The convention was preceded by a Stop The War march past New Labour’s conference. My guess, and that of most people I spoke to, was that it was in the region of 4000 strong with a fairly good local mobilisation and the hard core anti war activists from other parts of England, Wales and Scotland.
Consider what follows random first impressions rather than a finished account of the event.
On Saturday and Sunday there was around 2-300 people in the room at any one time with a strong representation of activists from the north west of England. Many of them were thoroughly engaged with the process and are palpably keen to find some vehicle for joint political action.![]()
Rather too much of the discussion was taken up with set piece propaganda speeches rather than a meaningful attempt to engage with real politics. There’s something about the phrase “I’m speaking on behalf of the International Bolshevik Tendency…” that always brings on a mild headache. And this is where I think the major structural weakness of the conference lay. The discussions on unity and cooperation were abstract. It was Pat Sikorski speaking on behalf of the RMT who most successfully tried to give some real guidance on what was necessary for this unity to become real. He asserted that there
can be no separation between the industrial and the political and indicated the alliances that were possible between groups of workers and the communities that will be affected by rises in fuel and food prices over the coming months.
There were a couple of big positives about the event. The first was the complete lack of manipulation and the absence of a top down approach. Introductory remarks were kept short and served the purpose of kicking off a discussion rather than setting an agenda. The choice of speakers was utterly random and unpredictable which made for a free flowing discourse rather than set piece debates. It was a successful and determined attempt to build real political pluralism into the event.
It’s too early to say if this conference will be a trigger for similar regional initiatives. It certainly has a future as a counterpoint to Labour Party conferences but it was the first time in a long time that such a wide cross section of the left have had so many civilised conversations over the space of a weekend.
Thanks to Richard Searle for the photos.





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