News

Home

Join us

Fight back now against job cuts

Stop the repossessions

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

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/507/3332

Print this articlePrint this article

email to friendemail to friend

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Home   |   The Socialist 25 October 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Huddersfield SOS: Class fighters' bold initiative

A RALLY last week publicly launched Huddersfield's Save Our Services (SOS) coalition and announced that this new united force will take to the political arena in the spring.

Ian Slattery

Around 35 people from different campaign groups and trade unions attended the meeting. A variety of speakers stressed the need for an alliance of groups to pose a political alternative for working-class people in Huddersfield.

Mel Mills, from the campaign that successfully defended local nursery services in the town, spoke on what she called "an important victory for the working class." That campaign has inspired thousands of people who have seen a struggle, fought by the community and trade unions together, defeat the Tory administration.

Equally inspiring are the sacked Unique Care women, still fighting for their jobs having walked out of work early in 2007 due to harassment and poor working conditions at the privately-contracted care company. "We're not going away until justice is served," explained Paulette, one of the women involved.

"We stood up to Unique Care, the unjust and unfair. We now stand for equal rights and justice for everybody. We'll fight until we're old and grey if we need to," she said to loud applause.

Annette Jallow spoke of the battle facing the school her children attend, which is under threat of closure with a view to being replaced by an Academy. "If it's not for community action, people standing up for what they need in their area, then these cuts will happen," Annette warned.

Other speakers included Huddersfield Technical College President and Socialist Students activist Evangeline Holland-Ramsay.

SOS will begin in a strong position, having within it councillor Jackie Grunsell, elected last year for the Save Huddersfield NHS campaign. Jackie, who campaigned as a Socialist Party member, doctor and councillor alongside women from the nursery and Unique Care campaigns, spoke of the brutal effects of New Labour's agenda.

"Cuts and privatisation all across the public sector prevents the next generation from gaining an education and creates a society to grow up in that is no longer a guaranteed improvement from previous generations," Jackie explained. "United action is needed to defeat these measures. Working-class people here have taken matters into their own hands and won.

"Socialist principles of need and equality are what the NHS and other public services were built on. With these principles and socialist ideas, we can begin to change society."

This bold initiative is not only important for Huddersfield, but can act as an example of a step towards a new mass workers' party nationally.

A steering committee will work on taking this alliance forward, by preparing to stand in the local elections and by building up support for the strike action which already looks inevitable this coming winter.


Also in The Socialist 25 October 2007:

Public health not private wealth

Join the 3 November NHS demonstration

NHS: What the Socialist Party says

March to save the NHS

Michael Moore's latest film 'Sicko' reviewed

Huddersfield SOS: Class fighters' bold initiative


Postal dispute

Reject Royal Mail deal: Vote 'No' and reinstate the action

Striking Liverpool postal workers return to work


Campaign for a New Workers Party

Why workers need a new party

Respect in crisis - what lessons for socialists?


Socialism 2007

Socialism 2007


Socialist Party feature

Pakistan: Suicide bombings at Bhutto rally


International socialist news and analysis

Turkey's invasion threat increases regional instability

Release Saburi Akande Akinola, Taiwo Hassan Soweto and Olatunde Dairo now

France: Biggest public transport strike action since 1995


Socialist Party women

Do women still have the 'right to choose'?


Socialist Party news and analysis

Liberal Democrat leadership: Two candidates, one background, no answers

Classroom assistants challenge the Stormont Assembly

Who's to blame for teenage obesity?


Workplace news and analysis

Glasgow: On strike for a fair deal

Train drivers prepare for action

Fight Cadbury's factory closure

Teachers' union election – time to change!

BBC threatens: hundreds of jobs


 

Home   |   The Socialist 25 October 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Huddersfield:

No to post office closures

Elections round-up and results

Health campaigners fight council cuts

Standing up for socialism: candidate list

Success! Double whammy for nursery campaign

Women:

Socialist women: Looking at the past to take action today

Defend abortion rights

Sacked for being pregnant!

NHS:

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

Top-up payments for private health care another step towards two-tier National Health