United LEFT

**working for unity in action of all the LEFT in the UK** (previously known as the RESPECT SUPPORTERS BLOG)

Friday, October 15, 2010

No to AV - YES to PR

No to AV - YES to PR.

Did you know that the No to AV - YES to PR campaign has a Facebook page - you can find it
HERE.

Say YES to PR by voting NO to AV.

As the site states:
- Yes to Democracy in the form of real Proportional Representation for the House of Commons.

If you support this campaign please join and tell your friends and help us organise before it's too late and we are stuck with half-baked version of First Past the Past in new clothes forever.

Support this campaign - become a signatory.

Sign your name/group on the wall to be added to the list.

- Yes to Democracy, we want real Proportional Representation for the House of Commons.

VOTE NO in the Referendum.

Its also interesting to note that Manchester Respect have submitted this motion (which i agree with 100%) to this years Respect National Conference:

"Alternative Vote Referendum: Locking Out Radical Politics

Proposed by Manchester Respect - see it HERE

  1. The Alternative Vote (AV) referendum is a trap set for the Liberal Democrats to give the party enough to bring it in to coalition. It is not a commitment to proportional representation and offers the least challenge to the political system.
  2. AV is part of a package that reduces the number of constituencies and MPs and evens out the number of voters in each. This is gerrymandering of the voting system. The equalization of constituencies will strengthen the tendency towards stabilizing the Tory and Liberal Democrat representation. The bigger constituencies will make it harder to break the stranglehold of the three major parties.
  3. It strengthens the push towards the political centre as the centre ground parties pick up the redistributed votes. AV will further lock out radical politics and prevent Labour forming a majority in the future. Respect would not be able to win Parliamentary seats and it would be very difficult for the Green Party as well. This package is a step backwards for the representation of the poorest in our society.
  4. Those against PR will argue that there is no mandate whatever the result of the referendum. Those in favour are being pushed into supporting electoral reforms that will lock out PR for a generation and lock out progressive representation with it. PR will not be on the agenda for a generation whatever the outcome of the referendum, which is the nature of the Tory trap.
  5. Respect needs to step away from the trap and campaign for NO to AV - Yes to PR".

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Tories slam door on poor students - Socialist Worker

Students protested outside London South bank University on Tuesday. The students blocked the road and occupied a lobby in protest against language department closures (Pic: Guy Smallman)

Tories slam door on poor students by Siân Ruddick - Socialist Worker.

The Tory plan to increase tuition fees is a vicious assault on students, education and working people.

It will close off university to many more people from lower-income homes.

Ex-BP executive Lord Browne recommends in his review this week that universities be allowed to remove the cap on tuition fees completely. Average fees will double to over £6,000 a year and the highest could be double that or more.

UCU lecturers’ union general secretary Sally Hunt said, “Lord Browne’s recommendations, if enacted, represent the final nail in the coffin for affordable higher education.

“His proposals will price the next generation out of education.”

Students starting this year will face debts of around £25,000 at the end of their course. That’s enough to put off many from working class families. But the new proposals will be crushing.

Signs

They might as well put up signs in many institutions saying, “Working class students not admitted.” Today there are more students from poor backgrounds than 50 years ago.

But that baseline was incredibly low, and a two-tier system still exists. Rich students dominate Britain’s “top” universities.

Oxford University is the worst in the country, taking just 11.5 percent of its intake from working class families. Cambridge is next, with 12.6 percent, and Bristol comes in third at 14.2 percent.

Students whose parents are manual workers are concentrated in ex-polytechnic colleges and colleges specialising in diplomas and apprenticeships.

Elitism also means there are as many black students studying at London Metropolitan University as in the entire Russell Group of the top 20 universities.

This all comes on top of a ferocious programme of cuts and course closures. Over 200,000 people who wanted to go to university were denied a place this year.

The Labour government imposed cuts of £575 million in higher education. But much worse will come after the Tories’ spending review on Wednesday of next week.

Fail

Vince Cable, a Liberal Democrat cabinet member, has said that universities and colleges should be allowed to go to the wall, like banks that fail.

But the banks weren’t left to go to the wall—they were bailed out by the government.

Lord Browne says no student will have to pay fees until they have finished their studies and are earning £21,000 a year. But this means a heavy tax on people earning £400 a week.

Browne asks why low paid workers should pay for the education of people who will go on to earn much more than them.

But he and his like never asked why ordinary people should shell out over £1 trillion for the bankers.

The best solution would be to tax the rich for education and other key services.

Incredibly, Browne said of graduates on Tuesday, “You’re facing better job prospects, a more exciting array of job prospects, mobility.”

But last year some 25,000 students were unemployed after completing their courses.

There are also huge gaps in employment rates between those from the top and those at the bottom of university league tables.

Students, lecturers and the working class movement as a whole must unite and fight.


The following should be read alongside this article:

© Socialist Worker (unless otherwise stated). You may republish if you include an active link to the original.

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October 20: Protests head to Downing Street

Join the Resistance!
Stop The Cuts - October 20: Protests head to Downing Street

Stop the Con-Dem cuts!

Build the Resistance!

Can’t Pay, Won’t Pay!

Speakers include Tony Benn, Caroline Lucas MP, Rev Jesse Jackson, Jeremy Dear (NUJ), Dot Gibson (National Pensioners Convention), Lee Jasper (BARAC), Zita Holbourne (BARAC) John McDonnell MP, Mark Serwotka (PCS), Jeremy Corbyn MP, Bob Crow (RMT), Aaron Porter (NUS).

The momentum for the demonstration on 20 October is growing. Camden Trades Council’s march is now supported by 15 trade union bodies plus the local Labour Party and several anti-cuts and anti-privatisation campaigns (full list below).

At the same time, the University of London Students Union is calling on all students to march (assembling 4.00pm outside ULU, Malet Street). The students will march to join the trade union demonstration. The joint march will then head for a rally in Whitehall outside Downing Street.

The Coalition of Resistance is calling on all supporters to build the demonstration and rally, and to join the march if possible (4.00pm in Malet Street, or 5.00pm at Lincoln’s Inn Fields) or the final rally (beginning 6.00pm outside Downing Street). When Osborne announces the cuts on 20 October, we need to challenge head-on the Con-Dem lie that ‘there is no alternative’ and that ‘we are all in it together’.

We need to break through the media consensus that working people and the poor have to pay for a crisis caused by the bankers, big business, and the rich. That means making the protest on the 20 October big, loud, and vibrant.

We can build protest over the next few days by:

  • Holding street stalls where we hand out leaflets, collect signatures on the Statement of Resistance, and sign people up to the 27 November CoR National Conference.
  • Organising CoR public meetings with national and local speakers (contact us if you need speakers or help setting up a meeting).
  • Leafleting tube stations, workplaces, meetings, door-to-door. Download the leaflet (2x A5 posters). Download the individual leaflets ( A4 – Page 1, Page 2)
  • If you have a group of local activists committed to building and joining the demonstration, issue a statement to the local press explaining why you will be joining the protest (model press statement below). More ..........
Link: Coalition Of Resistance

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Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Nick Cleggs pre election pledge to students

Nick Clegg's pre-election pledge to students.
The words on the pledge signed by Nick Clegg and every Lib-Dem election candidate reads:

"I pledge

To Vote against any increase in fees in the next parliament and to pressure the government to introduce a fairer alternative"

Signed

Nick Clegg

From the NUS web site:

"Nick Clegg signed the NUS pledge during a visit to the University of Cambridge on the election trail. During the campaign he said:

"Labour and the Conservatives have been trying to keep tuition fees out of this election campaign. It's because they don't want to come clean with you about what they're planning. Despite the huge financial strain fees already place on Britain's young people, it is clear both Labour and the Conservatives want to lift the cap on fees. If fees rise to £7,000 a year, as many rumours suggest they would, within five years some students will be leaving university up to £44,000 in debt. That would be a disaster. If we have learnt one thing from the economic crisis, it is that you can't build a future on debt.

"The Liberal Democrats are different. Not only will we oppose any raising of the cap, we will scrap tuition fees for good, including for part-time students. We can't do it overnight, but we can start straight away with students in their first year - that way means anyone at university this autumn will have their debt cut by at least £3,000. Students can make the difference in countless seats in this election. Use your vote to block those unfair tuition fees and get them scrapped once and for all."

Link: New Stateman

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Remember the General Election? Students do! Nick Clegg signing the no sudent fee increase pledge on video


Remember the General Election? Students do. Here Nick Clegg makes a series of commitments to camera that match his written pledges to "Vote Against, Campaign against and argue against a lifting of the cap"
Send this to every student in the UK and know the Lib-Dems for what they are: TORIES each and everyone!
Link: Video on YouTube (pass it on)

The United front – lessons for today by Piers Mostyn

The second in our series of reposted articles on the way forward for the Left in the UK.

The United front – lessons for today by Piers Mostyn - from Socialist Resistance web site.

How to build a united mass movement is a key question for any successful resistance to the onslaught on jobs, wages and services, just as it is for the campaign against fascism or to get the troops out of Afghanistan. Winning a majority for a fundamental transformation of society towards socialism, poses the question on a more profound level. But how is this unity in action to be achieved?A united working class has never been created spontaneously. Capitalism creates divisions and competition, particularly in times of crisis. Obvious examples are those along national, racial, gender and regional lines. But divisions between workers as employees and consumers, tax payers and welfare recipients are also encouraged. And a frenzy is presently being whipped up over which job or service should be cut or maintained, which part of the welfare state is less and more valued – pitting the interests of one section of the class against another.

That there should be different experiences within the class should come as no surprise therefore, nor that these give rise to different political perspectives. Marxists view the capitalist economic system as both wholly responsible for the global misery being inflicted due to the present crisis and functionally incapable of restructuring itself in a way that will prevent it re-occurring at regular intervals in the future. And yet this hasn’t let to a mass conversion to revolutionary socialism. That’s because, historically the overwhelming majority of the working class in this country has considerable faith in the potential for reforming capitalism to meet its needs. It will take more than an economic crisis and a bit of propaganda for that to change.

Overcoming disunity and winning a majority for socialism, or a particular campaign, cannot be achieved simply by proclamation. Nor can it be achieved by setting up small formations, pretending they are broadly representative and then excluding or marginalising all whom disagree. Posed in this way both methods sound ludicrous, but they are hardly uncommon practices in the British revolutionary left.

It is largely through their own experience of struggle that the many sections of the working class will develop the unity and perspectives required. This happens through a process in which collective consciousness is raised and self-confidence strengthened. At times this can occur very quickly.

But this will never happen unless methods of organising bring together all the different sectors, experiences and perspectives. This is turn entails not just a fundamental respect for different tendencies and currents, but a positive understanding of the necessity for pluralism in any successful movement.

Democracy and transparency

By definition true pluralism requires democracy and transparency to create trust. People want that reassurance if they are to invest their precious time and money in a joint activity with others whom they have disagreements. There is always a concern to know who is involved, how structures are accountable and who controls the resources.

In the 1920s and 1930s there was an ongoing debate in the international Communist movement and later in the left opposition about the United Front. Initially this was in response to a ultraleftism in the early 1920s during a period of defeat or decline following an initial post-war and post-Russian revolution upsurge. Communists in some countries over-estimated their own strength and the extent to which the mass of workers might readily break from reformism.

The Communist Third International under Stalin then lurched through a series of zig zags that went from a strategic alliance with the social democratic trade union bureaucracies even through bitter betrayals like the British General Strike of 1926; to the ultra-left “third period” in which the need to defeat “social fascist” social democratic parties was posed as a pre-condition for the defeat of fascism itself; to the popular frontism of the 1930s in which the defeat and roll back of class militancy was the price to be paid for participation in government and unity with the “liberal” bourgeoisie.

What immediately comes across from these debates is that the united front is not an abstract off-the-shelf formula that can be downloaded and applied for any given situation. It’s application is always a concrete issue dependent on the political context and the class balance of forces. Nonetheless there are lessons to be learnt.

Rather than rigidly applying particular slogans or organisational forms, or making a fetish about exactly who is involved, the guiding consideration should be a broader assessment as to whether the united front has a dynamic towards strengthening the consciousness, combativity, organisation and independence of the class. This is best achieved by a focus on common actions with specific goals, rather than vague long term aspirations.

The United Front is an organic and sensitive process that cannot be achieved by ultimatums or artificial preconditions, abstract or schematic approaches. In particular any mechanical counterposition of the strategic goals of revolutionary Marxists to the need for such unity will prove disastrous.

In Britain there has been no mass communist or revolutionary tradition. So the issue has been differently posed historically. Primarily it has involved a recognition of the hegemonic position of the Labour Party and its leadership in defining the political landscape of the working class.

Successful mass social and political movements

In the early 1930s Trotsky described the British Communist Party as compromising “an insignificant portion of the proletariat” and referred to it’s “extreme weakness”. He criticised Communists for trying to impose their own fronts instead of understanding that the masses will only come to revolutionary consciousness through the experience of struggle, something that will only occur through being drawn into a united front.

80 years on, the revolutionary left finds itself in a weaker position – not just because of small numbers, but due to a historically low level of class struggle in the past two decades. Despite this it is still possible for movements and struggles to be built using united front methods.

Successful mass social and political movements have been built in the last three decades. The Anti-Nazi League, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Anti-Poll Tax campaign and Stop the War were all, to varying degrees, action focussed mass campaigns that were pluralistic, based on autonomous grass roots activism and democratic national structures. These features were key to their success. And despite its ultimate defeat, the movement in support of the 1984-5 miner’s strike was similarly a model united front.

The anti-cuts and rate capping fights of the 1980s are perhaps the most recent example of an anti-austerity struggle. They were largely organised around and led by the Labour left, focussed in particular local government strongholds. This aspect is very unlikely to be replicated today.

But even if there are no signs that local Labour Parties will lead a fightback today, the involvement of individual Labour councillors, MPs, members and party structures is essential if the broadest possible campaign is to be build. Trade unionists and the local communities at the brunt of the attacks are likely to be the core building blocks this time around. And much of the strength of any struggle will be at the level of local actions.

But “localism” on its own will not be sufficient. In every campaign against cuts and job losses it will be impossible to build sufficient momentum without confronting fundamental political questions of national governmental policy: concerning the causes of the economic crisis and who should pay for it. And local campaigns, whilst retaining their autonomy, will need to co-ordinate in a national democratic structure.

Combining the need for a national, highly politicised approached that addresses these issues, whilst remaining as broad as possible, rooted in local activism and focussing on simple and specific concrete goals will be a very difficult balancing exercise. Getting it right will lie at the heart of any successful resistance.

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Monday, October 11, 2010

TUSC’s first steps by Clive Heemskerk

What future for the Left? Over the next few months the United LEFT blog will reproduce a number of articles on the future for the Left in the UK. Our first article is below.

TUSC’s first steps by Clive Heemskerk from
Socialism Today.


THE EARLY EFFORTS to establish working class political representation did not meet with easy success. In his first contest as an independent labour candidate, in the 1888 Mid-Lanarkshire by-election, Keir Hardie sometimes lost the then standard ‘vote of confidence in the candidate’ at his own public meetings. At a time when most trade unions supported the Liberal Party, the governmental alternative to the Conservatives, workers would frequently shout him down for ‘splitting the vote’. That was not the response received, however, by the candidates of the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) in May’s general election, even if the votes they won were no greater than the pioneers of the early Labour Party.

That TUSC’s vote would be squeezed in the context of a polarised general election was recognised by its participants when it was formed in January this year. The ‘Americanisation’ of British politics, with the capitalist New Labour party no longer seen by workers as ‘our party’, has created a deep sense of powerlessness amongst millions of working class voters. A report by the Department for Communities and Local Government, published without comment during the election, revealed that just 22% of people now feel they can at all ‘influence decisions affecting Britain’. (The Guardian, 30 April) What is this if not an expression of the effective disfranchisement of the working class, in the absence of a mass workers’ party that had the confidence of the working class to fight on their behalf?

An upsurge of workers’ struggle, which will come, could dramatically transform that consciousness – and create the basis for a new workers’ party to develop with mass traction. But, in this election, TUSC could not fill the vacuum. Those workers who did come out to vote – and the turnout rose in this election from 61% in 2005 to 65% – plumped for ‘the lesser evil’ against the threat of the Tories. Creditable votes were won by TUSC candidates in Coventry North East (1,592), Tottenham (1,057) and Glasgow South West (931) but generally TUSC polled no higher than Socialist Party and other left candidates had in previous elections.

The main purpose of TUSC, however, was to reach the most militant workers, in the trade unions and the unorganised as well, with the arguments for independent working class political representation. And in this it achieved some important successes. Twenty-one TUSC candidates were officially endorsed by the executive committee of the most combative industrial trade union in Britain today, the Rail, Maritime and Transport workers’ union (RMT), and a similar number of RMT branches backed and donated to local campaigns. Outside the RMT, support was won for individual candidates from branches of the Communications Workers’ Unions (CWU) and the GMB and UNITE general unions, and the Scottish region of the Fire Brigades Union. This follows – and, indeed, deepens – the process started by the formation of the No2EU-Yes to Democracy coalition, backed by the RMT, which contested last year’s European elections.

The TUSC steering committee includes, in a personal capacity, the RMT general secretary Bob Crow, and fellow executive member Craig Johnston; the assistant general secretary of the PCS civil servants union, Chris Baugh, and the union’s vice-president, John McInally; the vice-president of the National Union of Teachers, Nina Franklin; and the recently retired general secretary of the Prison Officers Association, Brian Caton. Amongst the TUSC candidates were nine branch officers of the UNISON public sector union, a CWU branch secretary and an assistant secretary, a University and College Union branch secretary, and three RMT branch officers. These latter included Bill Rawcliffe, the RMT senior steward at Jarvis Rail, who only decided to stand, after a mass meeting of rail engineering workers, when Jarvis went into administration on March 25th and made 1,200 workers redundant.

Significantly, it was not until the Jarvis workers decided to stand a candidate that Bill received a concerned phone call from his local New Labour MP Ed Miliband! This fear the capitalist politicians have of workers taking ‘politics’ into their own hands is just a hint of what a trade union-based workers’ party could achieve in the future, in beginning to change the balance of forces in favour of the working class.

TUSC exists precisely to be a ‘Doncaster on a national scale’, in other words, a banner available to be taken up by workers moving onto the political plane. The steps that were taken in this election – small though they were – on the road to re-establishing independent working class political representation, alone justify the TUSC campaign.

The outcome of the election, with a Tory-Lib Dem government and the Labour Party now in opposition, does not change the task that TUSC has set itself. The character of the Labour Party, transformed in the 1990s into New Labour, has not been changed by the election vote. There was, in some areas, a return – very limited at that – of its working class vote, out of fear of the consequences of a Tory government. A detailed survey of voters conducted by Greenberg Research confirms this, concluding that people "voted Labour to defend public spending" but that there was no "ideological content" to this, "no vision that brought people to Labour". (The Guardian, 17 May). How could it be otherwise after 15 years of New Labour consciously counter-posing itself to ‘Old Labour’ as a pro-market, ‘business-friendly’ party? The actual result still saw the biggest fall in seats for Labour since 1931, the lowest share of the vote since 1983, and 4.9 million fewer votes cast for Labour than in 1997.

Most important, however, is the fact that the nature of a party is not determined just by the composition of those of vote for it – otherwise the US Democrats would arguably be a workers’ party (and the 19th century Liberals too). Another critical factor in the dual character of ‘Old Labour’ as a ‘capitalist workers’ party’ were the possibilities that existed in its structures for its working class base to assert their interests against the party’s pro-capitalist leaders. Those channels were systematically destroyed in the past two decades and the election result has not changed that. The crisis of working class political representation persists and will be starkly revealed in the events ahead, as the new government unleashes its ‘savage cuts’.

While all analogies are limited, because different conditions effect how social processes unfold, Hardie found himself contesting the 1888 by-election as a local miners-nominated independent labour representative because the Liberal Party, then in opposition to a Conservative government, refused to accept him as their candidate. Other ‘labour representatives’ had been allowed as Liberal candidates on other occasions but Hardie’s candidature had developed out of bitter strike movements against local Liberal-supporting mine-owners and was not acceptable to the Liberal Party leadership. In the ‘Greek-style’ battles to come, with the new wave of Labour-controlled councils, for example, passing on Tory-Lib Dem cuts, the prospect of independent trade union and anti-cuts candidates will grow.

TUSC emerged out of discussions by those involved in the No2EU election coalition – launched, it should be remembered, just 15 months ago – which in turn was a response to an upsurge in workers’ struggle in early 2009, particularly the Lindsey oil refinery construction workers’ strike and RMT battles against European Union directives undermining workers’ rights. No2EU, involving the RMT, the Socialist Party, the Communist Party of Britain, Solidarity–Scotland’s Socialist Movement, and others, worked on a ‘federal’ basis, with decisions being reached by broad consensus while each participant had the right to produce their own material supporting the coalition. The Communist Party, which was an active member of No2EU, eventually decided not to be involved in TUSC – while the Socialist Workers Party (SWP), after some debate, was invited to join in March – but the consensus method of organisation was carried on into TUSC. While discussions will no doubt take place on the best way to organise the coalition as it develops in the future, certainly for the next period the federal approach must continue.

By continuing to group together in an electoral coalition the most militant leading trade unionists in Britain today, TUSC can be an important catalyst in furthering the process towards independent working class political representation.


Link: Socialism Today

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Friday, October 08, 2010

Coalition Of Resistance National Organising Conference Nov 27th


Coalition Of Resistance National Organising Conference Nov 27th.

Saturday November 27

Camden Centre

Bidborough St, London WC1H 9AU

10am-5pm

Details of speakers and workshops to follow
A large number of trades unionists, campaigners, academics, students, pensioners and others have signed the statement proposing a Coalition of Resistance to the Con-Dems budget cuts and consequent dismantling of key elements of the welfare state.
We are asking others to join us. Please sign our statement and come to the conference at the Camden Centre on the 27th November 2010.
The conference will be part of organising the fightback and proposing an alternative solution to the deep economic crisis that is destroying the lives of millions.
Across Europe governments are foisting the same austerity measures onto the backs of working people. In Greece, Spain, France and elsewhere there have been large scale strike movements opposing these cuts.
The conference will hear speakers from those struggles and from delegates from the anti-cuts and anti-privatisation groups springing up in this country. There will be workshops and the opportunity for all to have their voices heard.

Link:
Coalition Of Resistance

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