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Respect’s performance in the local government elections has been impressive. These were the first elections of this type the organisation has contested on such a scale. In many wards Respect came second or third, locating it as a credible electoral choice for thousands of working class voters. Eighteen candidates were elected as councillors.

The election of twelve councillors in Tower Hamlets only tells part of the story. There is evidence indicating large-scale electoral fraud which deprived some other Respect candidates of victory. There will be a legal challenge against this and we are likely to see the final tally rise. Newham mayoral candidate Abdurahman Akhtar Jafar won second place with 15,881 votes, this includes 12 898 first preferences. Not only did the party win three councillors in that borough, it came second in thirteen wards.

Across the country Respect candidates have broken through the barrier that usually prevents small parties from gaining more than handfuls of votes. In Bristol Jerry Hicks won 679 votes. This represented 25% of the vote in a ward that is 86% white British. Respect candidates came second in ten wards and third in eight others nationally. In Birmingham Salma Yaqoob polled 4,339 votes. This was 49% of the poll. The 28 Respect candidates outside London achieved 16,019 votes, representing an average vote of 16.4%. In Birmingham the average vote was 21.5%, while in Preston it was 27.0%. The average vote of the 18 candidates outside London, Preston and Birmingham was 11.5%. Only three candidates achieved less than 5% (and one of these was in Birmingham), and there were several results at 20%+, and a good number between 10-20%. The first past the post system used in British elections has always made it difficult for smaller parties to win votes and these results are much better than anything achieved by the non-Labour left for many years, both in terms of their consistency and their geographical spread.

It has taken years of work for the Greens to have an instantly recognisable political identity and a relatively small number of councillors. Respect’s success has barely been mentioned in the mainstream press.

There is a contradictory element to some of the results. The twelve councillors in Tower Hamlets are all Bangladeshi. This means that the council group is not fully representative of the ethnic and political diversity of either the borough or Respect in Tower Hamlets. Many of the councillors are politically untested and few of them have experience of socialist organisations other then Respect. Sections of Respect’s leadership have been very reluctant to adopt rudimentary Labour Movement procedures for the accountability of elected officials. The councillors will be able to cite the precedent that George Galloway has set whenever they are asked to report to the local organisation. The leadership’s assertion is that Galloway’s moral authority and the support of the national office will make sure that the new councillors stick to the policy commitments that were made during the election campaign.

The other side of the contradiction is that Respect has now begun to accumulate a mass base of support. This has to be consolidated by building vibrant, functioning local organisations using the networks and contacts that were made during the election campaign. In addition to having a large membership that than be used in large, spectacular events the organisation needs to put down roots in working class areas and offer its members the routine and structure that help create a stable, democratic organisation.

Labour’s neo-liberalism led many of its former voters in Barking and Dagenham to help elect eleven fascist councillors. In many wards in Tower Hamlets Respect won over large numbers of white working class voters because it campaigned against privatisation and the housing shortage. A result of this is that in the borough the fascist vote was only 9.4% in an area that is more deprived than Barking.

In many parts of the country Respect has proved that it is now capable of giving the other parties a real electoral challenge. In the months that follow its councillors can make the organisation even stronger by leading struggles both inside and outside the town halls. It will be the politics of class struggle and a fighting Respect that will give working people an alternative to new Labour.

24 responses to “Strong showing for Respect”

  1. I think the assessment of the results being “very impressive” is an exaggeration. Beyond Tower Hamlets, there is very little evidence of the “mass base of support” that you claim Respect now has.Further, it is a little late to “begin” to erode New Labour’s hold. When New Labour was at its very lowest point in many years, Respect failed to deliver in nearly every borough except for one and comes in 7th place behind the BNP, the Greens and the Resident’s Association in the national results. This is clearly not the alternative to New Labour that everyone was promising Respect would be.Further, you make it clear that the fundamental problem Respect has had (and the reason I resigned and have not supported them) has not diminished. There are still no procedures in place for accountability and given that most of those elected are unknown to activists in the area and have no experience outside of Respect in political organisations, the fact that they are not held accountable to certain policy ideas or procedures makes them in some ways irrelevant. What is the use of having Respect councillors if they have no obligation to pass policies in line with a certain political view, but can vote in whatever way they personally desire?Because Galloway was never held to account and no procedures were put in place to demand accountability, I am very pessimistic about what sort of policies these candidates will be adopting.Of course there are a few who have been elected that do have a good reputation and track record such as Oliur Rahman in Tower Hamlets and Salma Yaqoob in Birmingham, but again, this is hardly evidence of the new mass opposition to New Labour that everyone had been saying was going to take place.Finally, I think there is a very real danger of Respect being seen as simply a “Bangladeshi party” and nothing more. The fact that all of those in Tower Hamlets who were elected were Bangladeshi and that those candidates who were not elected were largely non-Bangladeshi leftists is something that should give everyone pause for thought.This shows to me Respect’s forgetfulness about its “S” and “T”. Socialism and Trade Unions. Without an attempt to remedy this deficit, Respect will become pigeon-holed into being viewed as a local Tower Hamlets group for Bangladeshi’s who oppose the war. This is all well and good in and of itself (and in my view could be defended if that was Respect’s stated goal from the get go), but this is hardly the mass party or mass alternative to New Labour that many supporting Respect have been saying time and again that it would become.In fact, this shows how far away from that goal Respect currently is.

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  2. I have only just started the exhausting number crunching, but would just like to point to the remarkable result in Bristol. which I think shows that respect can break out of the problems of only doing well in Moslem areas:Maxine Bowler Respect, Sheffield Burngreave1208/4662 = 26%Ward = 22.9% asian and British AsianJer Francis, Lockleaze Bristol679/2713 = 25%Ward = 5.3% asian and British Asian, 86.2% white British

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  3. An says’which I think shows that respect can break out of the problems of only doing well in Moslem areas’Really? Respect has been going for some time now and can only make tiny inroads (if that), which frankly, I would say are not significant. Where is this mass orientation towards Respect? So many disillusioned and disaffected lefties (some ex-LP members) are out there so why aren’t they clamouring to Respect?To reiterate the point made numerous time is to ask where is the accountability in Respect? As many of these newly elected councillors are politically unknown.BTW: I agree with much of what TWP says.

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  4. Respect’s performance was disappointing. They weren’t in the running for control of a council as their leadership thought. They didn’t getting 20 people elected in Tower Hamlets as Liam thought possible. They didn’t get the 40 plus councillors the dozen or so members of theirs on a well known left message board mostly thought they would get. But, to be fair, the results in parts of East London were good and if they hadn’t screwed up their vote management strategy in Newham the vote they gained should really have seen them pick up another half dozen seats there. It seems they misjudged their support level and standing for every seat instead of concentrating on key targets was a very bad use of resources.The most interesting thing about their results though is the geographical spread. Or rather the lack of one.Respect’s successes are once more concentrated in the same areas with a very high Muslim population they have previously done well in. In fact a subset of those areas with 15 of their 16 gains in East London and 1 in Birmingham. Outside of those areas their results were along the lines of those which any small left group with a well run campaign could achieve in recent years. That is they were results which the Socialist Party or the old Socialist Alliance might be pleased with but hardly votes which an organisation claiming to be the fourth force in British politics could be pleased with. There’s no sign of a breakout from their core areas, quite the opposite in fact.The other point of note is that all of Respects new councillors (not just those in Tower Hamlets but the other 4 as well) seem to come from the Muslim wing of the coalition. None of the SWP members or other prominent leftists were elected. Interesting times ahead I would suggest.Briefly on the other left results, the IWCA added a fourth councillor to their group in Oxford. The Socialist Party gained seats in Coventry and Huddersfield, while its two sitting councillors in Lewisham were reelected. Unfortunately one of the two former Labour left councillors who defected to the Socialist Party in Stoke lost his seat to the BNP.Results from groups outside those three were generally poor.

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  5. I personally believe these election results are truly outstanding for Respect and further consolidates our firm bases in various towns and cities across England.12 Councillors in Tower Hamlets3 Councillors in Newham1 Councillor in BirminghamA hatful of seconds in Preston, Sheffield and Bristol.It is obvious we now have a firm and secure base in the east end of London and our tentacles are spreading northwards with a councillor now in Birmingham to add to the 2 councillors already in Preston.I think the re-election of Oli Rahman is an important first for Respect and he must have been doing something right in TH to get re-elected. Well done mate.I think its a little early to write off the TH councillors. Lets see what they do. They stood on a Respect ticket so we can presume they will oppose council house sales, privatisation and war. I look forward to it.I also think its a bit patronising to say they are “politically untested and few of them have experience of socialist organisations other then Respect.”Well what a great way to get their experience. I wish them all the best and hope all socialists would get behind them.Either you want to reach out to new people to join Respect, like myself ex-Labour, or you want Respect to be another failing left party with the same old faces having the same old petty arguments about how leftist you are. I for one think these are great times for Respect. We are increasing our number of councillors and we are doing the necessary groundwork around the country in order to increase our support and membership. We should remember that we are only 2 years old and what a 2 years we’ve had. 1 MP and about 20 councillors is only a beginning but after a couple of years it is a trajectory that is pretty damn good. Onwards and upwards.Even after 33 years the Greens have never even had an MP. Have they ever had 12 councillors on a council?Join Respect here http://www.respectcoalition.org/index.php?sec=11Shaun High Peak Respect

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  6. And that was a party political broadcast, brought to you by somebody who has seemingly lost all capacity for critical thought.

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  7. Hi Mark,I use most of my critical thought on the rich and powerful.Respect is neither.

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  8. Liam Mac Uaid Avatar
    Liam Mac Uaid

    It’s simply a fact that the new councillors are untested and using words like “patronising” to describe facts is a substitute for analysis. These results are very contradictory and any attempt to understand them that does not acknowledge that clarifies nothing.”Same old faces” is the customary euphemism for people from other socialist traditons. In my view Respect’s major weakness has been its inability to engage with other left organisations and currents in the unions. At its worst the membership is sometimes treated as a stage army. That’s a fact and something I vigourously oppose at every opportunity.Mark P is right when he points to the limited geographical spread. However a very young organisation made great gains in these elections and that is an overwhelmingly positive fact. The interesting part will be building a rooted organisation in the period before the next elections. There’s an appetite for it.

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  9. Liam Mac Uaid Avatar
    Liam Mac Uaid

    It’s simply a fact that the new councillors are untested and using words like “patronising” to describe facts is a substitute for analysis. These results are very contradictory and any attempt to understand them that does not acknowledge that clarifies nothing.”Same old faces” is the customary euphemism for people from other socialist traditons. In my view Respect’s major weakness has been its inability to engage with other left organisations and currents in the unions. At its worst the membership is sometimes treated as a stage army. That’s a fact and something I vigourously oppose at every opportunity.Mark P is right when he points to the limited geographical spread. However a very young organisation made great gains in these elections and that is an overwhelmingly positive fact. The interesting part will be building a rooted organisation in the period before the next elections. There’s an appetite for it.

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  10. Shaun, I think you are confusing the laudable idea of concentrating your energies on fighting the rich and powerful with the frankly stupid notion that we should avoid thinking seriously about the left. Uncritical or hysterical cheerleading (of the kind which Socialist Worker specialises in for instance) is of no use to any of us in assessing where we are or thinking about what we have to achieve. Telling ourselves that everything we do is “great” and “fantastic” only serves to confuse and disorient.

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  11. Hi Mark,Are you a member of Respect?ShaunHigh Peak Respect

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  12. No. I’m not. I’m currently a member of the Socialist Party in Ireland. At various other stages I’ve been a member of English Socialist Party and the Scottish Socialist Party.

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  13. It seems to me that the Respect results are pretty good (and I’d like to congratulate Liam on all his hard work, although you must be disappointed that the excellent Glyn Robbins was not elected)It was also a good night for the Socialist Party and the Greens. None of these results are overwhelming – but good is still good.Respect got some excellent second places like Preston, Bristol and Sheffield although I think it’s interesting that in Preston they have never been able to repeat the election success of the Socialist Alliance – which must make them unique!It’s completely true that even if Respect had swept to power in Tower Hamlets it would have been the beginning of the hard work. Untested councillors from a variety of different political (and, I suppose, non-political) backgrounds are not guarenteed to produce an inspiring militant bloc on the council.People will be watching with real interest to see how these new councillors behave, which is both an opportunity and scary.ps at first glance of the figures it looks like the full time SWPers (John Rees, Kevin Ovendon, Chris Nineham, Gharda, Dean Ryan, Yuri Prassad) all under performed compared with other Respect candidates – is that right? And if so why do you think that might be?

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  14. Hi Mark,So why are you so bothered about Respect? Why are you spending your time telling us how badly we are doing and how badly we have done in the elections?If SWP want to be uncritical or use hysterical cheerleading about Respect, why does it bother you?I simply don’t understand non-Respect people getting so hot under the collar about us.If the Socialist Party wanted to be uncritical of the Socialist Party you know what, I wouldn’t give a toss.Thats up to them.

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  15. Liam Mac Uaid Avatar
    Liam Mac Uaid

    If you look closely at the Tower Hamlets votes you’ll see a pattern. White candidates were polled 100-300 fewer votes than Bangladeshi candiadates. I think the reasons for this are:1) Respect does not command the tribal loyalty that Labour does. Labour voters tend to vote only for Labour candidates. Some Respect voters voted for other parties on the basis of other affiliations. It wasn’t only SWP members who suffered from this. Glyn’s vote was much lower than Medhi’s.2) There were big arguments around the selection process and I think this affected how some networks choose to vote. The selection panel tried to avoid all male, mono ethnic slates in the wards. Some of the successful candidates disagreed strongly with this view.

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  16. Hi again Shaun. I don’t want to derail this discussion any further so I will keep this point brief. I have no idea why you find it all strange that an Irish socialist would be interested in the state of the left in the next country over or in left election results there. Neither do I understand why you seem to think that having a parochial sectarian attitude, only caring about the results of our own organisations, is a good thing.Liam, that’s a good point. Throughout each ward in Tower Hamlets there seems to be a vote gap between Respect running mates with Asian names and those without Asian names. The gap varies from a couple of votes in one ward to over 400 in another, but there is gap througout the results.I think that part of this is likely to be down to what I’ve seen described as the occasional soft-communalism of Respect. If some votes are coming on the basis of Respect being “the party for Muslims” (to use its own infamous phrase) or even the party for Bangladeshis, then it should hardly come as a surprise that some voters are more inclined to vote for the candidates who appear to be Muslim or Bangladeshi.That said, Respect’s decision to stand ethnically mixed tickets is hardly something they should be criticised for.

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  17. Where the F*ck is HIgh Peak? Anyway, I am suprised by Louise’s reaction to my posting about Bristol, as it is purely factual.Peresonally I am not a member of Respect, and I also agree with much of TWP’s commentary.I am just pointing out the Lockleaze result, because it shows some basic tings. A good candidate in the right ward, with a good hard working campaign can do well.Whetehr or not Respect actualy does learn froom that expereince depends upon theri wilingness to apply critical thought to the contradictiry situation they find themselves in.I think getting a bunch of Respect councillors elected with no socialist cadre amongst them and no accountability is in practical terms a very dangerous situation, however good it is as an electoral result

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  18. Hi Mark,Its great you’re interested in the state of the left here in the UK. As you can see we’re doing pretty well. I must say I wish I had the time to be up to date with left developments in Ireland…too busy trying to build Respect I’m afraid!ShaunHigh Peak Respect

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  19. Liam Mac Uaid Avatar
    Liam Mac Uaid

    Shaun,socialism in one country is an idea with a pretty dodgy pedigree. Anyone who is serious about building new mass parties has to acquaint themselves with the experiences of other countries. There’s a lot Respect supporters can learn from the Brazilian, Italian, Scottish, Danish, German and Portugese experiences. Contrast what’s happened in Germany to Respect’s rather modest growth, for exaple.

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  20. Hi Shaunwell apart from just general curiousness to how the left across the water is doing, we in Ireland are also in the middle of a debate on left unity. The sister party of the swp are one of the main groups involved and they hold up Respect as an example to follow. We in the Socialist Party are a little dubious to whether a serious left party can be built right now because of the lack of generalized struggle. But the SWP hold up respect as an idea of how great things can be achieved by current leftists organising an electoral alliance. So it’s of interest to us to see how you get on, what kind of policies you come up with and especially how you deal with opposition and democracy and accountability within your party. How your elected officials act is very important to us as the SP in Ireland already has strict rules for our elected officials, firstly strict accountability to the party and secondly not to profit financially, which is tds (mps) on a workers wage.And obviously it’s very important to see excatly what any formation would do with its elected officials, as otherwise whats the point!In Ireland we have a very small left with some similar problems to your own, added of course and complicted by the national question, partition and its effect on conciousness and the workers movement. There have been some pretty big leftist extraparlimentry campaigns in recent years inclding some victories, electorally The socialist party has had moderate success electorally in Ireland with a TD and a handful of local councillers, which we use as a platform to push campaigns and workers issues. Another more recent group The Campaign for an Independent Left (CIL) also has a TD and number of councillers.But like I say all pretty small.Best of luck with your new councillers and hopefully they and respect will develp in a more political direction.hsdublin ireland

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  21. Cheers hs,I note you say, “electorally The socialist party has had moderate success electorally in Ireland with a TD and a handful of local councillers, which we use as a platform to push campaigns and workers issues. Another more recent group The Campaign for an Independent Left (CIL) also has a TD and number of councillers.”Now my guess is that the SP and CIL have more in common than not and by joining some kind of alliance would be in a better position to campaign on workers issues.Good luck with it anyway.Shaun High Peak Respect

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  22. Go Oli.Go RESPECT.Why does Respect engage with the other left orgs? Well, why dont the signboards come talking themselves?I know its harsh when a signboard looks at real signs carried by real people and imaginary “masses:.

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  23. I’m not convinced about the comparison with Barking and Dagenham. B&D is an area comparable to what Tower Hamlets was like 20 years ago, with a predominantly white working class and a relatively recent influx of non-white immigration. Tower Hamlets is far more integrated now and isn’t what you would imagine to be natural ground for fascists. It’s quite frankly depressing that even with this level of integration, and with a left campaign around key social issues such as housing, nearly one in ten voters still vote BNP.

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  24. Liam Mac Uaid Avatar
    Liam Mac Uaid

    About 10% did vote for the BNP in my ward. However without the fight that Respect put up it would have been higher. As Barking and Dagenham shows there has to be an alternative on offer to New Labour.

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