Campaigning To Change Society

    I was always "Socialist minded" from my late
    teens. I took part in CND marches. I had worked with the homeless in London
    aged 19 so had seen the results of capitalism at the sharp end. I used to get
    mad every time I saw Maggie Thatcher on the telly but then kick myself for
    doing nothing!

    Rob Windsor, Socialist Party councillor, Coventry

    The biggest push towards joining a party was when I saw the
    contrast between policing at a CND mass trespass at the Trident base in
    Scotland, then under construction, and that used at the Wapping dispute over
    the sacking of 5,000 printers.

    The former was low key, the latter the most brutal I had
    ever seen. I remember a horse charge and saw this mounted police officer peel
    an old guy off some railings with a long riot shield. Then a "snatch
    squad" of about six with short truncheons beat him to within an inch of
    his life.

    It was then that I realised that a class war was going on
    and the lengths that the privileged would go to defend their interests. I
    became a Militant supporter (the forerunner of the Socialist Party) in 1987
    after the successful campaign to get Dave Nellist, then a Labour MP, re-elected
    to Parliament.

    Militant

    Of all the groups on the Left, Militant was the most
    serious and disciplined. When something was fully discussed and decided, it got
    done. Within two years, I was playing a leading role in building the anti-poll
    tax campaign that beat Thatcher and her tax.

    I am now one of three Socialist Party councillors in
    Coventry. Whilst there are only three of us we strive to show an alternative
    way of organising society in everything we do.

    We have played a full part in the mass anti-war movement
    and set up a special council meeting to discuss the war, one of the few
    councils in Western Europe to do so.

    A lot of our work involves fighting for people who the
    anti-war movement hasn’t touched – but the cost of the war certainly has! Every
    day we battle for funding for areas where local people are told that they can’t
    have even a few thousand quid for improvements – yet the £6.5 billion cost of
    war is made to seem like small change!

    Fighting for people

    We have fought housing privatisation and the break up of
    working class communities so that developers can profit from land deals. We got
    the council to oppose top-up fees. We saved council jobs, and through our
    determination to oppose at all costs, forced the council to put an extra £1
    million into adult social services.

    We work on individual issues and community campaigns every
    day of the week. Even one of Blair’s favourite think-tanks recognised us as
    good local representatives.

    But we are not like this because we are nice individuals or
    specially gifted.

    It is because we are members of a party with firm ideas
    about transforming society so that working people own and control the wealth
    created; a party that doesn’t allow its representatives to have lavish
    lifestyles way above those that we represent. We’re there to improve the lives
    of working people – not our bank balances.

    The Socialist Party doesn’t stop at just complaining about
    capitalist society but strives every day to change it. In trades unions, in
    local areas, in mass campaigns like the anti-war movement, amongst the workers
    and youth. It is well worth joining.