Thanks to Rob for sending me this short personal account of Tolpuddle.
“It’s a long, long way to Tolpuddle from Tamworth- especially battling holiday traffic, driving rain, and sluggish service at our one stop-off at a Little Chef.
But we made it after a 6 hour drive and I enjoyed watching Lisa put up the tent in the dark whilst I looked after an over-tired toddler.
Still, I managed to get to the bar before closing and hooked up with the comrades from Southwark Respect- which is always a pleasure. I then proceeded to bump into them, along with other comrades old and new, throughout the weekend.
Had a few interesting conversations and discussions on the hoof – some enlightening, some amusing, some confusing. Swapped some anecdotes, bought some papers. Bought lots of papers actually and filled a bag with assorted leaflets.
Lots of interesting stalls in the Martyrs Marquee. Having just a couple of tables for each group is a great leveller. If used as a snapshot of the state of the left its clear that the largest group in Britain is the SPGB followed by its own expellees in the originally named SPGB but coming up fast is the Workers Fight / Internationalist Communist Union group- you know the Lutte Ouvriere co-thinkers (some of them co-thought to the extent that they also had strong French accents).
There was a small Labour Party stall outside but, having no politics- or at least none they weren’t ashamed of- they contented themselves with running a raffle instead.
Prize for dullest headline on a paper goes to the Socialist Party for ‘Jobs not dole’ – so that would be ‘jobs not no jobs’ then?
Gave away some copies of the Respect freebie tabloid and sold a couple of copies of Socialist Resistance too.
(Note to self: next year we really need to have a proper stall with books, back issues and other goodies.)
(Note to national committee: lets avoid a clash with a national meeting next time shall we?)
Weather report: Sunny and bright with a few showers. I got a sunburnt face which looks weird with my white eyebrows.
Saturday afternoon was a freebie hunt. Byron got a plastic Slinky ™ and three juggling balls from the NASUWT, some snazzy RMT sunglasses, lots of balloons and a small Cuban flag.
The RMT have the best t-shirts by far (but they weren’t free) – I liked the one with a picture of a rattlesnake saying “Will strike if provoked”
The more moderate NUT contented themselves with handing out apples and packets of lettuce and coriander seeds- a patient vegetarian could live for free!
Balloons, squashy pillar boxes and that stuff you smear on your lips from the CWU.
Prize for the most silly hat: Jay from Bristle. Sorry mate, we love you to bits but I have asked my relatives to take me to a Swiss clinic if I ever wear one like that.
Sunday afternoon got very busy as coaches started arriving for the march and rally. There were literally hundreds of union, party and campaign banners- including quite a few from the Communist Party and various Labour Party branches. Lots of brass bands and pipe bands and socialist choirs too.
Mr Benn was star-turn. I am told he did the same speech, almost word for word, as last year. And the year before. But it’s a winning formula, so why change it? He did get a big cheer for dissing the Afghan war and he remains massively popular.
Impossible to gauge the overall numbers – suffice it to say ‘several thousand’ – certainly too many for the rally field and for the main street. Perhaps the Tolpuddle festival is outgrowing the little village of Tolpuddle and they might consider re-locating it to somewhere more accessible like the West Midlands for a change. Either that or demolish some of those picturesque cottages to build a bigger site…
Tolpuddle is a showcase of the British labour movement at its best – its lively and family friendly and the age profile is much younger than I had expected or been led to believe, the live entertainment is good, beer reasonably priced, the showers are hot (and free) and the toilets clean and, most importantly, it is highly political without being too down-your-throat,
It was our first time- I’m sure it won’t be our last.
Now we have twenty minutes for questions and contributions from the floor…”
Rob Marsden,
Tamworth





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