News

Home

Join us

Darling's prescription... It's spend, spend, spend on the banks... but cuts, cuts, cuts for the NHS

Manchester: No redundancies at IMI!

Campaigning to save post offices

'We're not taking these job cuts'

U-turn over post office card account

Drop the witch-hunt in Unison fight to Defend trade union democracy

Student democracy under attack

'Students in the Red' day of action

Prescott: the class system and me

Striking against low pay

Worlds apart... in 'them and us' society

Postal workers march for their jobs

Defeat NUS' undemocratic plans

'Why not save our jobs?'

NHS props up the private profiteers

Search...

Policies...

Marxism...

 

Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/486/2391

Print this articlePrint this article

email to friendemail to friend

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Home   |   The Socialist 10 May 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

After the no-choice elections

Workers need a political voice

PCS on strike 1 May 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

PCS on strike 1 May 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

THE 3 MAY council elections for most workers were a choice between New Labour, the Tories and the Lib Dems. These were really the 'no choice' elections.

Greg Maughan

On the one hand, there was New Labour, who since they came to power in 1997 have overseen cuts and privatisation in our public services, war and occupation in the Middle East and a growth in the gap between rich and poor that's unlike anything seen in this country since Victorian times.

On the other hand, there were the Tories, whose Old Etonian leader Cameron has tried to rebrand them as 'cuddly conservatives'. But most ordinary workers weren't fooled by this. They know that the Tories stand for the same diet of cuts, closures and privatisation that New Labour do and that they answer to the same big business paymasters.

The same goes for the Lib Dems, who will pose left or right depending on where they stand. But they in reality adhere to the same neo-liberal agenda as the other establishment parties.

PCS on strike 1 May 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

PCS on strike 1 May 2007, photo Paul Mattsson

This election was in some ways a judgement on both Blair's 'legacy' and Brown's future, with the overwhelming majority of workers and young people rejecting both.

New Labour only achieved 27% of the vote. This was not, however, the wholesale haemorrhaging of New Labour's vote that many commentators were predicting.

Fear of a newly resurgent Conservative Party under David Cameron saw a layer of workers put the 'x' next to New Labour through gritted teeth. Many of these voters will be workers who swore never to vote Labour again. But a key feature of this election was 'negative voting'.

People didn't like the party they were voting for but hated the party they were voting against! Of course, a huge number of people didn't even turn out to vote - who can blame them when in most areas they don't believe it will make any difference?

What we need is a new party on a mass scale that actually represents our interests and can bring together different workers' struggles and help build support for them.

Instead of 'negative voting', where workers are forced to make do with what they see as the lesser evil, we need a mass party with positive policies - one that stands up against cuts and privatisation, that opposes war and occupation and that fights for the millions, not the millionaires.

This Saturday, 12 May, trade unionists, socialists and campaigners will be coming together at the Campaign for a New Workers' Party conference to share our experiences of the recent elections and discuss how we can fight for just such a party.

If you're sick of bosses pulling the politicians' strings and want to help fight for a political voice for workers that was so desperately lacking in most of the elections, then you should be there too!


Also in The Socialist 10 May 2007:

Conference for a working class alternative

Blair's departure: Curtain falls on disastrous reign

Workers need a political voice


Socialist Party election analysis

Time for a new workers' party


Campaign for a New Workers Party

Campaign for a New Workers' Party conference

How we can fight to build a new workers' party


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Save Maudsley emergency clinic now!


Socialist Party news and analysis

Escaping Maggie Thatcher's glare

Salford: Tenants oppose stock transfer


International socialist news and analysis

France: preparing for a "third round" on the streets

Turkey: "No to coups, no to sharia"

Musharraf hangs on in Pakistan while poverty and oppression multiplies


Socialist Party election campaign

Strong support for the Socialist Party in Coventry

Huddersfield: Support for NHS campaign cuts across Labour lies

Wales: Labour's worst result

Scottish Elections: Labour rocked as SNP wins


Socialist Party workplace news

PCS: Unity against low pay

One big rail union?


 

Home   |   The Socialist 10 May 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Workers:

Profit motive and the whispering wind

Shock of recession draws near

Feature: Building the shop stewards' movement

Build the left in the public-sector trade unions

Exchanging socialist ideas worldwide

Labour:

New Labour hypocrisy on racism

Activists discuss how to reclaim Unison

Alistair Darling's pre Budget Report: Pain now, pay later

Tories:

Short-sellers back Tories

David Davis - sanity or carving a position?

Privatisation:

Coventry fights post office closure

Lewisham housing: Arguments against privatisation win