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Council Elections 2006

2006
May council elections 2006

Victory for NHS campaign

Huddersfield voters choose a socialist and a fighter!

Third socialist councillor elected in Coventry

Increased votes for socialism in Lewisham

Stoke - BNP wins close-run election

Excellent results for the Socialist Party


Local elections: A death blow for Blair?

Dangers in Respect's development

Respect - a reply to the SWP


Socialist Party members’ election successes

Dr Jackie GrunsellHuddersfield: THE ELECTION campaign of 'Save Huddersfield NHS' is going from strength to strength.

(Right, Dr Jackie Grunsell, Huddersfield Socialist Alternative candidate)

Socialist Party councillors make a difference

Coventry - re-elect Rob Windsor!

Coventry election archive pages

Fight for jobs at Manchester Airport

Where we're standing in 2006


2005
Analysis of the results of the 2005 election:

Time for new workers' party

Galloway election victory shocks Blair

Results: Socialist ideas adopted by new generation

Stormclouds gather over Labour's 3rd term

Blair’s last election


Coverntry Councillor Dave NellistBlair battered but what's the alternative?

Scotland - general election 2005

Wales: Discontent with the 'Blair project'

Northern Ireland elections: Polarisation widens

Coventry - the best campaign ever

(Pictured right, Coventry Councillor Dave Nellist)

Building a base in Lewisham

Big vote for socialism in Bolsover

General Election campaign 2005 archive

 


Elections 2006


Socialist Party members’ election successes

Press statement from the Socialist Party


For immediate use: 5 May 2006

[email protected] [email protected]

Further information contact Ken Smith on 020 8988 8778


Socialist Party members – standing as Socialist Alternative candidates and on behalf of Save Huddersfield’s NHS campaign - scored outstanding successes in the local elections.

The election Dr Jackie Grunsell, standing as a Save Huddersfield’s NHS candidate, represents the local government equivalent of the election of the Wyre Valley MP in 2001 who stood against hospital closures in Kidderminster.

Jackie received 2,176 votes, a majority of over 700, on a turnout of over 49%.

Jackie’s victory comes in the aftermath of months of campaigning in the Huddersfield and Kirklees area against threatened hospital cutbacks and closures, where two major demonstrations mobilised thousands on the streets.

The campaign also squeezed out the BNP vote in an area where they were otherwise making some headway.

As well as Jackie, three other Socialist Party members were elected as councilors – Ian Page and Chris Flood in Lewisham Telegraph Hill and Rob Windsor in Coventry St Michael’s.

The Socialist Party now has seven members who are councilors in London, Yorkshire and the West Midlands.

Additionally, many other Socialist Party candidates scored creditable improvements on previous results and saw a consolidation of the party’s support in Coventry and Lewisham.

Socialist Party general secretary Peter Taaffe said today:

 “The election of Jackie Grunsell, along with other Socialist Party candidates – as well as other left-wing and independent campaigners on issues such as the NHS – is to be welcomed and shows the potential for a new mass workers’ party to begin to be established.

“And, I’m sure that the election of Jackie Grunsell, which has come at a crucial time in the battle to defend the NHS for working-class people, will greatly assist in developing national campaign on the NHS which links NHS trade unions and community campaigners in calling for a national strike and demonstration to defend the NHS.

Full reports and analysis:

Victory for NHS campaign

Huddersfield voters choose a socialist and a fighter!

Third socialist councillor elected in Coventry

Increased votes for socialism in Lewisham

Stoke - BNP wins close-run election

Excellent results for the Socialist Party


Local elections: A death blow for Blair?

Dangers in Respect's development


Reports from the Local elections campaign May 2006


Huddersfield

Dr Jackie GrunskillTHE ELECTION campaign of 'Save Huddersfield NHS' is going from strength to strength.

Dr Jackie Grunsell

 Every street we visit keeps showing massive support for campaign candidate and local GP Jackie Grunsell. Many people are inspired by the stand she has taken against the local NHS Trust board and are joining in with the campaign's call for their sacking.

Iain Dalton, Huddersfield Socialist Party

Local people are also sick of the other political parties' lies and inaction over these cuts in local health services. Campaigning in Huddersfield

The Lib Dems, whist claiming to be defending the health services, fail to mention that their two councillors on the board voted for the cuts.

Campaigning in Huddersfield

The people are also fed up with a Labour government pushing through cuts and privatisation in the health service that Thatcher could only dream of.

Local people are waking up to the wider picture, shown by the fact that Socialist Party members are not only discussing local health services, but also the need for a democratically controlled public NHS that is accountable to local people, not run by the hands of parasitic Trust boards.


Coventry: Anger grows at Labour and Tory cuts

Rob Windsor

ANGER OVER cuts and attacks on the NHS in Coventry has fed into our election campaign to get Rob Windsor re-elected in the St Michaels ward.

Rob Windsor

Our stall on Easter Saturday raised over £200 fighting fund as people signed the petition protesting job cuts at Walsgrave hospital (see page eight).

Lindsay Currie, Coventry Socialist Party

The city-wide NHS SOS campaign, initiated by Socialist Party members and involving trade unions, health workers and community groups, is organising a protest on 27 April against the cuts and ward closures.

Canvassing door-to-door in St Michaels suggests that we have a realistic chance of regaining the seat. Certainly, dissatisfaction with New Labour runs deep. And the recent actions of the sitting - though largely absent (one resident asked whether he had died!) - Labour councillor, Solly Bhayat, shows how out of contact he is with the people he is supposed to represent.

Bhayat recently abstained on the Tory proposal for a new city academy - while other Labour councillors opportunistically voted against (despite it being New Labour's national policy). Most people in St Michael's oppose this proposal which is undermining Labour support.

A recurrent theme on the doorstep is that it is only the Socialist Party which is going out to meet, talk and listen to people. This also applies to the four other seats we're contesting in the city - Whoberley, Lower Stoke, Henley, Sherbourne.

Coventry West Socialist Party branch is carrying out door-to-door petitioning on the NHS in Whoberley ward before the local weekly meeting as part of the campaign to strengthen our support in other areas of the city, and to get backing for the Campaign for a New Workers' Party.

Socialist Party members from Wales and West and East Midlands have been helping the election campaign on weekends, and we will step up the campaign in the final two weeks before the election.


Stoke-on-Trent

No to cuts and redundancies

Paul Sutton

THE STOKE election campaign to get Socialist Party councillor Paul Sutton re-elected is in full swing and already Labour are in a panic.

Paul Sutton

Their first leaflet is devoted to accusing the Socialist Party of 'falsehoods' over our warning that the Labour-controlled council is planning to close or privatise care homes and community centres.

Andy Bentley, Stoke-on-Trent Socialist Party

This is despite the actual evidence - a list of care homes under threat published in the local paper on 4 April! But Labour councillors' 'warnings of mass deception' will cut no ice with ordinary working-class voters who know only too well the Blairite Labour Party's record on truth.

On the doorstep there is much anger towards Labour - a quarter of the people we have canvassed say that they will vote for the Socialist Party.

We are campaigning in the election to stop 1,200 redundancies at the University Hospital of North Staffs (UHNS). We organised a protest at the meeting of the city council Scrutiny Commission which heard UHNS boss, Anthony Samara, trying to justify this butchery of our NHS.

Labour councillors only agreed to the meeting in the first place because Socialist Party councillors Dave and Paul Sutton put pressure on them. The meeting, which had six Labour members, two Independents and one Tory, then barred Paul from his place on the scrutiny commission because he was part of the active campaign to stop these attacks!

The Labour chair, Derek Bamford, also stopped any members of the public speaking. Without Paul Sutton on the commission and ordinary NHS workers gagged, Samara must have felt he was being savaged by a powder puff, such was these so-called councillors' spineless performance.

The protest outside was covered by the local papers and radio. Sky TV also filmed our NHS-SOS committee meeting which was planning the details of the March to Defend the NHS in Stoke on 29 April.

So far, Stoke Central branch has sold over 300 copies of the socialist, Stoke South over 100 and more than 100 by others - a total of more than 500 from stalls, canvassing, regular sales and NHS workers.


Lewisham

Getting our message across

Ian PageTHE CAMPAIGN to get Ian Page and Chris Flood re-elected and to get Jess Leech elected is going very well.

Ian Page

We canvass up to three times every day so there are plenty of opportunities to convince voters to back the Socialist Party candidates.

Chris Newby, Socialist Party London Regional organiser

On Somerville estate, our two Socialist Party councillors Ian and Chris have been at tenants meetings discussing Labour's proposed housing transfer, the need for tenants to have a vote to stay with the council and for the government to put in the public funding needed for repairs and renovation.

Chris FloodTenants everywhere are angry at the lack of consultation - many have not only signed the Socialist Party petition initiated by Ian and Chris but are also now coming out to vote Socialist Alternative.

Chris Flood

We are also campaigning against the threatened cuts to Lewisham Hospital as a result of the £7 million debt (see page three). We have now also got the public support of a leading 'new school for New Cross' campaigner who is standing in the mayoral elections

A team of Socialist Party supporters distributed our main election leaflet to about 1,000 flats and houses on the Honor Oak estate over the Easter weekend. The same supporters helped to organise our launch party.

40 people have expressed an interest in either joining the Socialist Party or finding out more information. New people are regularly coming along to our local meetings. Using petitions on housing and Lewisham hospital, we regularly get donations of fivers and tenners for our fighting fund.

Now, we are going into overdrive with regular stalls at schools and stations to make sure that as many people in Telegraph Hill ward get our message. If you want councillors who put people before profit, you need to vote Socialist Alternative.


2006

Where we're standing

London

Lewisham Telegraph Hill: Councillor Ian Page, Councillor Chris Flood, Jes Leech

Walthamstow High St: Claire Buddle

Southwark Cathedral: Lois Austin

North West

Baguley Wythenshawe: Lynn Worthington

Merseyside

Netherton and Orrell Bootle: Pete Glover

Northern

Newcastle Byker: Paul Owens

Southern

Southampton Bevois: Nick Chaffey

West Midlands

Coventry St Michaels: Rob Windsor

Coventry Lower Stoke: Dave Runnells

Coventry Henley: Josie Kenny

Coventry Whoberley: Ross Saunders

Coventry Sherbourne: Jason Toynbee

Nuneato and Bedworth Exhall: Eileen Hunter

Stoke Abbey Green: Councillor Paul Sutton

Yorkshire

Huddersfield Crosland Moor and Netherton: Dr Jackie Grunsell (Save Huddesfield NHS)

Sheffield Graves Park: Calvin Payne

Wakefield East: Mick Griffiths


Socialist Green Unity Coalition

The Socialist Party is also standing as part of the Socialist Green Unity Coalition, who are fielding up to 50 candidates in the local elections.

 


Campaigning against cuts and closures

Manchester

Neither gales, rain nor hailstorms can stop the local election campaign for Socialist Alternative candidate Lynn Worthington in Wythenshawe, Manchester, which is well on its way.
Christian Bunke, Manchester Socialist Party, reports

Last year, we campaigned against the removal of vital facilities for disabled children at Greenbrow nursery, warning this would be a step towards the eventual closure of the entire school.

This is exactly what the Wythenshawe Labour councillors are planning now! They want to demolish the school and give the land to fat cat developers, exactly what has happened to three other schools in the area already. Is it any wonder that local people feel nothing but contempt for these councillors.

Closing the nursery will cost £1.25 million - we are campaigning for this money to be used to build more educational facilities, rather then demolishing them.

Councillors earn thousands in expenses, while turning up to a couple of meetings per month whose sole point is to decide which schools to close next, or which bit of public land to sell off to private developers.

These very same councillors seem to be afraid to face the anger of the community. None of them live in Wythenshawe and they hold only one surgery a month, where they all appear together for two hours!

Socialist Alternative candidate Lynn Worthington has lived here for decades. Through talking to people on the doorstep, we have already talked to more people than these councillors have ever done. We sold more then 50 papers in three days and hope to sell a total of 100 by the end of the week. 50 people have already put up window posters, showing public support for our campaign. A number of local people have pledged to help canvassing and leafleting.


Newcastle

Newcastle branch is standing Paul Owens as a candidate in the local elections in Byker. Socialist Party members from all over the North East have been out in force on the streets of Newcastle, with members and supporters from Cumbria, Durham and Teeside joining those from Tyneside.

Kieran Taylor, Newcastle

Our group had a big presence in Newcastle city centre on 8 April at peak shopping time. The anger at the recent announcement that up to 100 jobs may be lost at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Gateshead, helped us to gain hundreds of signatures for our petition and sell 55 copies of the socialist.

Afterwards, we converged on Byker ward for canvassing door-to-door. Socialist Party members were not put off by savage dogs and heavy sleet and snow!

We have continued to campaign in the ward every day and are getting a good response. After Saturday's soaking, members still made time for a meeting and a political discussion at a supporter's house, which she kindly let us occupy for the night. Over 20 people, from a 92 year old down to two teenagers still attending school, heard a very thorough introduction and enjoyed a lively discussion.

This was immediately followed by a social event - after a long day we could relax and dry out!

Over £100 was raised over the weekend and we made a big step towards building the profile of our candidate Paul Owens and a socialist alternative to the big capitalist parties.


Southampton

A look of surprise is usually the first response you get when the door opens. Most people haven't seen a canvasser from any of the main political parties for several years, but the Socialist Party's local election pitch in Bevois ward, Southampton, soon gets a warm reception.

Toby Harris, Southampton

We are campaigning on the doorstep for a secure future for St. Mary's leisure centre and against the ongoing attacks on services by the Liberal Democrat-run council. The popular and well-used centre has been threatened with closure twice in the last two years - both times local people and the Socialist Party demonstrated and defended St Mary's - and the council are already hinting at closing it next year.

Everyone in the branch has committed themselves to campaigning on almost every day of the week, canvassing each evening and doing stalls in the local area including three stalls every Saturday.

The people we meet on the doorstep are united in their anger and dismay at the main parties. One older couple condemned New Labour for being "intent on selling off every scrap of green public places to private developers". They totally supported our genuinely socialist alternative and took a window bill and flyers to distribute to their neighbours, buying a paper and donating £4 to the campaign.

It was inspiring for some of the young International Socialist Resistance members out canvassing for the first time to encounter such support, from young and old alike. Despite a day that included a three-hour stall outside a local supermarket, with a short break before another hour of canvassing and speaking at a branch meeting, I still felt the positive buzz of knowing our ideas reflect the experiences and opinions of ordinary people. The buzz that keeps us campaigning for socialism!


Walthamstow

Only hours after starting to leaflet High Street ward with our election address, people began to contact us to support our campaign. One was a community activist who would like our candidate to speak at election hustings for senior citizens and wants to attend our meetings.

Jane James

Waltham Forest council have recently cut 67 home care workers' jobs and are now using private agencies. While canvassing, we heard of one elderly person whose agency home-care worker had not arrived on a number of days to prepare a meal for her. This meant that, because she hadn't eaten, the district nurse couldn't give her medication when she called.

Our candidate Claire Buddle, who is standing for the first time, explains that "I am a socialist because I see injustice being done to people of all ages and races across the world. Ordinary people struggle to care for their families; young people are let down by the lack of facilities, finance and support for their needs and education and are expected to work for poverty wages."

We have had a warm response to our campaign, both on the doorstep and on our stalls, to our message that we can fight back and don't have to accept the deterioration in our conditions.

A PCS member contacted us to say they agreed with our programme and took an election poster and a 17-year-old has contacted us through our website asking to help out with ISR campaigns.

Branch members, including newer members who have not been part of our election work before, have all been out leafleting, canvassing and helping on stalls.

In the last week we have sold 139 papers; £43.50 fighting fund was raised just from two stalls in the ward on Saturday 15 April.


BNP is no alternative to Blairism

THE MEDIA have been queuing up to give publicity to the far-right, racist British National Party (BNP). According to the Joseph Rowntree Trust one in four Londoners are considering voting BNP, while employment minister Margaret Hodge claims that up to eight out of ten white families in her Barking constituency say they are thinking about it.

Naomi Byron, Tower Hamlets Socialist Party

The establishment are talking up the BNP's chances in order to try to scare traditional Labour voters into turning out. But this is a dangerous game. It could be counter-productive, encouraging voters to think that by voting BNP they can give the main parties a bloody nose.

The BNP have been promoting themselves as standing for "old Labour" values in traditionally Labour working-class areas. This couldn't be further from the truth. The BNP, whether in their previous neo-Nazi incarnation or their current "respectable" populist image, have never stood up for working-class people's rights.

They are shifting their propaganda because they have realised this attracts votes and support, not because they have any intention of following through in their promises. In the recent pensions strike the BNP didn't back the strikers. Instead they tried to shift the blame for government attacks on council workers' pensions onto the pensions deal won by health workers, teachers and civil servants fighting against the same attacks!

The BNP even say that: 'The fundamental cause of Britain's looming pensions crisis is the fact that the average Briton is not saving enough money for his or her retirement...' and 'A gradual increase in the retirement age... is reasonable.' (BNP economics bulletin 5/12/2005.) What about the £billions stolen out of our pension funds by the bosses and the government?

So much for supporting workers' rights - at the first sign of any confrontation the BNP immediately start to line up with big business and the government.

Even where the BNP have councillors, they utterly fail to stand up to cuts in local services, or to carry out their pledges such as opposing above-inflation rises in council tax (see issue 430).

The BNP are not just useless, they're dangerous. They are trying to divide working-class communities and stir up racial tensions, particularly against Muslim communities. And the media and mainstream parties are helping them.

The Socialist Party fights against the far right and racism, including the false ideas of the BNP. We are campaigning for a new mass party for working people, to channel the anger and frustration people feel in a positive direction.

 

 

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