The Socialist

The Socialist 12 October 2006

Health workers beat the privateers


Health workers beat the privateers

Get organised! Join the march on parliament!

NHS - not safe in their hands

Protests at health cuts

Angry marchers keep up the fight


Fees can damage your education

Student fees can be defeated

Campaigning in the schools and colleges

Chile: solidarity appeal


All views welcome at Socialism 2006

Huge meeting greets socialist movement

Cable Street 1936: When workers drove back the fascists

A 'race to the bottom' for workers' rights and a disaster for the environment

Dave Nellist's global warning

Kazakhstan - appeal for support

Brazilian elections: Lula fails to win in first round

"Bertiegate" scandal rocks Ahern coalition


Blood service faces cuts

Trade unions must organise casual workers

 
 
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Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Protests at health cuts

Huntingdon

OVER 1,000 people marched in Huntingdon on 7 October to protest against the closure of Hinchinbrooke Hospital which provides a service for 150,000 in the area.

For the people of Huntingdon their alternative will be Addenbrookes in Cambridge travelling on the congested A14 into the even more congested Cambridge. One young mother told me that neither she nor her baby would be alive today without the hospital as they would not have got her to Addenbrookes in time to save them both.

People were queuing to sign our petition. 28 papers were sold and £40 collected in less than an hour.

Teresa MacKay

Southampton

A DETERMINED group of around 60 trade unionists, NHS workers, patients and Socialist Party members marched through Southampton on 7 October to raise public awareness of plans to set up a local Independent Sector Treatment Centre (ISTC).

The local NHS trust wants the privately owned centre to be established at the city's Royal South Hants Hospital by late 2007.

Organised by Southampton Keep Our NHS Public, the demo attracted local media coverage to draw attention to the creeping privatisation of the health service. Onlookers joined the march as it proceeded, showing the strength of feeling amongst local people.

The demo also helped build support for the 1 November national lobby of parliament and speakers at the rally called for a second, larger march and rally in Southampton to follow this.

Southampton City Council UNISON sent a message of support - they are also facing a fight against privatisation of services, cuts and closures.

Jamie Davis, Southampton Socialist Party and Hampshire Police UNISON

Redditch

IN THE pouring rain, 200 people marched to Redditch hospital in the west Midlands on 5 October protesting at proposed cuts in services.

Trust bosses plan to reduce A&E services to an "8 til late" service and close maternity and children's wards.

This seems to be happening to hospitals across the West Midlands region.

The trust barred staff from participating in any protest, leaving them to wave their support from windows.

Marchers pointed the finger at the Trust and the government for trying to run down local services. PFI alone, through the scheme in Worcester, is already stripping Worcestershire's NHS of over £5 million a year for no extra benefit.

Neil Stote of the Save the Alex action group (www.savethealex.co.uk) was pleased with the turnout.

"This fight seems to have been going on forever," he said. "We fought these cuts last December and in April. We want basic local services for basic local needs. We don't want cuts. At which point will they listen?"

Protesters felt that national action was needed against cuts and privatisation.

Dave Griffiths

In this issue


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Health workers beat the privateers

Get organised! Join the march on parliament!

NHS - not safe in their hands

Protests at health cuts

Angry marchers keep up the fight


Socialist Students

Fees can damage your education

Student fees can be defeated

Campaigning in the schools and colleges

Chile: solidarity appeal


International socialist news and analysis

All views welcome at Socialism 2006

Huge meeting greets socialist movement

Cable Street 1936: When workers drove back the fascists

A 'race to the bottom' for workers' rights and a disaster for the environment

Dave Nellist's global warning

Kazakhstan - appeal for support

Brazilian elections: Lula fails to win in first round

"Bertiegate" scandal rocks Ahern coalition


Socialist Party workplace news

Blood service faces cuts

Trade unions must organise casual workers


 

Home   |   The Socialist 12 October 2006   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Health:

triangleHospital jobs scandal - Action now to save the NHS!

triangleIt's our NHS - Let's fight for it!

triangleHealth services at risk in Cardiff and Vale

triangleUnison leadership 'woefully inadequate' in face of cuts

trianglePublic sector

triangleImmigration and the far right

Southampton:

triangleUnison attacks TUSC candidate

triangleSouthampton TUSC and Socialist Party: May Day rally

triangleSouthampton TUSC and Socialist Party: Defend Education, No Academies, Restore EMA

triangleLabour - no friend of trade unions

NHS:

triangle'Save Heatherwood Hospital' campaign yielding results

triangleNHS GMB members vote No to pensions deal

triangleNorth Derbyshire Socialist Party: The battle to save the NHS - how will we win?

Hospital:

triangleWest London: Charing Cross hospital - Save A&E demo

triangleSwindon hospital workers fight bullying

triangleGateshead demo against hospital childcare cuts

Privatisation:

triangleVictory for Greenwich Unite library campaign

trianglePrivatisation pushes up transport costs in Yorkshire

triangleCare home closures in Sheffield