The Socialist

The Socialist 17 February 2010

Fight Council Cuts!

Fight council cuts!


Nominate Roger Bannister: Council workers need a fighting union

Notts Tories attack the vulnerable


TUSC to fight cuts in Spelthorne

New TUSC sponsors


New health inequality report reveals widening class divide

Ministers and MI5 colluded in the cover-up of torture

BNP's phoney changes

Fast news


The construction industry blacklist: Paltry punishment for attacks on workers

Oppose university cuts - defend jobs


Sussex student union elections: Support for socialist campaigners

Student places crisis


Youth Fight for Jobs: Leeds march for jobs and education


Wales: New challenges for socialists

Celebrate May Day this year with The Socialist


Greece: Massive public sector workers' strike against savage austerity plans

Capitalist crisis threatens the eurozone project

Winter Olympics: Shortage of snow but no shortage of debts?

Protests as Canada's Tories suspend parliament

 
 
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

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/612/8851

Seach this siteGoogle search the site

Printable versionPrintable version

email to friendemail to friend

Facebook

Twitter

Home   |   The Socialist 17 February 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Fast news

It's all for the best

THE NUMBER of housing repossessions for 2009 was the highest since 1995. Some 46,000 homes were repossessed last year, an increase of 6,000 on the total for 2008. In addition, 188,300 homeowners were in serious mortgage arrears.

With people in this recession losing the roof over their head or getting into major financial difficulties paying off their mortgage, Labour housing minister John Healey told Radio 5 Live: "It is impossible for the government to help everyone, it is impossible for everyone to avoid the risk of repossession. It may be, in the end, for some, the only option."

True, the government hasn't helped everyone during the downturn - mainly rich bankers with billions of pounds in bailouts!

And as an MP Healey also helped himself by claiming mortgage interest of £690 a month on his second home in Lambeth, south London.

The flat was sold for £198,000 last year, making Healey a huge £88,000 profit.

He also claimed £1,317 to replace a door. It is unconfirmed that the door was kicked in by irate homeless constituents.

Barclays bonus shame

HAVE THESE people no shame? Despite the government spending billions of pounds from public funds - our money - on bailouts and other costly financial guarantees in order to stabilise the failed banking system, yet another group of rich bankers have awarded themselves a huge bonus pot.

This time it's Barclays bank who announced profits of £11.6 billion for 2009 with £2.7 billion to be paid out in bonuses (nearly £200,000 for each investment banker).

Barclays' justification for paying out bonuses is that the bank didn't accept a direct government bailout. However, according to BBC economist Robert Peston, the bank indirectly benefitted "from a windfall generated by the emergency rescue of the global economy undertaken by governments and central banks, an emergency rescue that was needed in large part because of the havoc wreaked by the excessive risk-taking of banks".

Egypt textile strike

800 textile workers at the Tanta Linen, Flax and Oil company in Egypt recently began an indefinite strike sparked by the sacking of the plant's union president.

Around 400 of the workers later demonstrated outside the Egyptian cabinet office in Cairo and were attacked by the police.

The company was sold off by the Mubarak government four years ago and since then the pay and conditions of the workers there have worsened. Their demands include the reinstatement of the union official, the renationalisation of the company, rehiring workers fired during previous disputes and the handing over of unpaid wages.

This dispute takes place against a background of growing workers' struggle in the country.

Trade unionists and socialists internationally should be campaigning in solidarity with Egyptian workers for basic rights including trade union rights.

Paul Callanan

In this issue

Fight council cuts!


Socialist Party campaigns

Nominate Roger Bannister: Council workers need a fighting union

Notts Tories attack the vulnerable


Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

TUSC to fight cuts in Spelthorne

New TUSC sponsors


Socialist Party news and analysis

New health inequality report reveals widening class divide

Ministers and MI5 colluded in the cover-up of torture

BNP's phoney changes

Fast news


Workplace analysis

The construction industry blacklist: Paltry punishment for attacks on workers

Oppose university cuts - defend jobs


Socialist Students

Sussex student union elections: Support for socialist campaigners

Student places crisis


Youth fight for jobs

Youth Fight for Jobs: Leeds march for jobs and education


Socialist Party feature

Wales: New challenges for socialists

Celebrate May Day this year with The Socialist


International socialist news and analysis

Greece: Massive public sector workers' strike against savage austerity plans

Capitalist crisis threatens the eurozone project

Winter Olympics: Shortage of snow but no shortage of debts?

Protests as Canada's Tories suspend parliament


 

Home   |   The Socialist 17 February 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop

Related links:

Bankers:

triangleJP Morgan: banksters at it again

triangleClegg's text message plans make us LOL!

triangleSolidarity with Occupy London protesters

triangleIt's bonuses for bankers

triangleSocialist Party debates with leader of Southampton Council on BBC Radio Solent

triangleBankers bonus scandal - Fight this profit-mad system

Egypt:

triangleSwansea Socialist Party: Egypt

triangleRevolution through Arab eyes - the Factory

triangleStriking back in austerity Britain: Peter Taaffe, Socialist Party general secretary writes

triangleMubarak's state machine blamed for football massacre

Bonuses:

triangleFat cat pay: empty words from Cameron

triangleOccupy London tours Canary Wharf

triangleNationalise the banking system!

Banks:

triangleCapitalist crisis: 'Up to half of all Icelandic families are bankrupt'

triangleWhat's wrong with capitalism?

triangleEU summit - no capitalist solutions to the spiralling eurozone crisis