The Socialist 3 May 2007 Time for a new workers' party 2007 election analysis: Time for a new workers' party Scottish Elections: Labour rocked as SNP wins NHS cuts... privatisation... widening wealth gap Campaign for a New Workers' Party conference NHS: A matter of life and death in Swansea PCS: Fighting for jobs, pay and services Widening wealth gap needs working-class response Packed election rally for Scotland's Solidarity Irish election - Socialist Party takes on the establishment New Labour panics and resorts to lies Yorkshire ISR and Socialist Students day of action Alternative energy: Winds of change? Seattle students walkout against the Iraq war Pressure mounts for troops withdrawal Russia April 1917: Lenin returns from exile Women must have the right to choose! What 'public-private partnerships really mean Oppose legal aid contracts tooth and nail Remember the dead but fight for the living |
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Home | The Socialist 3 May 2007 | Join the Socialist Party Tales from the council chamberWhat 'public-private partnerships really meanSOCIALIST PARTY councillors, Ian Page and Chris Flood have won another victory on Lewisham council. Lewisham is to back the call for London Bridge station to be 're-zoned' while the East London underground line is closed for extension works. Following a recent public consultation meeting, Ian and Chris submitted a motion to Lewisham council, welcoming the East London line's extension but expressing concern with Transport for London's (TfL) plan to close the entire line for thirty months from December. The motion committed the council to lobby TfL for a phased or sectional closure programme to carry out the extension works. The motion also called for transport replacement arrangements to include the temporary re-zoning of London Bridge as a Zone Two station for 'transit journeys' that start and finish outside the expensive Zone One. Otherwise, East London line users will face the 'choice' of massively increased journey times for years or going through central London overground stations like London Bridge or Cannon Street and paying an extra fare each time for the privilege. In an unusual piece of lobbying before the council meeting, every councillor received a letter from TfL's Director of Development explicitly opposing the motion's call to re-zone London Bridge. "Although this might initially seem attractive", the letter argued, "it is not viable... the train operating companies, which are privately run, have estimated that this would cost them around £100m in lost revenue". This is very instructive. TfL is the transport arm of the Greater London Authority, a democratically-elected body led by the mayor of London, Ken Livingstone. Yet here it was, lobbying on behalf of its private sector 'partners' profits. Doesn't this say everything about whose interests come first in New Labour's 'public-private partnership' and PFI private finance initiative schemes? These are 'partnerships' in the same way that a horse is 'a partner' for its rider! Despite this intervention, however, Lewisham's New Labour councillors realised that they had no alternative but to grudgingly support the Socialist Party motion. The New Labour Deputy Mayor used her entire five minutes speaking time to attack the Socialist Party - "Unlike the socialists I live in the real world where you have to work constructively with your partners behind closed doors to get things done" - but was forced to recommend a yes vote. Ian Page, replying, thanked her 'for her sterling efforts' (for which she gets paid £47,600 a year), but hoped that now something could actually be done - rather than just talked about - to defend the interests of East London line users. In this issue
Socialist Party election campaign
Socialist Party NHS campaign
Socialist Party workplace news
Socialist Party editorial
Socialist Party election campaign
Global Warming
Education Socialist Students
Socialist Party Marxist analysis
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Socialist Party news and analysis
Socialist Party workplace news
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