This is the SWP assessment on Thursday’s results.

The whole political spectrum moved right in the local and London elections as voters punished New Labour for ten years of privatisation and warmongering.The whole of the left is paying for New Labour’s failure to defend its core working class voters. We now have a right wing mayor and a Nazi presence on the London Assembly. Ken Livingstone is the biggest victim of this shift. But Livingstone also brought this defeat on himself. When he ran against New Labour as an independent after he was kicked out of the Labour Party eight years ago he won by a landslide. When he rejoined New Labour and fought his second election four years ago he got back in with a reduced vote.

But at the end of this campaign with its endorsements from Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Alistair Campbell, the City of London and with Tessa Jowell as his campaign manager, he has been beaten by the Tories. Livingstone sought to bolster his election campaign by creating a huge cross party electoral block. The deal with Brown and Blair on the one hand and with the Greens on the other was the most publicised part of this process. But there was also a side deal with George Galloway and a nod and a wink to vote for the Liberal Democrats in Richmond.
The problem now is that everyone is going down with the ship. The Green vote is cut and Galloway’s vote is below that in 2004 – and too little to win him a career-saving place on the GLA. Even the Liberals have failed to take anything significant from New Labour’s decline.

Of course the Tory tide is the main reason for all this. But the rest of the left’s attachment to Livingstone has prevented them from standing out as a clear alternative to Labour around which a minority could have rallied. The Left List has managed to do this in some local areas but it was too recent an invention to make its full mark on the electoral process. In addition, the Respect name had been established over four years and many people who voted for Respect did so in error, believing that it was the old Respect.

The period opening up is in some ways like that at the end of the 1970s. Then a tired Labour government also paved the way for Margaret Thatcher by adopting anti-union, socially conservative agenda at a time when it was also attacking working class living standards. What is necessary now is not a left that runs the line ‘Labour at any cost’ but a left that stands by working class people and struggles alongside them. This will not necessarily be a primarily electoral struggle. It will be an industrial struggle, an anti-war struggle, an anti-fascist struggle and a struggle on many other fronts that we cannot foresee. This is especially true at a time when the extra-electoral struggle is not declining, as it was in the late 1970s, but rising. But there will still be an electoral dimension.

The Left List votes outside London showed some good examples of effective campaigning. In Preston we got 37 percent and missed electing a second councillor by 70 votes. In Sheffield we came second with 25 percent of the vote. In Manchester we won 12 percent and, in a newly contested ward, nearly 10 percent. In Cambridge and Bolton the vote was around 15 percent. The Galloway operation in contrast has reduced itself to a local party in a couple of areas without even the pretence of being a national organisation. Galloway will not be able to win a seat in the general election if he cannot win more than 11.3 percent in East London. And although Salma Yaqoob’s Sparkbrook ward returned another councillor the vote went down in the neighbouring Sparkhill and Kings Heath wards, both of which would need to
see increased votes for her to win the whole parliamentary constituency of which they are a part.

The Left List does have serious trade union support and a nationwide presence. We must now use this to assist in the rebuilding of an alternative to New Labour that will not be derailed by the surge in Tory and Nazi support at the ballot box.

38 responses to “Move to the right punishes New Labour for 10 wasted years”

  1. OK, now I wanna be sedated…

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  2. I’m slightly disappointed, Liam.

    To be honest though Liam I think you’d be better off trying to build unity on the ground against the fascists, against capitalist privatisation and racist policing rather than continue the sad old sorry tale of sniping about other group’s foolish comments.

    The SWP’s turn to the class struggle may be an inept tactical turn to deflect away from bad news about elections but actually it is very important to rebuild the class struggle with all working class militantsand socialists.

    Let’s have some unity in action.

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  3. There isn’t going to be unity is there Jason with the type of comments on here and at SUN? Liam, why not engage with the SWP’s assessment and have a political debate instead of condesending, arch, sniping?

    I don’t see how trying to build class struggle is inept. It’s what the SWP has been doing in conjuntion with the election.

    It’s undisputable that the left took a hammering. Despite a few good results both the Left List and Renewal made very little impact. Unless we understand and agree on why that happened and seek to change it then unity will be a mirage in the desert.

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  4. “There is now a very real chance that parts of the left can unite (common enemy and all that, made flesh by Boris), and he wants to make sure the nastiness continues so that it doesn’t happen.”

    The comments don’t help but they don’t prevent unity – the reality of a fascist victory and more government attacks is more pressing than hurt feelings over comments. We can get over it! And more importantly we must!

    Turning to class struggle is very necessary- I was only suggesting it might be a bot of a cover for an electoral disappointment but to be honest it’s a move in the right direction. The BNP are stalking our streets and there’s still a war in Iraq and a war on public services
    Black and white unite and fight

    Let’s do it

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  5. Jason read Ger Francis, tonyc, Nas et al. comments on SUN and then tell me there will be unity. They are frothing at the mouth over building power now that they mistakenly consider they have vanquished the SWP. These are desperate people clinging on to the last vestiges of an empire that will never grow. It’s no use believing you’re sailing majestically on an ocean liner when you’re being tossed and turned on a waterlogged raft.

    If they acknowledge the dreadful situation the left is in and dropped the Walter Mitty mindset then perhaps we could build unity. You have their analysis and you have the SWP’s. I know which one is the most realistic.

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  6. Jason, believe me the SWP is not ducking the terrible results for the left. But every cloud has a silver lining (to some extent) so rank and file organising is the way forward.

    Again I return to the issue of how to build unity. I don’t believe that unity is possible unless we sort out the fundemental issue of whether to build a left alternative inside or outside of Labour. The pull of Labourism is what is preventing unity.

    I hope unity is possible but nevertheless we can still unite on single issues which is better than nothing I suppose.

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  7. Yeah but Ray what’s more important building a fighting unity against the class enemy or nursing hurt feelings?

    If they don’t respond to calls for unity then that’s their problem- there are thousands out there ready to but don’t a hand a victory to those who don’t want unity in fighting united fronts by not calling for those fighting united fronts and more than calling for them getting out there and actually doing it.

    With that in mind I’m taking a res from the blogs for a day or two- final announcement

    “Health Care for All” is one of the central demands of this year’s May
    Day march in Manchester, organised by the Trades Union Council and Campaigners for asylum rights.

    May Day march, rally & celebration
    Bank Holiday Monday, 5 May
    Assemble 11.30am, All Saints, Oxford Road, Manchester,
    March to Manchester Town Hall
    Rally at the Peace Gardens with speakers.
    Followed by celebration event in the Friends Meeting House (behind Manchester Central Library)
    2.00 pm – 6.00 pm.
    Food provided
    1. ‘From Peterloo to the Pearl River Delta…’ with Paul Mason, BBC Newsnight journalist, based on his recent book ‘Live Working or Die Fighting, how the working class went global’
    2. The Flying pickets. Manchester launch of ‘The Flying Pickets the 1972 builders’ strike and the Shrewsbury trials’ with authors Dave Ayre, Reuben Barker, Jim French, Jimmy Graham & Dave Harker
    3. Will Kaufman sings ‘Woody Guthrie: Hard Times and Hard Travellin’

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  8. Ray, do you see any problem at all with the SWP using its post-election statement to make jibes at Galloway, sneer at Salma and attack Respect?

    You might want to contrast it with Respect’s statement, which perhaps shows a clearer perspective.

    If you can’t see anything wrong with Rees’s statement at 1am today, then that would explain why you can’t understand that I think Rees is out to destroy any chance of unity with us. But I think most people will clearly see that Rees’s statement is a statement of division, not a call for unity.

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  9. I take your point Jason. You’re right, there’s work to be done and that’s the most important thing right now.

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  10. No tonyc I don’t think there is anything wrong with making a political analysis of the election and the state of the post-election left.

    If you want to predictably charcterise it as a call for division then go for it. You have no intention of unifying with anyone so drop the pretend outrage. It’s getting tiresome and we’re in a new era. Right now you’re the beggar urinating on the homeless person so it would be in your interest to eat a bit of humble pie.

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  11. “I take your point Jason. You’re right, there’s work to be done and that’s the most important thing right now.”

    Cool.

    “No tonyc I don’t think there is anything wrong with making a political analysis of the election and the state of the post-election left.

    If you want to predictably charcterise it as a call for division then go for it. You have no intention of unifying with anyone so drop the pretend outrage. It’s getting tiresome and we’re in a new era. Right now you’re the beggar urinating on the homeless person so it would be in your interest to eat a bit of humble pie.”

    ffs- not so cool.

    anyway I live in hope.

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  12. I wish I shared your optimism Jason but without some agreement on a political direction for the left then unity is an illusion. I suppose I should ignore the baiting as it’s not actually contributing to the debate. I shall try to be cool…

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  13. While there is a fair amount one can agree with in this statement the tone it adopts towards Respect is not helpful. The organisation’s vote was credible in a number of areas and this is attributed to voter confusion or worse. It could also be evidence that Respect has established a base.

    There remains an opportunity to build a class struggle party. Respect’s vote, the LL vote, the SP vote, the Green vote and the number of independent candidates elected show that a critical mass of people willing to break with traditional parties exists. We’ll be exploring that theme at the SR dayschool on the subject.

    What is clear is that any new formation has to be transparently pluralistic and democratic if it is to put down real roots among the disparate groups which are rejecting social democracy.

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  14. I think the SWP analysis of Renewal is spot on. It’s not claiming that Renewal did badly in certain areas it’s stating that the vote for the left outside of Labour is down and the divisions are not helping either Renewal or the Left List. It was certainly a mistake for Renewal to throw their weight behind Livingstone when a independent united left may have done a lot better. Please remember that where Renewal did well this was based on 4 years of joint work using a name that belongs to all of us.

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  15. Whatever Ovenden and Ger over on sun want to say the result for Galloway was diabolical and seems to me toi be the beginning of the end. Remember his vote was massively down on what was achieved 4 years ago. GG on the basis doesn’t have a hope of winning at the general election, the RR vote in east london showed a decline in support. There is no other way to put.. we were told for months that GG radio programme meant he has mass appeal to people the left never get support from, the bus fiasco we were told by Ovenden was a massive break through and now everyone new he was standing and now the line is no one knew he was standing..Ovenden and Hoveman have completely mis calculated re Galloway.. he is disliked by many people due to BB and being seen as a bit of a spiv ..£300,000 per year is not acceptable for a socialsit MP, allowing himself to be used by Livingstone alongside the green party, lib dems and the rich to appeal to all voters was a gross miscalculation. GG I think will carry on with TALKSPORT but he is a b list celeb running out of time.
    Now the LL vote in London was awful etc etc no denying that. There needs to be a sober anaylsis of the current situation.

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  16. modernityblog Avatar
    modernityblog

    the real issue is the BNP and how they will use their success to build organisationally, for far too long we have underestimated these neo-Nazi headbangers and yet they carefully learnt lessons, toned down the Hitler admiration, put on suits and aimed at electoral success, knowing that if they achieve that they can build up in other areas

    and in the meanwhile the Left has split asunder

    I suspect that no direct political unity is possible between the competing elements of old Respect, still too much bitterness, egomania and personalities, but I hope that they would work together to solidly defeat the BNP

    that is the task at hand

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  17. Well the BNP are one issue and not wanting to down play the Nazi scum and what not, but they didn’t do that well.
    I think the results were terrible for both sides of Respect. What they really show is that Left electoralism is a total failure. Against the background of a resurgent Tory party and Labour’s debacle, its about time we stopped trying to play on their ground and returned to our ground.
    The key task of the hour is not cobbling together yet another electoral alliance, but re-building the unions.

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  18. “Well the BNP are one issue and not wanting to down play the Nazi scum and what not, but they didn’t do that well.”

    I’m not sure about that bill j- getting an assembly member should be a rallying call for all anti-fascists. Of course, only a small minority of the working class vote for them but it is very important to mobilise to smash them.

    I think rebuilding the unions is one of the key tasks .

    But another key task, related to this but wider as well, is uniting community campaigns with trade unionists playing a prominent role against cuts, privatisation, racist attacks, etc.

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  19. SWP ‘turn to the class struggle’ – oh yes, so what’s Post Worker doing then?

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  20. One of the features of the years of Labour government is the extent to which the unions’ relationship with the party has been a real obstacle to developing militancy. There is a strong link between offering an alternative political expression, which will necessarily have to take part in elections, and the rebuilding of combative unions. The two are not counterposed.

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  21. The two are not necessarily counterposed as long as socialist activists are remembering to build class fighting organisations and that electoral activity is strictly secondary to that.

    On a union issue demanding immediate solidairty- in fact feel free to put this bit as a seperate post

    http://www.permanentrevolution.net/?view=entry&entry=2074

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  22. Support Bolton School Strike

    A school in Bolton is taking strike action after the council announced its planned closure as part of an academy program. 94% of members voted for Yes to discontinuous strike action against the change of employer. The first day of strike action is this Thursday 8th May. Rush messages of support to the Withins staff nut@withins.bolton.sch.uk

    Phil Roberts, the union rep, said: “This strike shows the strength of feeling and will hopefully send a message to the local authority that we want to stay with that employer.”

    The ballot is for discontinuoius action and there is a strong determination amongst members to take whatever action necessary to win on this. This is obviously a very imnportnat fight and deserves the support of union activists up and down the country. It is yet another sign that members in schools are prepared to take militant action in defence of wages, conditions and education. Victory to the Bolton strike!

    Please make sure you get your local union branch and workplace branhc to send messages of support as well as sending resolutions demanding an immediate ballot for further ongoing strike action against the pay cuts.

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  23. modernityblog Avatar
    modernityblog

    the Left constantly underestimates the extreme Right

    it happened in France in the 1970s, I spoke to people (French and Brits) on the topic and they were dismissive of Le Pen’s chances (remember how big the PCF, etc were then)

    and now look at things, a massive NF, a shrunken Left

    just how fucking big do the BNP have to get before the Left realise the danger?

    does the BNP have to get 5 seats in the GLA before the penny will drop? and then we will be told “ahh, well they’ve got 5 seats, not much we can do about it now” ?

    building the Unions shouldn’t be counterpoised to fighting the BNP, the two go hand in hand, but first the needs to be a realisation of the slimy BNP’s potential and true danger

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  24. I tend to agree. You’re definitely right that the two issues aren’t counterposed- militant fights against cutbacks, in the unions and on the streets, a left that can actually win, will definitely help defeat the BNP as well as mobilising forces to confront it physically.

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  25. I don’t think any of the suggestions are mutually exclusive. Building among rank and file workers will mean that we will have a much more effective anti-fascist network. It will also help if/when we stand candidates in elections.

    The primary goal for the left must be to break from Labour. This is the one issue that is at the heart of the disagreement on the left and needs to be resolved. We must unite on this common issue because then we will have a greater chance of building an independent organisation that may draw radicalised workers and their unions away from Labour.

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  26. modernityblog Avatar
    modernityblog

    the primary goal should be to defeat the fascists, because if you don’t the Left won’t be allowed on the streets, the Left will be driven off

    and by that time breaking with Labour will be yet another meaningless slogan thrown about

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  27. The Nazi’s don’t have a street presence as the NF did in the 70’s. Their success is electorially based and this is because the BNP has diluted its message unlike the NF who consider the BNP to have sold out.

    Numerically the left is stronger on the streets and in the community. In the work place the left predominate and the BNP have not got a toe hold in workplaces as the NF had in the 70’s.

    Labour lost this election because of the 10p tax and other economic issues. The Tories got votes because of these issues and not because there is a racist and anti-immigration backlash across the nation.

    Most importantly we should not panic because it clouds the judgement. The BNP barely scraped through with one GLA position. They were hoping for three. Their vote nationally did not improve. The Tories gained out of the disillusionment with Labour not the BNP.

    Now let’s all take a deep breath. It’s not a good sign that the BNP were elected to the GLA BUT the left is in a position as it was when Derek Beakon was elected to cause the nazi’s no end of problems. Believe me it felt like the end of the world when Beakon was elected but we got rid of him.

    We mustn’t make the mistake of over reacting and focusing all our attention on the nazi’s. The other important work must carry on and that includes breaking with the albatross that is the Labour Party. With a bit of mettle and a steely gaze at the work ahead of us we’ll endure this set back.

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  28. modernityblog Avatar
    modernityblog

    [sigh] ray, do you even read what other people type?

    I have explained it, I remember the 1970s VERY well, that’s the point

    at the moment the BNP are building up a head of steam, and IF they are not tackled NOW then it will be too late once they got 5+ GLA members, used it to build up street by street support and have a massive organisation with funding etc

    and no, you won’t get the Left to agree to “building the Party” yet again

    they seen it done over the decades and all of the shambles that went with it, (ask someone about Socialist Alliance, the SLP, etc) but people MIGHT be persuaded to find some unity of purpose in fighting fascism, which alongside union efforts may be productive and meaningful if done soon enough

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  29. Brown’s defeat means there will be some time before the next election, for both sides (LL and RR) to build branches and strengthen local organisation. It helps neither side to continue old arguments.

    As SWP commentators have said Left List or Left Party is not a bad name so why dont they just agree that they will no longer claim to be RESPECT. Anyway that name is connected to Galloway, and they say they dont want to be asoociated with GG.

    Also it would be helpful if RR And LL agree not to fight over the same territory e.g it would be ridiculous now if LL decides to stand against GG and RR in Tower Hamlets at the next General election. LL had soem creditable results in Sheffield, Preston etc so we shouldnt be fighting over the same territory. Also we should be accepting the SP has built up support in some areas for them to get a clear run without left competitors.

    Such an approach would help all sides move on and improve on this debacle.

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  30. Some useful points have been made but the undercurrent of sectarian backbiting is all too evident. Two points on tone: all of us – LP left, SWP, RR and SP- have an awful lot to be modest about, so let’s listen a bit more and be slightly tentative in our assertions; past episodes of setback for the left are characterised by periods of counterproductive inter left rows.
    The whole of the left has to come together to fight a series of issue such as the public sector pay cap, privatisation,the rise of the BNP and imperialist wars.This is the most important priority. A very significent proportion of those who can be so engaged are not remotely winnable to extra LP electoral initiatives. That does not mean that a project of building a broad multi-tendency socialist party able to challenge the monopoly hold of Labour can be junked. But to imagine that , at a time when the Tories are on the rise and likely to win the next election, this will be a propitious terrain for such a project would be wrong.I can remember being involved in the Socialist Unity campaigns and being so excited about totally surpassing the SWP electoral results ( well by a few hundred if you want to be pedantic). Sadly our good efforts at the General Election were slightly overshadowed by the victory of Margaret Thatcher.
    Talking of the SWP, we need to get a perspective. They have not become the WRP and the contain lots of good hard working comrades.But they have to relearn how to work with other people in a non-manipulative way. The behavious of their leadership over the SSP and Respect will be even more catastrophic in this next period when we have to combine our forces in a series of defensive struggles.
    Finally on the BNP. The left blogosphere is pretty London centric, so maybe the GLA result will stir people up. Out in the sticks, particularly in the ex-coal fields, the BNP is consolidating; despite having a leadership that, thank goodness, appears to have a death wish with its Colletts and Hannams etc,etc. It will suggest, on some occasions, that the BNP is now the real party of Labour. And will be believed by some poor,old,ill or undereducated members of the working class who have been triangulated out of sight by New Labour. We have to discuss thisproblem since the existing nostrums of “no platform” or “vote for any democratic party” do not seem to provide all the answers.

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  31. Until those on the left drop this “it was the SWP wot dun it” attitude then the political reason for why unity in Respect broke down won’t be resolved. Unity only works if there is an agreement on the political direction of the alliance.

    The culture of blaming individual organisations rather than resolving the political disagreements is what holds us back. At the moment the blame culture still appears to be prevalent but I hope we can continue to work together on single issues.

    Received txt about anti-BNP demo on Tues at 6pm outside City Hall. Some workers are refusing to work with nazis and we need to build solidarity with them as well.

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  32. Many on the left might well conclude that this electoral disaster, which is a most damning indictment of the whole New Labour project, renders any possibility of reclaiming Labour for the left nigh on impossible.

    Respect Renewal does not see itself as the finished article in this regard, not by a long chalk. What we need is for those unions who have broken with Labour (and that list is likely to grow over the next few months) should call a conference with a view to setting up an anti-capitalist party of the working class. I’m sure that all of us, Respect Renewal, SWP Left List and others, would want to be part of that.

    We have a wonderful opportunity to push the debate forward on where the left goes from here with the Convention of the Left this September. This now has the backing of the LRC, Green Lefts such as Derek Wall, as well as left trade unionists like Matt Wrack, Mark Serwotka and Jeremy Dear. Bill Greenshields, President of the NUT, is also very interested. Jeremy Corbyn, John McDonnell, Tony Benn and George Galloway are all listed as sponsors. The SWP and PR are supportive although the SP are still keeping their distance, as is Bob Crow.

    We should all now pick up this ball and run with it. We should put motions through our union branches to sponsor the event. And the SP should be encouraged to abandon their wait-and-see approach and back the convention.

    For more information, see http://www.conventionoftheleft. org/home. htm and the discussion blog at http://www.conventionoftheleft.org.uk/

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  33. PR are fully behind the Convention of the Left.

    Interesting suggestion about a conference for an anti-capitalist party from the unions, Roy. Obviously if the FBU, RMT, PCS and other unions outside Labour got involved this would be very interesting and have some potential.

    However, the immediate priority I think is to have a co-ordinated fightback against the public sector paycuts and try to get together an alliance of rank and file trade unionists from PCS, NUT, Unison, Unite, GMB, RMT, CWU, FBU and others to push for actions and co-ordinate what we can achieve.

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  34. Brown may lighten up on the 10p tax issue but I think Labour will move to the right on certain issues like immigration. They’ll try to beat the Tories at their own game and while the BNP have influence the stakes of that game will rise higher if the Tories try to outdo the BNP’s racist agenda.

    The left outside of labour have built up some union support. It’s important to build on our potential to attract union rank and file and a few of the leadership especially now that Labour is in meltdown.

    “However, the immediate priority I think is to have a co-ordinated fightback against the public sector paycuts and try to get together an alliance of rank and file trade unionists from PCS, NUT, Unison, Unite, GMB, RMT, CWU, FBU and others to push for actions and co-ordinate what we can achieve.”

    Apart from organising against the BNP I think this is the most important activity for us to continue to involve ourselves in. I assume that unity can be achieved in these two areas at the very least.

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  35. Brown needs to be pressured to overturn the decision to scrap the 10p tax rate not simply be allowed to get away with a pitiful apology and abstract talk of wishy washy compensation.What a fool!

    Yes, to a coordinated fightback by public sector workers against Brown’s neo liberal offensive.

    Yes, to supporting the Convention of the Left and bringing the whole of the Left together, so we can finally start MAKING SENSE and build a solid unity on what we agree on in terms of ideas, policies, strategies, tactics and directions and learn to put aside and agree to disgree on that which we dont.TIME TO MOVE ON.

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  36. I agree it is time to move on yet I doubt that the left will join up into one organisation. Perhaps that’s not such a bad thing because each of our parts may work together to create something much more effective than a single organisation ever could.
    I hope a positive commitment to work together comes out of the Convention of the Left even if it doesn’t mean forming one organisation.

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  37. It ‘should’ be part of an ongoing process of trust and confidence building based on good organisation , constructive negotiation, genuine cooperation and well planned coordination.

    As I said it ‘should be’………..sure, to what extent all main serious and sane parts of the Left are willing to genuinely come together and discuss is one thing, nevermind come together within one organisation which something else completely.

    We have got to start somewhere and it would be a very positive step forward if the Convention of the Left can help achive that ,it certainly looks to be the best opportunity as it stands at the moment.

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  38. correction ‘achieve’ as against ‘achive’.

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