I’ve finally hit the big time with the Weekly Worker. Oh Christ! This week’s edition carries a piece on Socialist Resistance, Respect and me and, by a spooky coincidence, comrade Joe in Belfast who was best man at my wedding also earns an article. (I was best man at his wedding too and made what was probably the worst speech in the last thousand years but that’s another story.) The last publication which featured both of us in the same issue was Ulster, the UDA’s magazine. I spent several uncomfortable nights subsequently sleeping with a hammer under my pillow before working out that it wouldn’t be much use against a gun.
Apparently I’m a “leading ISG member in Tower Hamlets” and “discipline has broken down in the ISG”. The bit about Tower Hamlets is right but if I wanted to be a leading ISG member I would need to join the ISG first. They are quite strict about not electing non-members to the leadership. Probably some residual Leninism. The same goes for me breaking the famously ferocious ISG discipline. If I were an ISG member I wouldn’t take the risk of facing a midnight ride out to Epping Forest where my decomposing body would be found in a year or too. That’s what they normally do anyway.
As for the rest of it I’ve explained what I believe to be a largely shared ISG/SR conception of what we thought Respect could have been. Click on the Respect label underneath for details.
You can understand why the Weekly Worker gets very excited about this sort of thing but it’s not really warranted. Anyone who has read Socialist Resistance or attended its public events (and that’s hundreds of thousands of the British working class vanguard) will have known that there is a spectrum of assessments of Respect and the other left regroupment projects. Big deal. We have different opinions which reflect strands of opinion within the working class and sometimes we re-evaluate what we’ve been doing. In any case the majority of SR supporters will continue to remain members of Respect and work in it where they feel they have something to contribute.
We do though have utter unanimity on our opinion of the Weekly Worker.





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