The Socialist 9 June 2010 Reject these brutal cuts Come to the NSSN conference unite the fightback! Why public sector cuts are not inevitable Marches show opposition to Israeli state terror Determined BA cabin crew ready to reballot EDL thugs sent packing from Cardiff EDL protest stopped in Swansea CWU ballots BT workers for strike over pay Unite conference - union at the crossroads Wales TUC - rank and file delegates support socialist fightback Future of cuts a nightmare for youth Socialist Students national meeting: Preparing for a student fightback Youth Fight for Jobs open steering committee Lobby Iain Duncan Smith at his surgery Socialist Party youth meeting: ready to build a fightback Soccer World Cup 2010: South Africa, the ugly backdrop to the beautiful game Oil spill shows hazards of the profit system Bhopal - little justice 25 years on Will the Lib Dems survive coalition? Bradford murders and prostitution |
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Home | The Socialist 9 June 2010 | Join the Socialist Party Future of cuts a nightmare for youthIn a recent speech Iain Duncan Smith, the new employment minister, talked about how "aspiration is in danger of becoming the preserve of the wealthy." Meanwhile, in north east London, near his constituency, a new dole office has been opened just across the road from a further education college which faces almost £2 million in cuts. This epitomises the options available to millions of young people. University and college fees are likely to rise rapidly. The number of university places won't meet demand, leaving thousands denied third level education. Recruitment freezes in both the public and private sector mean there are few options for the one million young unemployed. Benefits are likely to be cut, with increasing compulsion to accept low-paid, low-skilled jobs. The Youth Fight for Jobs campaign has pledged to continue to organise for a mass fight back, for a programme of job creation to end unemployment, for free education to allow people to develop to the best of their abilities and for a living wage that will allow those in work to live a decent life. Below, three unemployed young people give their responses to the government's proposals: > Paul, South London"These days every time I hear a politician talk about the public sector it fills me with dread. It was bad enough under the Labour government when they planned to make people work on low wages for a few months, which would have meant working for just over the amount you get on the dole. But Iain Duncan Smith's proposals to force people to work for the dole are just a vindictive move aimed at punishing the unemployed for a crisis we didn't cause. It's sickening to listen to politicians line up to defend millionaire ex-treasury minister David Laws who fiddled thousands of pounds of tax payers' money while they plan to attack the most vulnerable people in society. If someone on benefits had lied to cover up something about their private life then they'd be fined and thrown off benefits. As it is, the government wants to punish people for the crime of not being able to find work." > Joe, east London"I, like 2.5 million others, am unemployed. Over the past few years the Jobcentre has seen an influx of a wide range of people. The task of Jobcentre employees has been to find appropriate employment for these people, especially for those aged 16-25. However, there has been a noticeable change in the attitudes of Jobcentre advisers since the general election. The fact is they are all very aware of the new difficulties young job seekers, such as myself, w ill now face. Last week I was told in no uncertain terms by a Jobcentre adviser that: "We must find you a job before the cuts". They, like many, realise that while New Labour played judge and jury sentencing a generation to the dole queue, it's the slashing Con-Lib government that will be the executioners, punishing us for a situation not of our making." > Lee, Brighton"The scrapping of Labour's 'Future Jobs Fund', a scheme that forced young people to take work at the lowest pay with no guarantee of a permanent job, is welcome, but this coalition has nothing to replace it with. Instead, their answer to unemployment is to give people more "incentives to take work". Seeing as there is no work, this amounts to plans to force people off benefits at all costs. Part of the solution is investment into public services to create socially useful jobs. Only by students, claimants and workers uniting to fight back can we beat these cuts." > Lobby Iain Duncan Smith at his surgeryFriday 18 JuneMeet at Chingford station at 3pmCall Suzanne on 07716610893 for details. No cuts in jobs and benefitsNo to mass youth unemploymentIn this issue National Shop Stewards Network
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Socialist Party news and analysis
Socialist Party workplace news and analysis
Socialist Party youth and students
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