|
Home | The Socialist 22 November 2003 | Subscribe | News Join the Socialist Party | Donate | Bookshop
Northern Ireland:Socialists Stand For Workers' UnityTHE SOCIALIST Party in Northern Ireland is challenging the right-wing and sectarian parties who have dominated Northern Ireland politics for generations by putting up two candidates (in East and South Belfast) for the Assembly elections on 26 November.Socialist Party candidates will fight to defend the common interests of working class people and to end the deadlock caused by sectarian politics.JIM BARBOUR, who represents Northern Ireland's firefighters on the Executive of the Fire Brigades Union, is running in South Belfast. Jim, one of Northern Ireland's best known trade unionists, has been active in the trade union movement for 20 years. Jim explained why he's standing:
TOMMY BLACK, a trade union and community activist, is standing in East Belfast. Tommy is chairman of East Belfast Water Charges "We won't pay" Campaign, fighting the latest burden being imposed on working class people. Tommy is a school caretaker and a NIPSA union rep. for education workers. Tommy says:
Living on a workers' wageJIM AND Tommy won't take the inflated salaries of Assembly members but will continue to live on a workers' wage. Jim's campaigning slogan is "A worker's voice - on a firefighter's wage". They will donate the rest of their Assembly salary to the socialist, trade union and community movements, including the campaign to defeat the water charges in which both are heavily involved. Assembly members get £41,321 plus allowances of over £50,000 plus perks. The Chairs and Deputy Chairs of Assembly committees get a further £10,290. Half a million people - 185,000 households - in Northern Ireland live in poverty. 37.4% of children are growing up in poverty. 21% of total household income is from state benefits, compared to 12% for the UK. Even while the Assembly was suspended, assembly members (MLAs) still got £31,617. Workers in Shorts, the shipyard, the textile industry and the many others who lost their jobs in this period got the dole. Workers at Richardsons' factory in Belfast even lost most of the pension entitlement their contributions had paid for. During the suspension, a childcare allowance continued to be paid to MLAs. 67% of lone parent families live in poverty, most unable to afford childcare to allow them to work. Using his Ulster Unionists' (UUP) new slogan of "Simply British", and depicting a fish supper, David Trimble reminded us we can eat fish and chips just like people in London, Manchester - or Dublin come to that. What he didn't say is that we have to pay more for the privilege. Food in Northern Ireland costs about 14% more than in Britain. Electricity is around 18% dearer. Gas costs 31.6% more than in England. But wages are much lower - in fact the average gross household income in Northern Ireland is 22% less than in Britain. In plain terms, households have about £100 a week less to spend. Yet the politicians justify water charges and increased rates by saying we have to pay the same local taxes as people in England. After all we are "simply British"! We'd all be a lot better off if the energy that the major political parties put into trying to squeeze extra taxes out of us were put into fighting to bring wages up and prices down to levels that apply in England. Our real equality agendaTHE IDEA of an equality agenda has become a bit of a catchphrase during the peace process. It goes without saying that the Socialist Party totally opposes any form of discrimination, whether on the basis of religion, race, nationality or gender. The Paisleyite DUP, Trimble's Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), the nationalist SDLP and Sinn Fein may have talked about equality, but, during their period in power, real inequality, ie the gap between rich and poor, actually widened. The richest 40% of households now have 67% of the total household income while the poorest 40% have only 17%. True, the gap in jobs and income between Protestant and Catholic has narrowed over the last two decades. But this is as much to do with the collapse of the manufacturing base and the growth of low-income sweatshop jobs as to any real improvement in the lot of Catholic working-class people. It seems that the "equality" agenda simply means that things are OK if working class people are equally poor. The conflict in Northern Ireland will never be resolved so long as the search for a solution is left to the right-wing and sectarian parties. It is anger at poverty, low wages and inadequate services that underlies the conflict. The right-wing parties can only deliver more of the same. The Socialist Party is campaigning for a real peace process based on uniting working-class people in fighting for a socialist society. We want to link this struggle in the North with the similar struggle of workers in Southern Ireland and in Britain. When we build a decent society where poverty and want are things of the past, it will be an easy matter to resolve where lines are drawn on a map. We advocate a free and voluntary socialist federation of Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales as part of a European socialist confederation.
|