The Socialist

The Socialist 25 May 2001

Keep The Private Vultures Out

Keep The Private Vultures Out

Break The Chains Of Poverty

Labour's union links crack at seams

Asylum - Labour and Tories up the stakes

Fat Cat at Wakefield Mayor's Ball

Socialist Alliance hits the airwaves

Students and Socialist councillors fight fees' threats

Green Party - A serious Left alternative?

Plaid Cymru - good old fashioned socialism?

SNP: Standing up for big business

Law and order: Soft on a criminal system

No to a bosses' Europe: Fight for workers' unity

Middle East - Edging closer to all-out war

 
 
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The Socialist - What we think

Labour's union links crack at seams

LAST WEEK'S decision of the Fire Brigades Union (FBU) to loosen its financial links to the Labour Party is major step forward. Rejecting the recommendation of the union's executive, delegates to the annual conference voted by 27,000 to 23,000 to allow financial support to candidates opposing the Labour Party.

Coming as it did just days after Labour's Manifesto launch promising an ever-greater 'involvement' of private companies in public services, this was a timely response. It followed the early news coming from Wyre Forest that New Labour could well lose the seat to a Kidderminster hospital campaigner, such is the anger at the local attack there on the NHS.

With New Labour now so clearly another capitalist party, albeit of a more 'liberal' character than Hague's Tories, workers, public service users, and young people, need a new mass alternative, a new workers' party, to represent their interests.

The successful motion at the FBU conference, from the union's London region, reflected the experience of FBU members there. Having voted overwhelmingly last year to back Ken Livingstone for London mayor they had been compelled by the then FBU general secretary, Ken Cameron, to withdraw financial support for his independent candidacy.

Another telling argument was when the mover of the motion, a Socialist Party member, explained that under the previous policy the union would not be able to support the Socialist Alliance candidate in St Helens South, long-standing Labour Party member and FBU activist Neil Thompson, who has resigned from the Labour Party to stand against the millionaire ex-Tory MP, Shaun Woodward.

Significant though the FBU vote is, however, the experience even within that union shows that the process of building a new working class party will not be a straightforward one. The London region that moved the resolution to loosen the links, for example, also calls for Ken Livingstone to be re-admitted to the Labour Party.

Reflecting a lingering ambivalence amongst some sections that perhaps the Labour Party could be 'reclaimed', there is also a lack of confidence that a viable alternative to New Labour can be built. Significantly, a motion from Bedfordshire FBU, which explicitly argued for disaffiliation from the Labour Party and support for the Socialist Alliance, was withdrawn when early soundings showed that it would be defeated.

The Kidderminster candidate, Dr Richard Taylor, also sees the electoral successes of the hospital campaign as starting "a revolt against the major party political system" (Guardian, 26 March). But at this stage it is seen as an 'independent revolt', not linked to a national alternative.

A good showing by Socialist Party, Socialist Alliance and Scottish Socialist Party candidates in the general election will increase the weight of The Socialist's arguments that a new workers party is necessary. Clarity within the Socialist Alliance, on the need for a federal structure that can accommodate workers moving onto the political plane at different speeds, and even on the need for a new workers' party, will also be important.

But it will be mainly events, of workers responding to the deepening crisis that a second-term Labour government will face, that will fill out the processes signposted by the FBU decision and the Kidderminster campaign into the basis for a new mass workers' party.


In this issue

Keep The Private Vultures Out

Break The Chains Of Poverty

Labour's union links crack at seams

Asylum - Labour and Tories up the stakes

Fat Cat at Wakefield Mayor's Ball

Socialist Alliance hits the airwaves

Students and Socialist councillors fight fees' threats

Green Party - A serious Left alternative?

Plaid Cymru - good old fashioned socialism?

SNP: Standing up for big business

Law and order: Soft on a criminal system

No to a bosses' Europe: Fight for workers' unity

Middle East - Edging closer to all-out war


 

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Related links:

Labour:

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleLeadership shows weakness at CWU conference

triangleBuilding the electoral alternative in Brent

triangleWales TUC - Oppose all cuts!

triangleElection results: How did TUSC do?

triangleLabour's best Wales result in 21 years will not stop cuts

Socialist:

triangleBristol Central Socialist Party: Art and Politics

triangleBristol Central Socialist Party: The role of the monarchy in capitalist society

triangleMore attacks on right to campaign

triangleMerseyside Socialist Party: Environmental crisis - a socialist solution

FBU:

triangleFire Brigades Union statement on pension proposals

trianglePublic 'disgust and shock' at fire service cuts

triangleFire service cuts

Labour Party:

triangleObituary: Arthur Deane

triangleManchester Socialist Party: The role of the Labour Party

triangleUnite rules conference - steps forward for members

Socialist Party:

triangleLiverpool Socialist Party: Marxist Economics

triangleLiverpool Socialist Party: A Marxist view of history

triangleBristol East Socialist Party: No Pasaran! Fighting the far right