July 09 060 Did you know that Simon Hughes is not a Trotskyist? I can exclusively reveal tonight that the Liberal Democrat MP is not in favour of nationalising stuff under workers’ control and that this is the view of his party.

Who’d have predicted that? Eh?

Shocked I was. Shocked and stunned.

The Campaign Against Climate Change (CACC) organised a pretty good impromptu demo in support of the Vesta occupation this evening outside the Department of Energy and Climate Change. Phil Thornhill kicked off by explaining that the ice up around the North Pole is melting rapidly and that this might cause a very sudden increase in the planet’s temperature. To this he added that wind turbines are one of the ways which will allow us to generate electricity without throwing millions of tons of carbon into the atmosphere and that the CCC had been down to speak to the workers and support their occupation of their factory.

Next up was Darren Johnson on behalf of the Greens. He gave his full support to the workers and gave the sort of speech that Tony Benn would have given. He was followed by a spectrum of Trots pretending to be random punters while accidentally holding a copy of a left wing paper they’d accidentally just bought for the first time ever.

The only political figure with any national profile who thought it worth giving up an hour of his time to support a group of workers occupying a factory was Simon Hughes. The cops had decreed that no megaphones were to be used and I can’t claim to have heard too much of what he said but there was something about the importance of skills, something about windpower being a good thing and global warming being a bad thing. Not quite the revolutionary programme but not worth getting your knickers in a twist about. Applaud mildly and see who’s up next is the sensible reaction.

Gosh no!

“It’s a popular front!” “He’s just grandstanding!” “Let’s occupy the ministry!” “Are you in favour of nationalisation???”

This was a bunch of Trots flashing back to the time they’d given Heseltine, Hurd, Prescott or Straw a rough time in their students’ union except this time it was a real campaign in defence of real workers’ jobs. So instead of Simon Hughes speaking for three or four minutes the revolutionary vanguard spent twenty minutes exposing him as a dreadful reformist in front of the revolutionary vanguard. Then, when he was finished, some tried to carry on the argument convinced that the one of the best known Lib Dems could be won over to Trotskyism by a five minute hectoring. It must work sometimes.

CACC done good. It worked out how totemic this dispute is and organised a demo in support of the occupation. A chunk of the far left pursued its mission of convincing the world that nothing is more important than selling a couple of papers and getting one of your people on the microphone.

Derek Wall, who has a more positive outlook on life has given a slightly different account here.

Support the Factory Occupation

Public meeting

Speakers: Vestas Worker, Chris Baugh (PCS Ass. Gen. Sec, pc), Seamus Milne, Jonathan Neale

Friday 24th July, 6pm, ULU Malet Street, London WC1E 7HY

Called by the Campaign Against Climate Change Trade Union Group

 

 

12 responses to “And those pricks are?”

  1. A rather more comradely approach would have been to politely ask Mr Hughes if he would support the IoW Vestas workers being helped to set up an enterprise which they owned – what with the Lib Dems being supportive of co-operatives, and all.

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  2. I only arrived towards the end of the demo cos I had been speaking on the Honduras demo before…I was told that Simon Hughes had opposed nationalisation which annoyed some people.

    The statement from Hugo Blanco, giving solidarity from the indigenous in Peru, was better received at the demo I believe.

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  3. Perhaps you would care to name those Trots?Or provide evidence that they are all ex-students?

    I have mixed feelings on Simon Hughes. I saw someone on the TV a while ago who said they’d never forgive him for the gay-baiting campaign that enabled him to beat Peter Tatchell and become an MP in the first place. On the other hand Tatchell himself said he’d forgiven him and that he’d done good work on equality during his time in parliament. Obviously the important thing here is the jobs at Vestas.

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  4. barnetcommunitycampaign Avatar
    barnetcommunitycampaign

    Address the crowd for two or three minutes? You have the ratio the wrong way around. Simon Hughes is a national figure, and a bighead. He jumped up on the wall and addressed the crowd, and addressed the crowd, and addressed the crowd…

    Democracy is not about boring people into submission. There were plenty of other people there with more interesting things to say, and he was just allowed to use this platform, and use this platform and use this platform… to promote himself.

    I did ask him afterwards:
    – did he support the occupation, yes or no. He said he supported the workers, if they thought that was what they had to do… a typically slippery politician’s answer. He wouldn’t have any platform at all if it hadn’t been for those people taking their brave stand. I said it wouldn’t have been in the news at all if they hadn’t done what they had done.
    – if he didn’t support nationalisation what was he in favour of? Workers’ control? In a way, yes, he was in favour of an employees’ buyout. I don’t really know what to make of that.

    If you support this occupation you must know that it was down to the work of a few far-left hotheads – Workers’ Climate Action, AWL and SWP – going to the Isle of Wight over a period of weeks, talking to the Vestas workers, building up their confidence, bringing lessons from other campaigns, that we are having this conversation at all.

    Best wishes,
    Vicki from Barnet

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  5. Vicki – my understanding is that Simon Hughes had been invited along by CACC. Phil had announced that he was due to arrive at about 6.30 and he did. Now while you or I might not necessarily invite a Lib Dem MP that is CACC’s prerogative and the place to have that conversation is inside the campaign.

    If the barracking had come from group of workers from the factory who’d been sold out by Simon Hughes that would have been fine. It was the self appointed vanguard doing it and that’s what made it look stupid. To the civil servants working in the office watching the thing and to any non Trot environmentalists there the spectacle looked like a bunch of bad tempered Year 9 kids giving a supply teacher a rough time.

    Hughes was left with no choice but to carry on speaking. Would anyone with any degree of self repsect allow themselves to be howled down like that? Of course he was going to carry on and probably had a good laugh about it later with his mates.

    It’s just bizarre to expect a Lib Dem to support Marxist demands. That in no way negates the good work done by the comrades who gave the workers the confidence to occupy the factory.

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  6. “Ed Milliband finally speaks:”

    OK, it’s bedtime.

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  7. I was at the edge of the demo and didn’t see who was heckling. But all the SWP comrades I spoke to thought it Hughes should have been allowed to speak. However, the length of his speech and his refusal to come down on the side of the workers might be thought to be provocative.

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  8. Maybe some SWP comrades who were getting revenge for Simon Hughes demolition job on Martin Smith of Newsnight.

    And thanking the SWP for bringing the lessons of other campaigns!! Like Lindsey????? Anyone who supports this strike is playing with fire!!!

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  9. Steve – at a meeting in support of the Vesta workers last night Jonathan Neale suggested that should a similar barrage of heckling happen again people use the traditional British “shush” to silence it.

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  10. The Financial Times today reported (very briefly) that Vestas were going to court for a repossession order.

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  11. […] to than most Labour MPs. As the photo shows he was the only MP to bother turning up at a small demonstration in support of the Vestas strikers held about ten minutes’ walk from […]

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