Drummed into every fresh faced revolutionary neophyte is the conviction that the only meaningful measure of success is how big YOUR group is, how many front organisations it can run simultaneously and how many papers it sells at demonstrations. It’s predicated on two ideas. The first is that only one current can have the monopoly on wisdom. The second is that the key for a successful revolutionary transformation is persuading everyone else to accept the first idea.
That brings us onto the upcoming election in UNISON which cynics suggest might have something to do with getting Dave Prentis re-elected as general secretary before the end of his current term. The cynics also suggest that the plan is pre-empt a challenge when he is even more tarnished in a few months.
Nominations have closed and Prentis received 320, a modest fall of 200 since the last election. There are two potential left challengers. Roger Bannister of the Socialist Party got 34 nominations and Labour Party member Paul Holmes got 58. The election is on May 17.
Holmes had said that he would stand down in favour any left candidate who won more nominations than he did. The correct and sensible choice. He has also said that he would call a special conference to put the issue of Labour affiliation to the membership. It’s hard to see what the Amazon of money that UNISON donates to the Labour Party actually delivers to the union’s members but anyone who can read a newspaper can work out that it is not the first issue on the minds of most local government workers at the moment.
Roger Bannister affects to believe that it is a central line of division inside the union and is reported as saying that he won’t stand down in favour of Holmes on account of his Labour membership. Yet by all accounts Holmes’ instincts on all issues connected with defending the union against New Labour are spot on.
From the outside, and I’m open to correction, the principal reason for Roger Bannister choosing to split the left vote is that the overriding priority is to build his organisation. Neither he nor Holmes is going to win but a modestly successful and unified left challenge to the bureaucrat Prentis has the potential to strengthen those forces in the union which are willing to work together to resist the proposed horrors of the coming months.
But that would involve unlearning lesson one from cadre school.





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