image The National Council of the Respect Party met on 22nd May to discuss the aftermath of the 2010 General Election – a serious and detailed discussion took place with all present expressing their determination for Respect to continue our work – seeking to organise and promote, where we are able, our values of peace, justice and equality. The following document is based upon those discussions.

Clive Searle, National Secretary

1) National Council: Progressive Politics after the General Election

The battle for our public services has begun. The new ConDem government has pledged to impose devastating cuts on public spending. The plans to reduce the deficit will be accelerated, with the burden falling on public spending rather than increased taxes for the better off.

Already, more than £6 billion of cuts have been announced with more to follow in the next four months as the coalition government builds its confidence. The economic crisis in the Eurozone and its effect on the British banking system is fuelling the increased pace of public service cutbacks.

The programme of the new government amounts to one of the most severe attacks in British history on public services, jobs and the living standards of working people and the poor. To minimise resistance and to strengthen itself, the government plans to rewrite the rules to force further coalition government in the event of failure rather than calling a new general election (the 55% rule). Cameron aims to reduce the number of MPs in a move that is widely believed will cost Labour up to 40 seats. The coalition has also pledged to ‘pursue a detailed agreement on limiting donations and reforming party funding in order to remove big money from politics’.

The last measure, from parties funded largely by super-rich individuals, aims to attack the right of trade unions to fund political parties – a direct attack on the Labour Party and the rights of working people in general to organise to secure political representation.

The outcome of the General Election is a weak, unstable government seeking to limit democracy to strengthen itself while embarking on protracted confrontation with all those who wish to defend jobs, wages, pensions and public services. This will be accompanied by a rise in racism – which the mainstream parties will either pander to or directly promote. This has already been signalled by the new measures attacking ‘economic migrants’.

The General Election

The General Election saw a 5% swing from Labour to the Tories; not enough for Cameron to form a majority government, but enough to force Labour from office. The hung parliament was a victory for none of the three major parties.

David Cameron, Etonian public schoolboy, is Prime Minister with the lowest share of the vote of any Tory party in history. He is only able to move into No.10 with the support of the Liberal Democrats, led by the ‘Orange Book’ group of right wing neo-liberals. Cameron describes the new alliance as socially liberal and economically conservative. Although the Liberal Democrats lost seats, their share of the vote increased since 2005 as many became desperate for an alternative to Labour and the Tories.

Many of these voters face the reality that they voted Lib Dem but got the Tories. The Liberal Democrats have already ditched key commitments such as the scrapping of Trident and the demand for a genuinely new voting system based on proportion representation (the alternative vote system we may be offered in a referendum is likely to entrench the dominance of the old order rather than challenge it.) Vince Cable, Lib Dem Business Secretary, will be instrumental in the plans to privatise the Royal Mail.

Millions of voters had already deserted Labour out of disgust at Blair’s alliance with Bush over the Iraq war. Under Gordon Brown, Labour lost a further section of its base as his economic and social policies unravelled.

But Labour’s vote did not collapse in this election. The justified fear of Tory plans brought large numbers of people to the polls to vote Labour, in what was perceived as the only practical way of stopping a Tory government. It was not necessarily a positive Labour vote but an anti-Tory vote mobilized by fear. Many that had deserted Labour in protest since 1997 came out to vote, so there was a higher turnout than 2005.

The 5% swing to the Tories was not uniform. In the urban centres, particularly where Labour was historically strong, the swings were much less – and in some cases reversed.

In 40 constituencies in London the average swing was to the Tories just 1.6%, and there were 13 constituencies which saw a swing to Labour of an average of 3.1%. These were in the north-east and east of the city with large black and Asian communities and high concentrations of poverty. In total, there were 27 seats in England where there was a swing to Labour. All of these were in poor urban areas; 13 in London, 4 in Birmingham, 2 in Liverpool and so on. In Scotland, 27 seats saw swings from the Tories to Labour – as many as in the whole of England and again concentrated in urban areas.

The General Election was, in the end, dominated by the stark choice between a Labour and a Tory government. The TV debates increased the sense that only votes for the three major parties mattered. With very few exceptions indeed, smaller parties and independents were squeezed out of the debate and overwhelmed by the surge of support for the main parties. Independents that had fought off Labour and the Tories in previous elections such as Dr Richard Taylor (Wyre Forest) or Dai Davies (Blaenau Gwent) were swamped on this occasion, both losing their seats.

The election of Caroline Lucas as Green Party MP in Brighton Pavilion was a rare and welcome exception. It was built on a platform of 17 local Green Party councillors and ward based campaigning over many years with a positive national profile for Caroline herself. But this was not a nationwide turn to the Greens as elsewhere the Green Party suffered a similar squeeze to other small parties.

The other positive aspect of the election was the weakening of the threat from the far right. The BNP was wiped out in Barking and Dagenham and failed to make the gains expected in Stoke and elsewhere. The combination of the main party squeeze and strong campaigning facilitated this but it should not obscure the reality that the BNP polled 564,000 votes nationally – up from 193,000 in 2005. Likewise, the vote for UKIP increased from 603,000 to 918,000. That is 1.5 million votes for parties based on racist and/or xenophobic appeal.

The Labour vote

When faced with the prospect of a Tory government, many voters were prepared to vote Labour. With Labour now in opposition and a ConDem government attacking living standards, it is very li
kely that support for Labour in its ‘heartlands’ will be sustained. This is a fact of electoral politics that Respect must take very seriously.

The Labour Party vote was historically appalling. It polled only 200,000 votes more than the 1983 vote. This was when Labour had suffered the split to for the SDP and Labour’s manifesto was compared to that of the Communist Party’s and described by Labour’s Gerald Kaufman as ‘ the longest suicide note in history’. (Though it must be said that Kaufman’s 22,469 votes in 1983 compares somewhat favourably with the 19,211 (50.1% he received on 6th May 2010). Labour’s share of the total potential vote was lower than at any point since the 1930s.

The leadership election illustrates the problem of Labour’s lack of a coherent progressive alternative to the ConDems. The three front-runners all claim that part of the problem for Labour was that it was not tough enough on immigration, while their policy differences with Blair and Brown remain marginal.

Even though the leadership election is highly likely to signal more of the New Labour mould, and with it a failure to resist the coalition government, it is also likely to be the beneficiary of attempts to remove the ConDem government – with many concluding that backing Labour will be the most effective anti-Tory vote. This is bound to squeeze the electoral possibilities of progressive parties like Respect.

Local Elections

In the local elections held on the same day as the General Election, Labour won back control of a number of local councils in urban areas. The first indications are that the ConDem government will push the burden of public service cuts onto local councils so posing an important question for Labour councils. Do they act as a shield for working class people and refuse to implement cuts or lead the way in slashing services and jobs? This dilemma has the potential to provoke deep splits in the Labour membership and electoral support.

Respect and the election

The Respect Party is historically unique in British politics. It is a party with localised but significant electoral support that has at its core the principles of anti-imperialism and anti-racism. It was born from the womb of the anti-war movement and resistance to Islamophobia since 11 September 2001. At this election, Respect sought to widen its position to embrace a critique of the public service cuts consensus and the bailing out of the bankers at the expense of society.

We had a genuine opportunity to create a small national platform for radical politics based on the values of peace, justice and equality. The election of even one Respect MP, to sit alongside Caroline Lucas in parliament, would have made a powerful impact on politics generally and helped the left to rally opposition to the public service cuts.

We fought positive and powerful campaigns but failed to win any of our three target seats. Respect lost 7 of its 8 councillors in Tower Hamlets and its only councillor in Newham. However well we performed in the election, and in some cases we performed very well indeed, the failure to win a parliamentary seat was deeply disappointing. There are no prizes for coming second in first-past-the-post elections.

Nonetheless, Respect’s achievements are worthy of note.

Birmingham

The vote for Salma Yaqoob in Birmingham Hall Green was unique. Her vote increased from a notional 7,500 in 2005 to 12,240 and her share of the vote went up from a notional 16.2% in 2005 to 25.1%. (The ‘notional’ figures take account of boundary changes). Salma’s campaign succeeded in gaining the support of the outgoing left-wing Labour MP and the endorsement of Caroline Lucas and the Green Party. It achieved a 11.7% swing from Labour to Respect (bigger than the 8.4% Lucas achieved in Brighton).

The swing runs counter to all the national trends and in the circumstances of this election was a remarkable achievement. Salma’s re-election as a local councillor was a vote of confidence and ensures Respect has a continued political platform with 3 councillors in Birmingham City Council. Respect polled 10,646 local council votes (21.8%) over four wards, an outstanding achievement.

East London

In other areas the Respect parliamentary vote was squeezed badly. Both Abjol Miah and George Galloway recorded strong votes but were ultimately unable to resist the surge of support for Labour. In the local elections in East London, our core vote held up very well but it was swamped by the general election turnout.

In Tower Hamlets, Respect polled 16,236 votes (15%) across 17 wards with 50 candidates, coming second with increased votes in 5 wards. In Newham, Respect polled 3,448 (12.1%) in 4 wards, coming second in two and third in two. These are historically high votes for a radical party.

We can be very proud of the campaigns we fought, and of the work of our candidates and campaign teams. Respect reached a very large new audience, engaged it with some success but ultimately, its loyalty remained with Labour and, to a lesser extent, the Liberal Democrats. There is no escaping the consequences of these results. We are unable to create the national platform that we had hoped for. And we have lost all but one of our councillors in East London.

A challenging situation

We now face a very challenging situation. The areas where we competed seriously with Labour proved to be those areas that stayed most loyal to it, especially when faced with a Tory government. The biggest swings to Labour were from exactly the kind of areas where Respect was standing.

Respect retains a strong base of support in Birmingham and East London with some effective though small electoral footholds in other cities such as Bradford, Rochdale and Manchester. But, in planning for the future, Respect will have to take full account of the fact that in most areas of the country, opposition to the ConDem government is likely to be expressed firstly by voting Labour.

The problem we face is how we develop a strategy around the positive contribution Respect can make to the struggle against the ConDem government, in terms of developing opposition to the public service cuts, alongside maintaining and ultimately expanding Respect’s electoral support in areas where we retain a significant base.

The future

Respect was formed because there was a need to oppose war, oppose racism and to stand up for public services and social justice. It has never been an exclusively electoral party. Respect is an electoral party and also a campaigning force between elections. It has a proud record from the Gaza solidarity movement, including initiating the remarkable Viva Palestina convoys, the Yes4mayor campaign in Tower Hamlets, in Manchester campaigns such as Free Public Transport or ‘School places for all’ and initiatives for new community facilities and funding for the local swimming pool.

Peace, justice and equality remain as necessary today as they were when Respect was formed in 2004. We will continue to speak fo
r these principles and find every possible way to connect with those who will feel the brunt of the attacks that are coming. They will hit every community and Respect will stand with every mobilisation of resistance. If the Labour councils or individuals councillors refuse to implement the Condem cuts, Respect will applaud and stand alongside them with the local community. But if those councillors chose not to defend those who voted them into office then Respect will campaign alongside everyone affected and help, to the best of our abilities, to mobilise the opposition.

The Respect 2010 Manifesto declared itself for ‘Jobs, Homes and Peace’ and carried a clear argument for investment rather than cuts. These ideas will be developed further to aid campaigning and help activists within and without the party. Respect intends to work with as many people as possible – from the Greens, Labour and other progressive parties as are willing to help, in giving an alternative vision of what can be done. We have a contribution to make both ideologically and practically.

There is no inevitability that ConDem cuts will lead to immediate large-scale public protest or strikes. Nonetheless, it is incumbent on those who oppose the cuts consensus to argue and explain the economic, social and environmental reasons why the neo-liberal orthodoxy is wrong – and outline our alternative. This must include the powerful arguments for the alternatives strategies needed for dealing with climate change – an issue that was woefully neglected by the major parties in the recent election.

As the cuts deepen they will produce a scramble for the little that is left on offer – and racism is likely to flourish. Respect will continue campaigning against racism and to undermine the myths about immigration which are used to divide the poorest communities where the cuts will bite.

Over the coming weeks and months Respect will be seeking to bring around us new networks of supporters. In some areas, the election campaigns have started this process. In others, Respect will need to articulate its argument against the cuts and demonstrate its campaigning ability to build such networks. It will take time and hard work, and is unlikely to be rewarded with high votes for some time.

Electoral Challenges ahead

Aware of the electoral challenges ahead, Respect will need to pick its targets carefully. In Birmingham, the priority will be to defend the council seat in Sparkbrook next May. In east London Respect locally will be assessing its tactics in relation to the autumn Mayoral election and across the city will be preparing for the Greater London Assembly elections in 2012 – held under a form of proportional voting. Elsewhere, Respect will need to adopt a much more localised electoral strategy of building support in individual wards.

In 20 of the 43 wards contested at the election, Respect polled more than 10%, while in 30 Respect polled more than 5%. In Rochdale’s Milkstone and Deeplish ward, Respect achieved 20.9%. In Manchester, Respect polled 1,830 votes (4.8%) in working class wards. Considering that Respect is contesting ground with a party that has been campaigning for more than a century, these results give grounds for hope. It will require long term campaigning over many years by every branch and group of supporters across the country to strengthen Respect into a party capable of becoming a genuinely national force. This is simply the reality of electoral politics – sudden breakthroughs such as George Galloway’s epic victory in 2005 are not the normal occurrence but are the exception. Most electoral success is developed with patient work over many years.

There were two examples of the changing character of political organisation in the election. The first was Labour’s use of technology, especially the Internet and phone banks, to mobilize support. The other was Hope Not Hate’s anti-fascist mobilisation using viral Internet campaigning methods. Respect will be seeking to adapt these methods to our own circumstances – to both strengthen own media message and reach a wider audience.

The communities from which Respect draws its support are among those most likely to be hit hardest by the ConDem government. The Liberal Democrats have been exposed as little more than bag carriers for the Tories, so its base of support in poorer urban areas is likely to come under pressure. People may vote Labour expecting it to defend them. But our experience is that New Labour will let them down badly.

While Respect is drawing many lessons from the election, its goal remains the same: wherever we have the opportunity to do so, we will seek to represent and defend our communities, and speak up for peace, justice and equality. The world is sick and needs to change in order to heal. Respect is determined to present the case for change and to work with those that seek the same.

This article is the product of debate and discussion over the last three weeks in Respect branches, which was further developed from a discussion document presented at the National Council meeting on 22 May 2010.

31 responses to “Progressive Politics after the General Election”

  1. So. no self-criticism then.

    Only insistence that Respect is a progressive party, a party of the left, despite much evidence to the contrary in Tower Hamlets.

    Those trying to shape the future of Respect could do worse than read Georgie Weymess’ book, mentioned in Glynn Robbins’ article.

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  2. But the document doesn’t seem to address the fact that Labour in opposition to the ConDem gvt is a different thing to fight against, and that there is a possibility of struggle within the labour party during and after the leadership election- for the future direction of the party.

    IN fact the main players in the labour leadership campaign now seem to have come out as having been against the Iraq war (in some sense or other) all along. This document appears not to register the pull of the labour party against the new government -it almost reads like what you would have expected if the SWP were still running the show, as if the result was not all that important.

    I guess time will tell if this document is the start of a new phase of building respect or a last gasp.

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  3. Rachel – what do you think is good about RESPECT? Were you in favour of the Iraq war and did you believe everyone in Bethnal green should have lined up behind Oona King? Have you any criticisms of Labour? Are you happy Fitzpatrick was elected to support david Miliband – arch Blairite – what criticisms have you of Fitzpatrick?

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  4. ‘This document appears not to register the pull of the labour party against the new government ‘

    Perhaps you missed this bit.

    ‘We now face a very challenging situation. The areas where we competed seriously with Labour proved to be those areas that stayed most loyal to it, especially when faced with a Tory government. The biggest swings to Labour were from exactly the kind of areas where Respect was standing.’

    So much for your ‘it almost reads like the result was not all that important’.

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  5. Some thoughts on the future of the left here:

    http://nextleft2010.blogspot.com/2010/05/crisis-and-left.html

    The general election has demonstrated just how deep the roots of labourism and piecemeal reformism are within large sections of the British working class.

    Some on the left try to avoid this uncomfortable reality by pointing to events overseas claiming, as the SP do, that ‘Greece will come to Britain’. Good for political morale but rotten and self-deluding analysis.

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  6. The problem with the document is the go-it alone approach. The challenge is to draw on the need to recognise that many outside of Respect are to the Left of the Labour Party and how to build Left unity including those from TUSC etc. There is no mention of how to attempt to ensure the divisions and sectarianism does not get repeated and what to do about it.

    At the same time, we must be able to also acknowledge that within the Labour Party there is a debate which reaches into the trade union movement that can not just be ignored. The report makes no reference to John McDonald and what is left of the Labour Left either.

    How will Respect contribute to the building of local anti-cuts campaigns? How will it work with those who are not in it but share many of its common campaign themes? How will it respond to providing the stimulus for such united front activity that needs to be built? This is what is missing from the statement.

    Will Respect provide the impetus for the initiatives that are emerging or simply put itself up as the only option? We need to have a more detailed analysis and debate, which this document fails to do.

    My concern is that on one hand the SWP go into a super militancy role through the Right To Work, expecting the Left to simply accept their every twist and turn. Or on the other hand Respect. Neither approach is sufficient for the challenges we face.

    There is a sense that the Left may go into sectarian mode once again and compete with each other rather than to address the need for reallignment. Oh no. Do I feel a sense of deja vu coming on again?

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  7. p.s. “Wake up the nation” is not a slogan that we should be promoting, just as “British jobs for British workers” was wrong, so is this.

    Let us drop the term progressive politics, which is used by all and sundry as meaningless and opportunist. Condems are singing it all over the place to cover up their cuts agenda.

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  8. Alf- “Wake up the nation” is the name of the first Paul Weller album worth listening to in thirty years. It’s politically very sharp too. I’m only surprised that Salma has gone round spray painting walls.

    Rachel – There was a full and frank exchange of views at the meeting mentioned in the article about different conceptions of Respect’s functioning and role. SR is having a process of internal discussion and, as is our way in these things, the documents will be in the public domain shortly.

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  9. It reads very much like “more of the same”. As Alf says, no discussion of a strategy to relate to the rest of the left (apart from a hat-tip to Caroline Lucas). Nor is there any discussion of a trade union strategy for building links with the labour movement (even the Greens have one of them!). The old strategy of focusing on one or two areas of strength is preferred to a long-term branch-building program to extend Respect’s reach into other important urban areas. The problem with all this is that it’s been shown not to work, and has weakened Respect as an organisation. More of the same means that Respect will likely wither on the vine.

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  10. Sorry Liam but not up to date with music scene. Accept your recommendation on that one.

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  11. Liam: “SR is having a process of internal discussion and, as is our way in these things, the documents will be in the public domain shortly.”

    But surely this is arse-about-face. Why didn’t SR have the internal debate, produce the document and then put it on the table to be argued within Respect?

    No wonder you lot have a reputation on the left as being mugs.

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    1. “have the internal debate, produce the document and then put it on the table to be argued within Respect”

      What a great idea. I wish we’d thought of that. Thanks for the tip Martin.

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  12. ‘As Alf says, no discussion of a strategy to relate to the rest of the left (apart from a hat-tip to Caroline Lucas). Nor is there any discussion of a trade union strategy for building links with the labour movement (even the Greens have one of them!).’ What would you suggest?

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  13. I’d suggest developing one.

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  14. I’ve posted my own response to Clive’s report here:

    http://bristolred.wordpress.com/2010/05/26/respect-business-as-usual/

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  15. GT:
    Rachel – what do you think is good about RESPECT?

    Best thing probably hard work around council housing. Also ESOL funding – George Galloway read some of my students’ letters about the cuts out loud in Parliament – very moving.

    Were you in favour of the Iraq war and did you believe everyone in Bethnal green should have lined up behind Oona King? No, no.

    Have you any criticisms of Labour? Yes. I have never voted labour. My politics are to the left.

    Are you happy Fitzpatrick was elected to support david Miliband – arch Blairite – what criticisms have you of Fitzpatrick?

    I don’t like Fitzpatrick, a war-monger, a liar, someone who directly opposed ESOL funding (Galloway and Respect took the right position and have been very supportive).

    However, I don’t think the problem with Fitzpatrick is he’s ‘Islamophobic’ and using these kind of smears against people for the sake of political expediency is not progressive (the Respect leaflet claiming that Lutfur Ali was the victim of an Islamophobic witchhunt was more daft than dangerous, but how on earth could this have been approved?).

    Similarly, opposing the Labour candidate because she’s not a good role model for Muslim women (because she doesn’t wear hijab for example) is not progressive. The social policing of Muslims that Respect engages in in Tower Hamlets is not progressive. It sets us back, it hinders the possibilities for reaching across barriers and boundaries. It is incompatible with building working class solidarity.

    Framing Gaza as a Muslim issue is not progressive. There is a shrinking space in the world for arguing that the Palestine situation is not just about Jews vs Muslims. While this view may be the real crowd puller, it does nothing to help Palestinians let alone build socialism.

    I sense that white leftists who comment here don’t want to get into these areas for fear of being seen to criticise ‘Muslims’. I don’t worry about this because I know Muslims who share my views about Respect. It is far more anti-racist to recognise the differences within the community and seek out those elements who share common politics, not to lump together all Muslims and seek to ‘ally with them’. You can’t just look at the on-paper positions of Respect and ignore what actually happens on the ground.

    The reason why I am slightly obsessed about these things is that the right-wing Islamic elements that Respect has allied with in Tower Hamlets affect the life of me and my children on a DAILY BASIS. Of course, the war, increasing racism, and impending unprecedented cuts are far more serious concerns. But in my opinion Respect is actually an obstacle to building a radical movement. That’s why I go on about it.

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  16. Neil Williams Avatar
    Neil Williams

    Can i recommend Bristol Red excellent article below which I agree with 100%:

    http://bristolred.wordpress.com/2010/05/26/respect-business-as-usual/

    Plus:

    “The old strategy of focusing on one or two areas of strength is preferred to a long-term branch-building program to extend Respect’s reach into other important urban areas. The problem with all this is that it’s been shown not to work, and has weakened Respect as an organisation. More of the same means that Respect will likely wither on the vine.”

    Spot on Bristol Red and the omission of long term trade union work has been a weeknes for some time.

    I can see nothing in Clives article (and there are some good sections) other than “More of the Same” – with Respect having a presence in just two small parts of the UK , I’am afraid this will not work. The non mention of the “S” word once again is becoming a lot more than mere accident.

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  17. Liam: “What a great idea. I wish we’d thought of that. Thanks for the tip Martin” you’re welcome.

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  18. “The old strategy of focusing on one or two areas of strength is preferred to a long-term branch-building program to extend Respect’s reach into other important urban areas. The problem with all this is that it’s been shown not to work, and has weakened Respect as an organisation. More of the same means that Respect will likely wither on the vine.”

    This is bizarre. There is nothing at all in the article that says the old strategy of focusing on one or two areas is preferred.

    Indeed to quote “Over the coming weeks and months Respect will be seeking to bring around us new networks of supporters. In some areas, the election campaigns have started this process. In others, Respect will need to articulate its argument against the cuts and demonstrate its campaigning ability to build such networks. It will take time and hard work, and is unlikely to be rewarded with high votes for some time.”

    A long-term strategy is implicit in this. One of the problems of much of the posting above is that they seem to be debating with another document. Not the one actually published.

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  19. “The non mention of the “S” word once again is becoming a lot more than mere accident.”

    You are right Neil. it must have been deliberate. Perhaps because this was an analysis of the election and suggestions for the coming period. Socialism isn’t on the agenda. How would you have used the ‘s’ word to make the article better. Instead of carping try some positive contributions.

    And what ‘trade union strategy’ would the other posters suggest? Our trade union members attempt to build their own union branches and engage politically and industrially where they can. But in Birmingham a few months ago the main trade unions were only able to mobilise 150 in the face of thousands of job losses. What do people think Respect can do differently?

    When anti-cuts campaigns emerge Respect members will support and build them (and we may well be in a position to help initiate them in some local areas) – but pretending we can magic generalised ‘resistance’ out of thin air is not an honest strategy.

    In the absence of that ‘resistance’ then respect – along with other progressive forces (green, labour, whatever) need to wage an ideological battle against the cuts consensus. For Respect that must start with our membership and supporters – but those arguments will have something directly to say about other issues such as the labour leadership election.

    There is no business as normal for Respect as ‘normal’ no longer exists. But in moving towards a new strategy let’s not pretend we can do things we cannot, that others want to join with us who do not or that we can have a significant influence over shaping events in the short to medium term when we probably cannot. Harsh truths indeed – but that is politics in 2010.

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  20. TLC wrote: “A long-term strategy is implicit in this.”

    In a strategy document it helps if the strategies are made explicit. I can see no evidence here, in any case, of a change of focus. Pulling a short extract out of the document to quote at people doesn’t change that.

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  21. OK – you read things differently than me. What is your strategy. Your own article is good on critique but what would you actually do. What does your strategy mean individuals have to do? I’m not being difficult here I just don’t understand exactly what you are arguing for. Saying we need to expand outside our areas of existing support is one thing – which we can all agree on – but what are the actual steps 1, 2 and 3 to achieving this goal?

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  22. “…what are the actual steps 1, 2 and 3 to achieving this goal?”

    I don’t have a cunning plan I’m afraid. A useful first step though might be to accept that Respect’s long term future has to be as part of something bigger. I think that vision has been lost somewhere along the way.

    What else? Perhaps divert some of the resources from the strong centres towards the periphery, rather than (invariably) vice versa. Strengthen the organisation’s appeal to the more class conscious worker by being upfront about socialist politics (even if they are of the Old Labour variety rather than anything more radical) and generate a political program that reflects that. Try to start building formal links with the trade union movement, and establish a working group to take that forward. Produce regular publications that are open to debate rather than fanzines for a couple of the leading members. Move away from the peculiar situation where some branches rarery (if ever) meet, and strengthen the democractic decision making processes. Promote transparency within the organisation. Etc. etc.

    Lots of stuff, in fact, that was discussed at some length a couple of years ago, at least on the left of the party. But a lot of water has passed under the bridge since then.

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  23. Bristol Red, you are dreaming here. It is very easy to claim all sorts when you have no involvement in making a strategy happen and have absented yourself. Do you really believe that Respect is not trying to develop new branches? In Oldham, Rochdale, Bradford, Merseyside (more currently trying to get off the ground) – are these figments of imagination? Indeed, Respect’s membership and branches (plus its organizational depth) are developing now which is rather better than the standstill of the previous national secretary and his ‘left of the party’ (whatever that means – are you referring to the failed ‘regroupment’?). Claims of a left and right in Respect just demonstrate failed analytical categories on your part.

    The strategy for opposition to the cuts is about relating to wider and hopefully larger forces and seeking to build in new areas. ‘Something bigger’ simply does not exist as yet – name it if I am wrong!

    As for your cliched retort about the ‘s’ word being missing, I refer you to my point about the circularity of the logic of the likes of yourself and Neil Williams. If you proposed audience for Respect is completely different than ours, say so. Stop hiding behind cliches – personally, I don’t see how any socialist could miss the obvious fact that ‘jobs, homes and peace’ are concrete socialist demands.

    However, I agree with TLC that you are clearly having problems reading. To take another quote from the document:

    ‘It will require long term campaigning over many years by every branch and group of supporters across the country to strengthen Respect into a party capable of becoming a genuinely national force. This is simply the reality of electoral politics – sudden breakthroughs such as George Galloway’s epic victory in 2005 are not the normal occurrence but are the exception. Most electoral success is developed with patient work over many years.’

    Explicit enough for you or do we need to collectively wear Doc Martens before you notice what is being said?

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  24. Perhaps divert some of the resources from the strong centres towards the periphery, rather than (invariably) vice versa.

    – I’m not sure that this is true. The national resources of Respect (small though they are) are mostly spent helping the smaller branches and individual members. The strong centres usually put much more in than they get back. But I suppose with only one office worker it makes things hard to really support fledgling branches. But the trouble with having an electoral base is that you need to defend it during elections – and even if this takes no external financial resources it does often demand external labour.

    Strengthen the organisation’s appeal to the more class conscious worker by being upfront about socialist politics (even if they are of the Old Labour variety rather than anything more radical) and generate a political program that reflects that.

    Good idea – but let’s do it using 21st century language rather than endlessly recycling quotes from dead Russians and Germans,.

    Try to start building formal links with the trade union movement, and establish a working group to take that forward.

    – not sure what ‘formal links’ mean. Please explain.

    Produce regular publications that are open to debate rather than fanzines for a couple of the leading members.

    – The email that went out last night that contained the above article also requested letters from members and supporters for the next Respect Quarterly. Let’s see if anyone responds.

    Move away from the peculiar situation where some branches rarery (if ever) meet, and strengthen the democractic decision making processes.

    – I know of many branches that meet. Trouble is that there aren’t many branches. But if there are branches that don’t meet the simple solution is for the members that do want to meet to, well, er…meet. Which branches were you thinking of?

    Promote transparency within the organisation.

    – sorry again – what does this mean?

    Etc. etc.

    Great ideas. There’s lots of stuff to be done. lots of things could be done better. I don’t know of any Respect member who thinks everything is all rosy in the garden. But we are a small organisation with very limited resources. All bar one of the organisation’s officers have jobs outwith Respect and are settled in three cities 200 miles apart. This makes day to day central organisation difficult and so Respect relies a great deal on the individual actions and initiatives of its members. Perhaps we need to increase our subs level to pay for a larger paid leadership. But for the forseeable future this problem will remain.

    I’m sure that there are lots of things that can be done – and the coming months will see different branches and individuals try a range of tactics and strategies. Perhaps things that work in one place can be shared – or will not work elsewhere. There’s going to be an awful lot of ‘suck it and see’ tactically over the next few months.

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  25. I’m tired of anti -cuts campaigns! They are the long drawn out and bitter aftermath of the end of the post war boom in the mid-seventies when the Labour Party decided we could no longer afford the welfare state (and paved the way for the Thatcher/Blair monetarists/neo-cons) They are too defensive. We win small victories but always lose the war(s). Of course we have to fight them but they are thin gruel to fuel an alternative politics.

    Talking of war, I agree with David Miliband: Iraq is not a major political issue any more – apart from its use by LP Blair and Brownite leadership contenders to distract attention from their lack of a programme. It’s possible that the rising body count in Afghanistan will spur a serious anti war movement as in 2003 but at the moment it has been sidelined by the “we are fighthing to withdraw” consensus in the ruling class.

    The left will never succeed as a mish mash of campaigns but by offering a clear programme for government. For all the worthiness of “campaigns” the brutal truth, as stated by that vulgar Marxist Bill Clinton is “it’s the economy, stupid” .

    The biggest crisis of capitalism for decades provides the opportunity for us to put forward a radical economic programme, which points in a positive direction. So what about an alternative economic programme which, for a
    start , targets the banks and the speculators.

    That in turn, will require the left to return to the correct position on the EU. Interesting to Angela Merkel being forced to step up her attacks on the speculators.

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  26. Rachel – thanks for your honest response to my questions. I think we have a lot in common. However I think its wrong to view RESPECT only by some of the alliances its leadership in Tower Hamlets have built. Many of the grassroots members of RESPECT (including Muslim comrades) have the same criticisms of RESPECT’s direction as you have.

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  27. GT, thank you for your polite post and for a very rare acknowledgement that Respect may need to consider more carefully the alliances its leaders make.

    This is the first time I’ve had a Respect person acknowledge this (I’m generally ignored or, on Socialist Unity, called a racist). Now that I know the discussion is being had within Respect I can stop spending so much time here. I wish you luck.

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  28. TLC wrote: “I’m sure that there are lots of things that can be done – and the coming months will see different branches and individuals try a range of tactics and strategies. Perhaps things that work in one place can be shared – or will not work elsewhere. There’s going to be an awful lot of ‘suck it and see’ tactically over the next few months.”

    I’m sure that’s the case, and I just wanted to say that I appreciate the comradely nature of your comments. Chris C, OTOH, probably needs to go and lie down in a dark room for a while and listen to a relaxation tape ;o)

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  29. I welcome this discussion and would suggest that some of it, at least, comes down to practicalities and communication issues.

    Its good that there has been a call for submissions to a Respect Quarterly magazine and I hope Neil W or Bristol Red will find the time to submit a letter to it.

    However, a quarterly forum for members to air their views needs to be supplemented with ongoing discussion. Why not set up a dedicated Respect email discussion group so that branches can share their experiences and best practice in real time – without having to go through “The Centre”- a space where articles can be posted for comment prior to publication, examples of local leaflets posted and reports of meetings and activities filed?

    That sort of thing might be the best support mechanism for isolated Respect members in the far flung reaches of the cosmos.

    I don’t want to teach people to suck eggs but when TLC says “And what ‘trade union strategy’ would the other posters suggest? Our trade union members attempt to build their own union branches and engage politically and industrially where they can”
    I would add there is more that we could do now to lay the basis for the future.
    Surely sizeable numbers of Respect members are in Unite, the NUT, Unison etc. but we don’t know each other. At the very least, we should convene occasional meetings of these members – I presume the national secretary has details of the union affiliations of all members- to discuss standing slates for election or to publicly, collectively, back other left candidates.
    In particular, UNITE members in Respect should be working together in support of Jerry Hicks and reports of activities in the unions should appear regularly in the Respect Paper and Respect Quarterly.

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  30. […] on A public official writes…GT on Progressive Politics after the…Padraic on Progressive Politics after the…TLC on Progressive Politics after the…AndyB on Scotland Hates […]

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