The Socialist

The Socialist 10 February 2010

Fight University Cuts

Fight university cuts


Fighting leadership needed in Unison - Nominate Roger Bannister for general secretary

Greenwich Unison backs victimised branch secretary


Preying on the living and dead

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory

Fiddling MPs: Jail the whole lot of them!

Vulnerable lose out on benefits

Socialist Women: Fighting for equality through socialism

Fast news


Civil service strike ballot: Vote 'yes' for action

Boycotting the 2010 SATS in schools

Coventry youth workers' strike

Metaldyne workers strike

Stoke: Axiom workers in overtime ban

Saving jobs and services in Worcestershire

Workplace news in brief


Hazel Blears must go

TUSC: Wellingborough socialists make a stand


PCS young members network conference

Bristol job centre workers fight transfer


Trade unions in Britain - are they ready for the coming battles?


Northern Ireland: An agreement to cement division

Sri Lanka President Rajapakse removes his rival, Fonseka

Tamil Solidarity -: Successful northern conference


Trotskyism on trial


Armed forces: Release Lance-Corporal Joe Glenton

Trade union rights for service personnel

 
 
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Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory with a mass stall protest for the right to campaign, photo Sarah Sachs-Eldridge

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory with a mass stall protest for the right to campaign, photo Sarah Sachs-Eldridge   (Click to enlarge)

"Next thing you know they'll be prosecuting residents for sticking up 'missing cat' posters on lamp-posts" I joked when Waltham Forest's enforcement officer initially challenged us over the right to campaign in the local town square. Now a local cat owner has actually been fined £75 as part of the council's 'zero tolerance' of 'environmental crime' for exactly that!

Sarah Sachs-Eldridge, Walthamstow Socialist Party secretary

But Socialist Party members in Waltham Forest have scored a victory against the council's outrageous attempts to clamp down on campaigning. On Saturday 6 February 20 members of the Socialist Party and eight tables showed that we will not be silenced!

This followed three members of Walthamstow Socialist Party receiving letters threatening a £500 fine for setting up a campaigning stall in the place we have done them in for 20 years.

Every person who stopped to sign a petition or to buy a copy of the Socialist newspaper was horrified when we explained the reason for our 'mass stall'. One local campaigner expressed support and told her own story which highlights the gross hypocrisy of the council.

Residents tried to organise a campaign to get the fruit and vegetable waste from the market composted rather than sent to pollute the earth in a poisonous landfill. What was the council's response? To threaten them with action over pinning notices on trees!

Campaigning against the war in Afghanistan, against cuts at Waltham Forest College, in solidarity with striking Turkish workers, for investment in job creation programmes, for democratic rights in Sri Lanka, and for a public inquiry into the wasteful privatisation schemes of our rotten council, kept activists busy.

Success

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory with a mass stall protest for the right to campaign, photo Sarah Sachs-Eldridge Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory with a mass stall protest for the right to campaign, photo Sarah Sachs-Eldridge

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory with a mass stall protest for the right to campaign, photo Sarah Sachs-Eldridge Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory with a mass stall protest for the right to campaign, photo Sarah Sachs-Eldridge   (Click to enlarge)

While most people were happy to speak to us and supported our stand to defend free speech the council officers kept their distance. Yellow high-visibility jacket-wearing officers were present in the square but they did not approach any of the campaigners. The bullying and aggressive methods we had previously experienced were kept in check by our show of strength.

We are having difficulty establishing the details of the case against us. The enforcement officer's letters quote a 1906 by-law. When we questioned why the council was acting on this now, a council spokesperson told the Waltham Forest Guardian that: "the by-law has always been enforced, but until recently there have not been enough enforcement officers working at the weekends to catch people breaking it."

The spokesperson also said: "Any person or group wishing to operate in these areas needs to have the correct permission, in the form of a signed agreement, and have paid the appropriate fee."

But so far no one at the council has been able to tell us who we need to speak to about this and it appears they have never even been asked for a permit for a campaigning stall before.

Campaign continues

Socialist Party activists will not stop here. We demand the council recognises our right to campaign, but we are also calling for adequate public notice boards and public meeting rooms to be run by and for the local labour movement and activists and no harassment of campaigners.

We also call for the council to 'open the books', for the right of recall of all councillors and crucially for a reversal of all privatisation schemes. We have shown we will not be pushed off the streets. We are determined to fight alongside working class people in Waltham Forest to defend jobs and services.


In this issue

Fight university cuts


Unison general secretary election

Fighting leadership needed in Unison - Nominate Roger Bannister for general secretary

Greenwich Unison backs victimised branch secretary


Socialist Party news and analysis

Preying on the living and dead

Waltham Forest: Campaigners score a victory

Fiddling MPs: Jail the whole lot of them!

Vulnerable lose out on benefits

Socialist Women: Fighting for equality through socialism

Fast news


Socialist Party workplace news

Civil service strike ballot: Vote 'yes' for action

Boycotting the 2010 SATS in schools

Coventry youth workers' strike

Metaldyne workers strike

Stoke: Axiom workers in overtime ban

Saving jobs and services in Worcestershire

Workplace news in brief


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

Hazel Blears must go

TUSC: Wellingborough socialists make a stand


PCS young members

PCS young members network conference

Bristol job centre workers fight transfer


Socialist Party feature

Trade unions in Britain - are they ready for the coming battles?


International socialist news and analysis

Northern Ireland: An agreement to cement division

Sri Lanka President Rajapakse removes his rival, Fonseka

Tamil Solidarity -: Successful northern conference


Unison witchhunt

Trotskyism on trial


War and occupation

Armed forces: Release Lance-Corporal Joe Glenton

Trade union rights for service personnel


 

Home   |   The Socialist 10 February 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

Socialist Party:

triangleSocialism 2013

triangleYork Socialist Party: The history of the CWI

triangleYork Socialist Party: Modern day slavery

triangleBirmingham Socialist Party: Climate change and the environment

triangleWaltham Forest Socialist Party: A socialist approach to immigration

Waltham Forest:

triangleWaltham Forest Socialist Party: A workers' paper - the Socialist

triangleProtesters demand councils reject blacklisting companies

triangleWaltham Forest Socialist Party: Jamaica

triangleWaltham Forest Socialist Party: Marxist economics

Council:

triangleBrighton bin workers fight pay cuts - this time from the Greens

triangleTUSC builds support in Leicester byelection

triangleTrade unions recommend more cuts in Neath/Port Talbot

Socialist:

triangleWest London Socialist Party: Immigration and racism

triangleWest London Socialist Party: Today's capitalist economy