Richard Hatcher sets out some ideas for how Respect could start to develop policy on the local government level. A version of this article will appear in the September edition of Socialist Resistance.

People see their city, their town, their borough, as a significant context for their lives – it shapes their lives in important ways, and they in turn try to influence and shape it, in the limited ways they can, to meet their needs. At the centre is the municipality, the council, as provider of public services, as employer, and as site of local democracy.

The implication for Respect is that wherever it is trying to build branches it has to have a political project for the city as a whole. (I’m thinking of Birmingham, Manchester, Bristol etc. London is a more complex case but the same principles apply.) In other words, it is more than taking up national issues locally, and more than doing local politics at the level of the ward or constituency, and it is more than taking up specific city-wide issues – a public sector strike, a campaign around a hospital or an Academy – as and when they occur, though of course we should do all of these. It is recognising that all of them need to be integrated into a full spectrum systematic and long-term city-wide strategy.

There are implications for Respect’s electoral work. When we stand in local elections, and where we get elected, we do not do so solely as representatives of and accountable to the voters in a particular ward or constituency. We stand for and are elected to the city council, which means we are involved in taking decisions, or taking positions on decisions, on city-wide policies, and are therefore politically (if not electorally) accountable to the whole city. Though the basic unit of building Respect might be ward or constituency branches, it has to be more than the sum of its parts at the city level. This is not a debate about where we build Respect – i.e. the extent to which we focus on the few areas where we have a chance of getting elected in 2010 – it is a debate about the politics we build it on. A political project at the level of the city is a key element in getting Respect elected, for two reasons. One, because it shows us as serious local politicians and Respect as a serious city-wide party in its political scope and ambition. Two, because many of the issues facing people in the wards and constituencies we stand in can only be addressed adequately at the city level.

That means we have to develop a programme at the level of the city which engages with the various concerns of social groups across the city. In part the programme will necessarily be defensive – against cuts, privatisation etc. But it also has to offer a different and inspiring vision of how the city could and should be. Without succumbing to illusions in ‘municipal socialism’, It has to put forward concrete demands and policies about what should be done now by the city council about such burning issues as transport, crime, youth provision, housing, childcare, urban planning, etc. Take transport as an example: the proposal in Manchester for a congestion charge. This is an opportunity not just to argue for our position (whatever it is!) on congestion charges but to put it forward as one element in a radical vision which might include free public transport in the city and free home-to-work travel paid for by employers. (These are two demands which LCR councillors raise in France – the former is actual policy in a number of cities.)

However, having the right policies is only half the answer. The other half concerns how we think policy should be made. Are we saying ‘just put us in the driving seat and we’ll steer the vehicle in a better direction’, or are we saying that we have an entirely different conception of how local politics should be done, one where the councillors’ role is to work towards empowering citizens through promoting deliberative democracy, collective action and popular self-management?

This aspect of our politics is very undeveloped, but it is crucial at a time when there is profound public cynicism about all political parties and about local government as a whole. This is a problem which Labour itself recognises, in particular because of low turn-outs in local elections and widespread voter cynicism. It is the theme of a number of recent government policy documents, most recently the ludicrously mis-titled White Paper Communities in control: real people, real power (DCLG, July 2008), which ‘aims to pass power into the hands of local communities, to encourage vibrant local democracy in every part of the country, and to give real control over local decisions and services to a wider pool of citizens’. All this is largely empty rhetoric and tokenism, but it is a debate which we need to have alternative answers to. (Academies are a case in point: no mention of them in the White Paper, but Sheffield City Council – Lib Dem – has at least gone as far as announcing that there will be a ballot of parents on any Academy proposal.).

The key principle of ‘doing politics differently’ is of creating spaces in each local authority area in which deliberative democracy can take place about policy issues. The exact relationship of this process of deliberative democracy to the forms of local representative democracy – in particular the city council – is a matter for discussion, and the balance of forces. It needs to be stressed that proposals for democratic participation should not be confused with notions of ‘social partnership’. They are ways of strengthening popular activity and providing a more favourable context for gaining support for radical policies. Their impact would depend not just on the power of argument and popular pressure but on their ability to count on popular mobilisation when necessary.

To give an example, in each local school system we should advocate what we might call an Education Forum. It would be open to all with an interest in education – parents, teachers, other school staff, school students, governors and citizens – though its decisions might be taken only by elected representatives of its constituents. Its purpose would be to discuss and take positions on key policy issues and develop an Education Plan for the local system of schools and colleges. In that context it would discuss and vet significant distinctive policies which a school or college decided it wanted to pursue, in order to decide if they posed problems for social equality and justice in terms of their impact on other schools, thus democratically ensuring local diversity within a common general interest.

One well-known form of local popular participation is ‘participatory budgeting’ (PB). Radical in Porto Alegre, it has now been coopted in a de-radicalised form by Labour in its
document Participatory Budgeting: A Draft National Strategy – Giving more people a say in local spending (DCLG March 2008) and in the White Paper Communities in control: real people, real power. Every council has to delegate some funding powers to local neighbourhoods. But radical PB is very different. Its defining feature is that it enables the construction of a collective city-wide general interest out of particular local community interests through a process of deliberative democracy. This is a practical demand here today. There is an interesting example from the LCR in Paris, where tenants on a number of council housing estates held meetings on each estate to draw up priorities for the housing department to implement. They then elected a delegate for each 10 tenants present who met, looked at evidence, and worked out a list of agreed priorities across the estates, which the housing department then drew up a budget for, got it ratified by the tenants, and implemented (see article by Picheral in Critique Communiste 185, December 2007).

What does all this mean for Respect? It needs to do 4 things:

1. Recognise the need for a city-wide political project, including implications for the role of councillors and local elections.

2. Develop in each area a vision for the city, comprising critique of the capitalist city, defence of what is worth defending, and radical alternatives concretised in credible demands for today.

3. Couple that with a vision of doing politics differently, based on deliberative democracy, popular mobilisation and self-management, and again concretised in specific credible demands and alternatives for today.

4. Set itself the medium-term task of gearing itself up to work in this way by developing its own expertise, trying things out, and systematically sharing experiences and ideas across the country.

Richard Hatcher

July 2008

16 responses to “Respect and the city”

  1. Absolutely ‘on the money’ Richard !

    In the early 1980s the CP, without anything resembling the electoral base Respect has in East London and South Birmingham, developed the idea of alternative plans for boroughs and cities where it had some kind of public presence. The best of these was produced for Hackney. Around the same time socialist-feminists, socialist economists, trade unionists were collaborating on strategies transforming the local state. Jeremy Seabrook did some very good work on Walsall, Cynthia Cockburn’s work on the local state, the book ‘in and against the state’.

    To revive such a politics in a new form appropriate to the 21st century would really start to map out a new and vital role for Respect. Your thinking and practical proposals are a big help here!

    Mark P

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  2. Gosh Mark. There really is nothing like a good blast of early 1980s Stalinist town planning to start the blood running. I can’t wait. In my mind I can already see the results. Wonderful. I’m kidding.

    Check my blog for something on towns and traffic as a contribution to the debate.

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  3. Great stuff.

    We had a meeting in Swindon today of our new branch committee, to discuss our strategy for the next two years. (Our next local elections are in 2010)

    One idea we had was a local publishing project, where we run a blog style journal of our views on local issues, interviews with local people, etc, collaboration and intput from other progressive groups, trade unions, etc, with the aim that we can draw on this for periodical print versions, and a “Respect plan for Swindon” to be launched in 2010.

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  4. Kevin Ovenden Avatar
    Kevin Ovenden

    Well done, Richard. I too find this very suggestive.

    Concreteness is everything over these questions. Take Birmingham. Respect’s deep presence is not across the city as a whole. It is in one distinctly minority part of it. It’s reputation is wider.

    So – projecting a policy and vision across the city as a whole (which is far bigger than and has a different dynamic from, say, Tower Hamlets) has to go hand in hand with deepending an electoral base in the areas where Respect has or is in reach of establishing an elected presence.

    What I mean is this: it’s absolutely right to point out in Tower Hamlets the poorer health and social statistics compared with, say, Kensignton and Chelsea, and to contrast the money spent there with what we get. I’d expect our representatives in a poor area of Birmingham to do the same and seek to lever out of the council resources which the poor areas have been denied.

    That goes hand in hand with projecting a political vision across the city as a whole – which in Birmingham we cannot in fact deliver on in the next couple of years, realistically, unlike in Tower Hamlets where it is conceivable, but not the most likely outcome, that Respect could form or be part of an administration in two years time.

    I guess what I’m saying is that precisely because we have the electoral base that left of Labour forces lacked in the early 1980s, but in a context of declining Labourism, we need to think very local if we are to secure the bases that can enable us to project a wider vision. Are those things in opposition? Of course they are, and navigating that course is what it’s all about.

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  5. COMMENT DELETED – PHONY E MAIL ADDRESS. SEE POLICY.

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  6. David. No danger of any Stalinist town planning I can assure you! In fact the examples I cited came from the Eurocommunist wing of the CP, much influenced in turn by the Italian CP and in particular their work in Bologna which was recorded in a key book of the time ‘Red Bologna’. Likewise much of the work on local politics was pioneered by socialist feminists, left economists, community activists. These kinds of networks are today are in a far, far weaker state and often non-existent, an imaginative application of the kind of practice Richard is outlining, particularly in East London and Birmingham could lay the basis for a new version of this kind of practical-political framework.

    Mark P

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  7. ‘Red Bologna’ is actually a very good book, particularly interesting are the sections on how the administration implemented free public transport. However, a key issue would surely be that local councils in Britain have far less power than they did in the 80s, so the scope for municipal reformism is severely curtailed.

    The Left Alternative Councillor, Michael Lavalette has touched upon an important issue of neoliberal urban regeneration: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wSKs_5Z_CHk&feature=related

    I’ve been conversing with a marxist academic here, who has written a lot on regeneration as the urban dimension of neoliberalism.

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  8. Joseph Kisolo Avatar
    Joseph Kisolo

    We have “to offer a different and inspiring vision of how the city could and should be.”

    I couldn’t agree more.

    I remember in 2006 putting forward the idea of Manchester Respect producing a “Manifesto for Manchester”. Individuals agreed it was a good idea, my branch agreed with the idea and I set up a email group to take things forward, but it didn’t get anywhere, there were only ever 11 posts on the yahoo group. (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Manifesto4Manchester/)

    Part of the problem may have been the way I presented the idea and the fact that I tried to push it forward through an email group rather then through consistent development in the branches, the other problem may have been the fact that Manchester Respect was not at the time particularly united.

    A major issue though was that such long term work just wasn’t seen as the strategic priority by the key movers and shakers who controlled the group. This was a problem that plagued the old Respect and though the SWP with its vision of Respect as a limited special kind of united fount helped entrench short-termism in the organisation it was not the only offender.

    The email group started with the following timescale:
    We should look to having a draft/working document ready for the Manchester Respect conference in Oct/Nov 2006 so that it can be discussed at the conference. We should then look to producing a finished version in Jan/Feb 2007. We will then have it ready in plenty of time before the next local elections.

    Not only did the document never get produced, to my memory we never had the Manchester Respect conference. I think that this was the year that there was a big StW demo planned for the Labour party conference in Manchester around Oct/Nov. I thought that it would be a good idea to try and build a local Respect conference out of this demo. Starting with various meetings on Manchester topics open to all and ending with a closed meeting for members to vote on local proposals. The general feeling was however that it was more important to concentrate on the wider movement and build a anti-war conference.

    We didn’t have a Manchester Respect conference the year after either. I would suggest that such events, formulated as above as open to all, could help pull wider forces into building a Respect’s alternative visions for localities.

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  9. Joseph Kisolo Avatar
    Joseph Kisolo

    One key issue will be the fact that Respect will not have all the expertise to pull of such a vision on our own, we should try to bring in others who are willing to work with us to develop our ideas and also work constructively with the plans put forward by other progressive groups.

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  10. We certainly need a different vision and also a different practice to get there.

    I agree that it shouldn’t just be about Respect or indeed any other group saying join us.

    Rather it should be about working together to force change from the action of the masses.

    A couple of concrete examples:

    Yesterday I went to an interesting meeting about how resources in the Congo continue to be stripped, millions dead over the last decade or so, British and multinational companies using armies to enforce slave labour, war and death to fuel their considerable profits whilst destroying the earth.

    A Congolese activist asked what can we do? How can we ensure what we do here makes a difference?

    The left should unite around this issue and others to draw in as many activists as possible into direct action campaigns. If we had a group in Manchester of just a few hundred willing to take direct action I’m sure we could begin to seed and create a movement that can make a difference to climate change, genocide and environmental destruction.

    Another example- the wholesale transfer of schools and hospitals to the private sector. If students and workers walk out- such as the Bolton strikes- and launch militant occupations and other tactics and begin uniting the struggles we can begin to win.

    There could be other examples in housing- e.g. against evictions, for occupation of offices demanding resources for militant direct action.

    We need to start offering concrete real solutions based on the mobilisation of the working class not promoting each little group- though of course we can do that as well and indeed better as a side effect of creating a genuine movement.

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  11. The general idea is a good one, but it will make some difficult decisions unavoidable – for example, there would have to be a position about issues like congestion charging in Manchester and Birmingham, and such a plan would have to come out against Birmingham’s grammar school system.
    These are issues that you can get away with ignoring at the ward level but not in a plan like this.

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  12. off topic but the times has just noticed that marxists exist. Again.

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article4321671.ece

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  13. Being concrete as Kevin says is essential.

    Andy, perhaps this is the kind of policy you are thinking off? It was originally sent out as a press release and to trades unions, AMs, councillors, news papers etc? It is from some time ago however:

    http://cardiffpolicyforum.blogspot.com/

    I think a Swindon Respect Campaigns and Policy Forum is a very good idea. A resource centre of sorts.

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  14. I think it is necessary to add into strategies of this type about participatory budgets etc. an assessment of the state of the class struggle. In a time of quiescence in the class struggle, I should imagine it is easy to get co-opted by the state. Isn’t this what happened in Brazil?

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  15. modernityblog Avatar
    modernityblog

    talking of principles, will Respect Renewal’s MP be supporting Early Day Motion 2039?

    http://edmi.parliament.uk/EDMi/EDMDetails.aspx?EDMID=36381

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  16. PhilW, I agree with you there. Policies need to have that vision thing going on. They must point beyond the system and yet be perceived as realisable. They must galvanise, animate and arm. They must not be about what can we have but what the working class ultimately needs. They should pose the quesiton of power and bring new forces into action. If they are reduced to simple accounting then it is all too easy to become the policemen of the system. That policy that Owen Davies outlined on the Cardiff Policy Forum had quite a galvanising effect on a previously moribund campaign. That’s not to say it was successful but it made people think about what was possible and gave them the ammunition to at least raise some opposition.

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