Here is a report from the other Respect conference written by a comrade who is not a supporter of Socialist Resistance. He has been prominently active in his London Respect branch since it was established.
I went to the Westminster conference out of a kind of duty to the local branch, having been delegated and because I thought that an argument had to be made in every forum to help local (unsplit) groups continue working with believable legal advice and to call for an electoral alliance, instead of abandoning all our achievements to score a few points and handing the non-mainstream seats on the GLA to the BNP.
I was hoping for some mature reflection and some critical analysis of how the leadership had handled the split, and some realistic planning for the future. There was none. It turned out to be a day of denial.
Instead of this, within the first hour the conference had near-unanimously (if it wasn’t for me voting against) elected John Rees and Elaine Graham-Leigh to the officer posts (and Oli Rahman as Chair), reaffirming them without question rather than criticising their reckless orchestrating of some of the worst and most dishonest contributions to the email war that has destroyed the left for the foreseeable future.
It also elected 46 unopposed names to the National Council on the nod, given that there were 50 places.
At that point I should have left. I had no further function but to be disruptive (I would have heckled if my mouth hadn’t been so wide open when a member from Brighton commended John Rees and the officers for their “dignity and restraint”). Amina spoke well on the question of whether it was a left/right split, but I wish now that she had been able to show more anger.
Later, Julian proposed the Lewisham version of the SWP amendment (thereby opposing the SWP version) ie removing reference to witchhunts and socialists, and got a fair amount of applause and some votes, but the SWP version was overwhelmingly agreed.
In the end, although I wanted to leave at lunchtime, I figured that the argument still had to be made that the split was not as political as they claimed and that they must find a way of helping local groups work together and think about an electoral alliance.
I put in two speaker slips for the afternoon but was not called. If I had been called, I would have made the following points questioning the extent to which there is a left/right, rather than organisational, split.
1) Speaker after speaker confused the splits in Tower Hamlets (which may involve some left/right differences for all I know) with the split in the National Council.
2) The conference had just unanimously voted for a resolution written by members who were in the Bishopsgate conference; so much for political differences.
3) The conference had just elected a list of names without being provided with a single word of information about the politics of the people whose names they had been presented with that morning. Is that really focussing on the politics? I recognised some of the names, but the rest could be Tories for all I know. Election address? Not one word, written or spoken, nothing, zilch, all just on the nod.
4) The only split locally has been over whose story one believes about the different versions of events.
Most of the speakers who had been at both conferences were very diplomatic, with the very unfortunate exception of Mark Serwotka. After a rousing speech about unions and the political fund, he suddenly decided to take sides in a split that he clearly knows nothing about. He just swallowed the witchhunting story, hook, line and sinker. I sat on my hands while everyone stood and applauded, no doubt earning much dislike if anyone recognises me.
Funny how the people who claim to have been witchhunted are the ones who have retained their positions.
The only moment of light relief in what, for me, was a dead, grey conference, was when, after Rania Khan had used the fact that Respect Renewal had a guest speaker from the Green Party as a reason to slag it off, the same Green speaker turned up at the Westminster conference (and turned out to be probably the most left person there).





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