movement. All activity – demos, meetings etc – to raise awareness is to be welcomed. But the NSSN correctly foresaw that exerting pressure on the leadership of our movement, the trade unions, was the first priority. This paid off when the TUC was forced to respond to the demand for a national demonstration – albeit belatedly for 26 March 2011.

The NSSN has continued the campaign of pressure on the trade unions to act, not least by building the anti-cuts movement on the ground. It has played a key role in founding many of the local anti-cuts unions and in instigating the regional trade union demonstrations against the cuts that took place on 23 October in London, Bristol, Cardiff, Manchester and elsewhere.

Socialist Party members who are officers of the NSSN are proposing that the conference in January 2011 founds the ‘NSSN – all-Britain anti-cuts campaign’ under the slogan ‘Unions and communities together to save jobs and services’. This proposal will be discussed at the NSSN steering committee taking place on 4 December.

Opposition

Unfortunately but not surprisingly, it will be opposed by members of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP). When the anti-cuts conference was first agreed by the NSSN steering committee (which includes members of the SWP and the Coalition of Resistance) the SWP members voted for it, but then less than 24 hours later announced their own ‘Right to Work’ conference.

Yet the SWP are now opposing the NSSN conference under the cloak of ‘unity’. However, we are not able to take at face value the declarations of the SWP for unity when their actions in practice have been so divisive.

When Chris Bambery of the SWP spoke on behalf of Right to Work at the Coalition of Resistance conference on Saturday 27 November he declared that: "we do not want different anti-cuts campaigns in the same town or city". We agree, but just a day later the SWP’s party notes again re-emphasise the importance of building separate Right to Work groups in every local area! He also stated that: "we do not want demonstrations taking place at the same time". Again we agree, but it was his party that, just weeks ago, knowingly organised a national Unite Against Fascism demonstration on the same day, time and venue as Socialism 2010 – our 1,000 strong weekend of discussion and debate. As a result the UAF demonstration was far more poorly attended than it could have been.

An NSSN officer who is in the SWP comments on our proposal for ‘NSSN – an all-Britain anti-cuts campaign’ in the Socialist Worker (27 November 2010) saying: "At the moment no single organisation has any mandate or wide enough support to set itself up as the sole national organisation against the cuts. An attempt by the Socialist Party to railroad the NSSN into proclaiming itself as this national body is a recipe for division and disaster."

This is to deliberately misrepresent our position. The Socialist Party does not claim that the NSSN’s anti-cuts campaign would be the only national organisation against the cuts. Given the existence of the Coalition of Resistance and Right to Work this is clearly not the case. We do, however, think that the NSSN – with its records, roots and fighting programme – is uniquely well placed to begin to bring together the forces that are building the anti-cuts movement on the ground.

We are in favour of the maximum unity and cooperation between the different anti-cuts organisations, and have proposed that the NSSN discusses coordination with the Coalition of Resistance (CoR) and Right to Work. However, unity only strengthens the movement if it is around a fighting programme. If we were all to unite around the programme of passivity put forward by Brendan Barber and the leadership of the TUC we would obviously be dooming our movement to defeat.

At the CoR conference Chris Bambery of the SWP declared that: "anyone who claims to be the leadership of the movement should be punished". Yet just a day later the SWP’s party notes tell their members: "In every area SWP members need to not only be involved in local anti-cuts groups but also fighting to lead and shape them." That is the right of the SWP. No one can currently claim to be the sole leadership of the anti-cuts movement nationally, but every political trend involved in the anti-cuts movement can and should put forward and argue for their strategy for defeating the cuts.

Which strategy is most effective in defeating the cuts, and can therefore win the leadership of the movement, will be tested and decided in the living struggle. This is what happened in the anti-poll tax movement. It was the non-payment strategy of the Socialist Party (then called Militant) which was adopted by 18 million people and led to victory.

Unfortunately, at the CoR conference, there was no opportunity for genuine discussion and debate on how best to defeat the cuts. By contrast, the NSSN conference will be open and democratic with full rights for all trends to put forward their point view.

No strategy

The SWP do not have a strategy for victory. Recently this has been shown by their serious mistakes in the industrial field – both condemning the London FBU firefighters for suspending their strike action, and alienating BA strikers by occupying their talks. The SWP are combining ultra-leftism with increasing opportunism. The latter is indicated by the article by the NSSN officer. Their approach is to ‘keep quiet’ about cuts by Labour councils, in order to keep Labour Party members on board. This is a strategy for defeat. To build a united movement it is necessary to oppose all cuts in jobs and services, regardless of which party is wielding the axe.

The SWP’s approach was shown by their coverage of the magnificent London NSSN-initiated anti-cuts march on 23 October, where they criticised the chair of the rally for asking Jeremy Corbyn MP to call on Labour councillors to oppose cuts, saying: "In order to build a broad alliance we need to defeat the Tory cuts, we will need to work not only with left wing Labour MPs like Corbyn, but with far more flawed figures on the right of the party." We agree that we should work with Labour Party members in the anti-cuts movement, including Labour councillors, provided they oppose the cuts. Where they vote for them, they cannot be part of the anti-cuts movement.

Electoral stand

The NSSN officer writing in Socialist Worker states that the Socialist Party’s "proposal to support anti-cuts candidates is also very divisive. It will inevitably mean standing candidates against the Labour Party, and therefore will likely exclude any supporters from the left of Labour." It is open for debate whether the NSSN anti-cuts conference wants to formally adopt a position of standing anti-cuts candidates at this stage.

However, it is absolutely clear that a major part of the anti-cuts movement across the country is opposing the huge cuts being carried out by Labour councils whether it is workers taking strike action against £400 million worth of cuts from Kirklees Labour council or campaigners in Lewisham opposing £60 million of cuts by the Labour council in Lewisham – which this week called out the full might of the riot police against 200 peaceful anti-cuts protestors!

It is right and inevitable that – faced with candidates from the big three pro-cuts parties – anti-cuts campaigners – perhaps even including some who are currently Labour Party members – will want to stand anti-cuts campaigners in elections. To suggest that we do not do so for fear of ‘excluding Labour supporters’ is to try and take away an important political weapon in the struggle.

The Socialist Party will fight for unity – but for unity around a programme of action capable of defeating the Con-Dem axe men and women.

La Coalition de Résistance

Voici un petit truc que j’ai écrit pour les camarades du Nouveau Parti Anticapitaliste.

Le gouvernement britannique de coalition entre Conservateurs et Libéraux-Démocrates utilise la crise du secteur bancaire comme prétexte pour une offensive d’austérité sans précédent qui frappe quasiment tous les groupes sociaux. Les étudiants, les retraités, les travailleurs, les femmes, les minorités, les familles qui ont besoin d’un logement social seront tous beaucoup plus pauvres si le gouvernement s’avère capable d’imposer sa volonté.

Une opposition sérieuse a déjà commencé à se manifester. Des milliers de réunions se sont tenues à travers tout le pays : les militants se sont regroupés pour voir ce qu’ils peuvent faire dans leur secteur. Les branches et fédérations syndicales qui, depuis des années, fonctionnaient à peine sont en pleine réorganisation. Les étudiants ont déjà participé à deux manifestations massives et dynamiques qui ont donné à une nouvelle génération un premier goût de l’action politique et de la violence policière. Le Trade Union Congress a appelé à une manifestation nationale pour le 26 mars : trop tardive par rapport à ce qui serait nécessaire, mais elle devrait être énorme.

Le 27 novembre, 1 300 militants venus de toute la Grande-Bretagne ont participé à la première conférence de la Coalition de Résistance, à Londres. Elle s’est fixé comme objectif d’être une alliance militante large et unitaire contre les coupes budgétaires et les privatisations dans les services publics et les services sociaux. Elle se distingue des deux autres principales coalitions par le fait qu’elle n’est contrôlée par aucun groupe de gauche.

Pour Solidaires, Christian Mahieux a évoqué la récente vague de grèves en France. Sa conclusion a été sobre : la bataille a été perdue. Néanmoins la classe ouvrière n’est pas démoralisée et ses organisations sont en train de tirer les bilans, afin de reprendre le combat.

L’un des invités les plus significatifs a été Len McCluskey, le secrétaire général nouvellement élu du syndicat Unite. Son syndicat représente globalement un million et demi de travailleurs et il a choisi de s’adresser à une réunion composée de militants lutte de classe. Bien qu’il n’ait pas pris d’engagement au nom de son syndicat en ce qui concerne la grève, il s’est engagé à ce que les responsables syndicaux prennent contact avec les comités locaux de campagne. Si c’est bien le cas, cela donnera une impulsion décisive à la bataille.

Pour réussir, la Coalition de Résistance doit construire des passerelles avec ceux qui, dans les syndicats, veulent se battre ; avec les membres du Parti travailliste qui veulent contester le soutien aux coupes budgétaires apporté par leur propre parti ; et avec tous les militants qui ont commencé le combat dans leurs différents milieux. La conférence qui s’est tenue samedi est un début prometteur.

War criminal Rajapakse humiliated

image

In all the excitement over the student protests this major victory by the Sri Lankan community in Britain has gone largely unnoticed.

The photo, provided by the Sri Lankan government, shows Tory Minister Liam Fox and war criminal Rajapaske meeting during the visit.

President Mahinda Rajapakse’s address planned for Wednesday. "Due to the sheer scale of the expected protests, we do not feel that the talk can reasonably and safely go ahead," the organisation, an independent debating society which is not part of the University of Oxford, said. Thousands of people were expected to protest Thursday in the university town to express their outrage at the event, organised despite growing international outrage over the Rajapakse administration’s war crimes and ongoing repression. Last week Tamil societies from sixteen British universities wrote to the Oxford Union protesting the invitation. On Monday hundreds of people demonstrated at Heathrow airport as Rajapakse’s plane landed.

Before the cancellation was announced, Thames Valley Police had planned to close several roads in the city centre between 1300 and 2300 GMT, the BBC reported.

Thousands of people were expected to travel to the university town amid growing outrage and anger at the event. Last week, British parliamentarians were amongst those urging for public protests.

A statement from the Oxford Union said: "Due to security concerns surrounding Mr Rajapaksa’s visit which have recently been brought to our attention by the police, the union has regretfully found the talk is no longer practicable and has had to cancel his address.”
In 2007, amid similar outrage over the Oxford Union’s invitation to Holocaust denier David Irving and British far right leader Nick Griffin triggered protests. The event was disrupted when angry students surge into the venue and resumed when they were later persuaded to leave.

President Rajapaksa Tuesday issued a statement regretting the decision taken by the Oxford Union, which he lamented as "the home of free speech".

"I am very sorry this has had to be cancelled but I will continue to seek venues in the UK and elsewhere where I can talk about my future vision for Sri Lanka,” The Guardian newspaper quoted him as saying.

Announcing the cancellation, the Oxford Union defended its invitation: "The union holds a politically neutral stance with regards to speakers and the decision was not made in relation to any aspect of Mr Rajapaksa’s political position, the policies of his administration or any allegations against his government," the statement said.

Nonetheless, amid the storm of controversy, the Oxford Union sought to explain its invitation: “[we] felt that Mr. Rajapaksa would provide a unique insight into the political climate of the region in his speech.”

The Union also invoked the principle of free speech in its defence: "This decision [to cancel] was not taken lightly and the union deeply regrets the cancellation. The union has a long tradition of hosting prominent speakers and upholding the principles of free speech."
However, in a joint letter last month to the Oxford Union, sixteen Tamil university societies questioned the society’s extension of ‘free speech’ to a leader who was crushing that very right at home.
“The Oxford Union in the past faced criticism for inviting other controversial speakers also known for their racist views. However, President Rajapakse is in a different position from [far right leader] Nick Griffin or [Holocaust denier] David Irving,” the letter, issued by the Tamil Youth Organisation, said.

These previous speakers live in countries with a free and independent media and the rule of law. They could not therefore use the Oxford Union as a means of propagating unchallenged, noxious views or indeed as a platform for a campaign of concealment.
“However, President Rajapakse has crushed free speech in his own country and done his best to conceal from international attention the grave crimes committed in the Tamil speaking areas.”

The university Tamil societies are those of Cambridge, Nottingham, King’s College London, Kingston, Cardiff, St. Georges, Westminister, Hertfordshire, Southampton, Queen Mary, Middlesex, Brunel, Greenwich, Imperial College, Central London, and City.
Responding to letters of protest it had also been receiving Monday, the University of Oxford said:

“The Oxford Union is an independent debating society. Although most of its members are current or former Oxford students, it is not part of the University of Oxford. It has its own funding sources and premises, and the University does not have jurisdiction over its events.”

John McDonnell and an action programme

John’s speech was one of the best at Saturday’s Coalition of Resistance conference. And he annoyed the Daily Mail.

Good class struggle stuff.

Choose life says new Sinn Féin TD

imageIt’s a source of constant wonder how anyone still contrives to find Sinn Féin a radical party. In the north they run a corrupt grantocracy and sit in government with the hard right DUP. To pick a random example, Magherafelt council ,which has six SF councillors, is looking to make 184 staff redundant. The Republican vanguard is maintaining a silence on the subject honed by years of clandestine activity.

The party’s most recently elected member of the Dáil, Pearse Doherty has taken a firm stand on one issue that really matters. He’s not calling for the repudiation of the banks’ debt nor for taking houses into public control so that the speculators can’t make families homeless.

Oh no. He’s nailing his colours to the mast or, more precisely, responding to the Pro Life Campaign to which he “has given a written personal commitment to oppose any legislation that would make abortion available in Ireland and supports a law to protect the human embryo from deliberate destruction.”

Nothing even along the lines of “it’s not what I’d recommend but it’s a woman’s right to choose” or “my party’s position is..” In fact his position was exactly the same as that of Fianna Fáil’s and for that matter of the local bishop.

How best to avoid kettling

The Metropolitan Police seems to be on a mission to prove to everyone under the age of 25 that the Marxists are right and the bourgeois state is fundamentally repressive. Last week they gave a bunch of fifteen year olds mild hypothermia and severe anxiety as part of this project.

As we all know a big turning point in every revolutionary’s life is that moment when they learn to really hate cops.

The youth are learning. Watch this little video of the student protests on November 30th from The Gabber to see how they dodge the cops’ kettling tactic. (The Gabber has arrived at just the right moment. It’s providing a lot of on the spot, high quality footage telling our side of the story in a sort of 21st century Woody Guthrie way.)