The Socialist

The Socialist 24 November 2009

"We wont pay for the crisis"

'We wont pay for the crisis'


How could full youth employment be achieved?

Bristol Youth Fight for Jobs challenges council leader


Lessons of struggle: If you fight, you can win!


Flood chaos in Cumbria


Afghanistan: Brown and Obama scrabbling for an exit strategy


Main parties plan cutbacks: It's time for a fightback!

Mobilising to stop Griffin

Racists - stay out of Wrexham!

Successful Manchester Tamil Solidarity meeting

Fast news


People's Charter - a step towards workers' political representation?


The battle for state education

Socialist Party candidate increases vote in NUT election

Education: 'Try your best' is not enough

Schools paying for the crisis

Attacks begin at Bangor University

Fight cuts at Manchester Met


Leeds bins victory

Superdrug workers show industrial action can win victories

Defend the four!

Postal dispute: Bosses still on the attack

London bus workers strike

Axiom railworkers' strike remains solid

Cuts crisis on the Isle of Man


Guadeloupe - End the profiteering and exploitation


The 1970s, mainly viewed from the top

 
 
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Socialist Party contemporary Marxist analysis

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Socialist Party candidate increases vote in NUT election

Martin Davies at public meeting on lessons of the Lindsey oil refinery strike with Keith Gibson and Jerry Hicks, photo Paul Mattsson

Martin Davies at public meeting on lessons of the Lindsey oil refinery strike with Keith Gibson and Jerry Hicks, photo Paul Mattsson

Lewisham National Union of Teachers (NUT) secretary and Socialist Party member Martin Powell-Davies received over three thousand first preference votes in the election for NUT vice-president, coming fourth out of six candidates.

Report from Socialist Party Teachers

Supporters and opponents alike have recognised that this was a good performance for a candidate without the backing of any of the main groupings that traditionally dominate national elections in the NUT.

Martin's vote went up from the last election in 2007, despite the turnout falling to a mere 9% of the membership. The campaign secured a higher proportion of the vote in comparison to the number of nominating Local Associations (branches) than any other candidate.

As usual with the transferable vote system used in the election, the main candidates from both the 'left' and 'right' blocs within the union were elected to fill the two vice-president positions. However, Martin's support showed that there is growing frustration at the failure of all sections of the national leadership to adequately defend classroom teachers.

The low turnout shows that many teachers, ground down by continual workload and the bullying regime that has taken hold of too many schools, are questioning whether the union can make a difference.

Yet, where Martin's campaign was able to get a hearing, our call to overcome the isolation of individual school groups by building national action on workload always won support. Our demand has been won at successive NUT annual conferences but is still to be implemented by the nominally 'left' controlled national executive.

With education and public services facing severe attacks after the next election, whoever forms the next government, the NUT leadership will be put to the test like never before. That's why Socialist Party Teachers, along with other supporters of Martin's campaign, will be continuing to campaign for united national action and for determined union leadership, locally and nationally.

We will be campaigning in support of Socialist Teachers Alliance member Kevin Courtney in January's election for NUT deputy general secretary. However, Socialist Party Teachers will also be standing ourselves in next year's elections for the NUT national executive so that we can help give genuine campaigners like Kevin the backing they will need in the national leadership.

Results (first preference votes):

  • Nina Franklin 6,603, elected after transfers
  • Ken Cridland 4,707
  • Marilyn Harrop 4,397, elected after transfers
  • Martin Powell-Davies 3,028
  • Anne Swift 2,305
  • Simon Jones 2,145

In this issue

'We wont pay for the crisis'


Socialist Party editorial

How could full youth employment be achieved?

Bristol Youth Fight for Jobs challenges council leader


Marxist analysis: history

Lessons of struggle: If you fight, you can win!


Environment and socialism

Flood chaos in Cumbria


War and occupation

Afghanistan: Brown and Obama scrabbling for an exit strategy


Socialist Party news and analysis

Main parties plan cutbacks: It's time for a fightback!

Mobilising to stop Griffin

Racists - stay out of Wrexham!

Successful Manchester Tamil Solidarity meeting

Fast news


People's Charter

People's Charter - a step towards workers' political representation?


Education

The battle for state education

Socialist Party candidate increases vote in NUT election

Education: 'Try your best' is not enough

Schools paying for the crisis

Attacks begin at Bangor University

Fight cuts at Manchester Met


Socialist Party workplace news

Leeds bins victory

Superdrug workers show industrial action can win victories

Defend the four!

Postal dispute: Bosses still on the attack

London bus workers strike

Axiom railworkers' strike remains solid

Cuts crisis on the Isle of Man


International socialist news

Guadeloupe - End the profiteering and exploitation


Socialist Party review

The 1970s, mainly viewed from the top


 

Home   |   The Socialist 24 November 2009   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Martin Powell-Davies:

triangleNUT Executive "shirks its responsibilites"

triangleNUT teachers' conference

trianglePublic sector pensions: 'Coalition of the willing' gathering strength

triangleStand up to Tory bullies

triangleLewisham teachers - Action threat spells victory

triangleStrike back at pensions robbery!

NUT:

triangleStrike at Sussex Downs College

triangleLincolnshire academies in crisis

triangleSolidarity against far-right thugs

triangle10 May sees united strike - but teacher unions shirk their responsibilities

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

Socialist:

triangleSolidarity with Greek workers

triangleGood result for Socialist Students candidates in NUS elections

triangleTurning anger into action

Election:

triangleElection results: How did TUSC do?

triangleCon-Dems battered in Scotland

triangleLegitimacy of Cameron and Clegg further shattered

Teachers:

triangleLondon teachers and lecturers strike to defend pensions

triangleThem & Us

triangleHaringey - Save community schools, No to academies