Today’s march organised by the Campaign Against Climate Change in London was quite a festival of ideas and some of them were nearly sensible. We don’t get Supreme Master TV in this house but its devotees were handing out glossy leaflets with a peculiar admixture of science about global warming, advice from Supreme Master Ching Hai on why we all need to go vegetarian and a list of the “vegetarian and vegan elite of the world”. It’s a random bunch which includes John Cleese, Pamela Anderson, Charles Darwin, Leonardo Da Vinci and Shania Twain. What I don’t understand is how an organisation promoting this blend manages to get a TV station and most left groups are doing well to get a regular publication that doesn’t sell that many copies.
By my reckoning there were about 2000 people in Parliament Square when the march arrived. It was a much less miserable event than last year’s freezing sodden trudge because we were a lot luckier with the weather. Now I know that the rationale for marching in December is so that the London march happens at the same time as the 70 or so other marches across the world but there are other months in the year when the odds of getting cold and wet are lower. This would probably make for a larger demonstration.
There were not that many union banners present. The largest organised contingents seemed to be either groups of musicians and various lifestyle cohorts. I’m open to correction but one of the groups of musicians seemed to repeatedly play a version of Devo’s politically incorrect Mongoloid. The lifestyle organisations were all pushing the anti-meat message and there was a big emphasis on the virtues of veganism and its part in reducing methane filled cow farts. It’s fair to say that the climate change movement is ideologically pretty heterogeneous. The left was there in the usual sort of numbers that one would expect but the SWP’s profile was lower than it has ever been at a national demonstration due to the clash with the one day Marxism event. The Green Party had a good profile and the new issue of Respect’s paper was on
sale.
Who knows what was said by the speakers? I heard “constituents, direct action and Heathrow” and assumed it was the ever reliable John McDonnell. The amplifiers didn’t really fill the square.
As demonstrations go this one was modestly successful. Its age profile was fairly young. It was lively and dynamic. However judged against the scale of the preventable damage that climate change will cause and the short time span in which meaningful action can be taken then this mobilisation barely scratched the surface of mass consciousness.
Click here to for details about the Campaign Against Climate Change Trade Union Conference and here to download the document on ecosocialism which is part of the discussion on revolutionary regroupment.
Thanks to Richard for the photos.





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