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Lewisham By-election 4 December
Vote For Real Change
Vote Socialist
THE SOCIALIST Party is standing in the by-election in
Telegraph Hill ward in Lewisham on 4 December. The Socialist Alternative
candidate is health worker Chris Flood - we aim to get another socialist
councillor elected to work alongside Ian Page.
Local people have had enough of politicians who care
more about big business and fat cats than public services or the interests
of ordinary voters.
The biggest issue on the Honor Oak estate is the
council's sheer gall in charging some leaseholders up to £11,000 to remove
asbestos from their homes! As Chris told the socialist:
"Local people tell us that there's a report going
back to the mid-1980s showing that they were well aware of this asbestos
problem.
"Yet the council sold the leaseholders these
properties without telling them - this is clearly the council's
responsibility. They should fund the cost of removing the asbestos and not
charge leaseholders or threaten to cut the refurbishment budget for
tenants on the estate.
"Local people are determined that the council
won't win this battle and have launched a campaign already that we will
get involved with - local residents welcome our involvement."
Another big issue is the fight for a new non-selective
secondary school in the north of Lewisham borough. Socialist Party
councillors put forward a motion to the council calling for Telegraph Hill
school to be reopened as a fully funded community comprehensive school.
Labour opposed this and demolished the building, so
Socialist Party members have played a big part in the new school campaign
during the last couple of years. Chris Flood will keep fighting for a new
school to be opened in the north of the borough.
Chris said: "People on the doorsteps often tell us
they don't know who their local councillors are. Labour, both nationally and
locally, just take their voters for granted.
"Many people though have seen what Socialist Party
councillor Ian Page has done, including leading the Save Lewisham Housing
Campaign which stopped the council selling off 7,500 flats and houses."
Practically every area of the ward has gained from our
campaigns alongside local people to win improvements. As Chris Flood said:
"There's a lot of disillusionment amongst Labour's former voters, over
the war with Iraq and the occupation that has followed it, and on subjects
such as education and housing.
"We're starting to see people turning their backs
on New Labour, and if we can show that we're a party that's different, we
can win a second socialist councillor in Telegraph Hill to fight alongside
Ian Page."
If you want to help Chris Flood and the Socialist Party
win this vital seat, please ring the Socialist Party at 020 8988 8777.
"Fighting together we can win battles"
CHRIS FLOOD, Socialist Party candidate in the Telegraph
Hill ward by-election in south London on 4 December (see above), spoke to
the socialist.
I'M A psychiatric nurse and a health service
researcher, born and brought up in Lewisham. I was a shop steward in the
NUPE union (now part of Unison) from the late 1980s.
In the early 1990s I was involved in a campaign to
keep Charing Cross hospital open. The Tomlinson report into hospital
services in London had highlighted it as a hospital that might close.
The workers and the union led a campaign which
threatened occupation if necessary to save the hospital. It got a lot of
support from NHS workers and the general public and successfully kept that
hospital open - it's still open to this day.
I have never forgotten that campaign - through this
fight, many people got to see the power of collective struggle. If we
fight together, we can win battles.
I was also very active in the movement against
Thatcher's blatantly unfair and undemocratic poll tax. Most of the nurses
in our hospital didn't pay their poll tax and the national anti-poll tax
campaign amongst nurses was largely led by Charing Cross workers.
In recent years I've been living in Deptford and been
involved as a local resident in taking on developers who wanted to build
huge luxury private tower blocks.
New Labour councillors have gone out of their way to
encourage these developers and to ignore the concerns of local people, who
are worried about the lack of social housing in what is still
overwhelmingly a working-class and deprived area.
New luxury housing in the area has just made that
worse. There's also the lack of planning and the impact that has on GP
services and schools. All this has starkly shown up how far the local
council was pro-developer and pro-rich.
I've also been involved in campaigns on
bread-and-butter issues such as getting security at our local railway
station and getting new traffic-calming measures.
I've worked with local community groups and raised the
need for a new mass workers' party - New Labour is now clearly just
another party of big business like the Liberals and the Tories. The
electorate aren't being offered any choice in most elections.
That's why it's so important that working-class people
stand in local elections and that the Socialist Party stands under its own
banner.
I think the time is right now for councillors to take
the opposition you hear on the streets into the council chamber and fight
for a socialist alternative.
Some people may feel demoralised that there isn't a
Labour Party as there used to be but we've got to argue that people should
come to our banner where we think the lessons of collective struggle, of
collective bargaining can be relearned.
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