The Socialist

The Socialist 28 May 2008

Build a new workers' party

Build A New Workers' Party

Crewe and Nantwich 'no-win' by-election: Why New Labour lost

I told my union: "We need a new workers' party"

Westminster parties are remote from life

Campaign for a new workers' party: conference 2008

MPs' expensive expenses


Tax the rich not the poor!

Exeter bomb explosion: Workers' unity needed against terrorism, war and deprivation

Johnson's Prince of Darkness

Them & Us

Greenwich - save our centres


Women welcome abortion rights victory: Now fight to extend rights


Home secretary: "Tough on crime"...but not the causes

'Youth justice': repressive measures do not work


'Counter-terrorism' legislation threatens our democratic rights


South Africa: Attacks on refugees and migrants reveal capitalism's barbaric underbelly


The Wire - Reviewed by Michael Wrack


PCS conference: More battles ahead on pay and jobs

Usdaw general secretary election: Members want democratic debate

Industrial news in brief

 
Socialist Party logo Socialist Party on the climate change demo December 2007, pic Paul Mattsson Socialist Party News
Socialist Party Policy statements
Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Westminster parties are remote from life

THE START of the week and the same pressure begins. From behind a bank of screens a worker mutters: "So they want us to become bloody monarchists now?" He's just read about Gordon Brown's plans to get school pupils to swear allegiance to the Queen.

Steve Wootton

I look up and he says Labour sounds just like the Tories now, "cos that's what they'd say and support". I say well, that's who our union supports with our money. He gives a resigned sigh, and with his eyes rolling up in disdain, shakes his head and laughs.

Having Campaign for a New Workers Party (CNWP) material in my bag I hand him a leaflet. "Here", I say, "this is what I'm campaigning for in the union". He stops work and reads on. Says nothing more.

Two days later I ask him: "So, what did you think of it then?" There's no hostility, rather a look of trying to figure out the bigger picture and how it'll happen, given that no such party exists yet and the scale of the task. "Nice idea" he says, continuing: "Come the revolution it'll happen eh?"

Joking aside, it's clear he's circulated my leaflet more widely. His mate across the way - a Liberal voter, joins in. For years he's been lobbying to get his daughter council house accommodation; at the same time he can't afford new glasses that he needs and the credit card bills are mounting.

"What we need is a common sense party, one that identifies with us", he adds. Both workers agree that "Westminster is shit" and that everyone in the parties within are disconnected from the reality we live in.

Both these workers have yet to consciously say that we need a new workers' party. Both don't know what a "common sense party" would look like as there is no credible model yet; there isn't even the outline of one. But the idea of a party representing their interests has not been dismissed in the conversation.

Workers' unity needed

What they do know is that all the parties at Westminster are of no use or benefit to them now. The shout goes out: "Anyone want to join Steve's party?" as they depart for the tea room with more immediate concerns on their minds.

What this conversation shows is that it is workers' direct experiences that are key, and that disappointingly for middle-class media commentators, the working class is debating just how it can be represented politically. It doesn't need a series called "White" on the BBC. It doesn't need navel-gazing from the chattering classes or 'head in hands' from detached union leaders saying: "there is no alternative to Labour".

This has no place in the workplace today. There are serious questions to be asked, but who will be there to answer the questions? So, this comment comes with a caveat.

I was there in my workplace, to hand others a CNWP leaflet. What if the far-right BNP or UKIP had been there instead? It's highly probable that given the developing polarisation alongside a feeling of 'no-one gives a toss about us', that these two workers could have given an ear to the racist and populist right's ideas.

On this score, it's touch and go who can get there first. Already an area of Bristol, Barton Hill, is called by workmates 'little Somalia', due to the sheer speed of change as migrant workers settle in the area and open small businesses like shops. But housing is scarce and people are feeling utterly disenfranchised, with no place and no one to address their concerns to. So frustration is reflected verbally. Next stop, politically?

Unfortunately, if a new far-right political party was set up, with a populist message, I am sure it would get the ear of many of my workmates. Likewise if a credible workers' party or even pre-party was set up, it too could potentially gain the audience. It's in the balance - whose agenda will win?


Also in The Socialist 28 May 2008:

Build A New Workers' Party

Crewe and Nantwich 'no-win' by-election: Why New Labour lost

I told my union: "We need a new workers' party"

Westminster parties are remote from life

Campaign for a new workers' party: conference 2008

MPs' expensive expenses


Socialist Party campaigns

Tax the rich not the poor!

Exeter bomb explosion: Workers' unity needed against terrorism, war and deprivation

Johnson's Prince of Darkness

Them & Us

Greenwich - save our centres


Socialist Party women

Women welcome abortion rights victory: Now fight to extend rights


Youth and crime

Home secretary: "Tough on crime"...but not the causes

'Youth justice': repressive measures do not work


Socialist Party feature

'Counter-terrorism' legislation threatens our democratic rights


International socialist analysis

South Africa: Attacks on refugees and migrants reveal capitalism's barbaric underbelly


Socialist Party review

The Wire - Reviewed by Michael Wrack


Socialist Party workplace news

PCS conference: More battles ahead on pay and jobs

Usdaw general secretary election: Members want democratic debate

Industrial news in brief


 

Home   |   The Socialist 28 May 2008   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

CNWP:

Terry Fields memorial meeting

CNWP conference: Wanted - a new mass workers' party

Campaign for a New Workers' Party

Come to the Campaign for a New Workers' Party Conference

New Labour's failures: Don't just get angry, get active

Far-right:

Oppose the BNP 'Festival of Hate'

Stop the far-right

Unite and fight against racism

BNP:

Opposing the far right

Protest at BNP's racist policies

Campaign for a New Workers Party:

Campaign for a new workers' party: Conference - Sunday 29 June, 11am - 5pm

conference