The Socialist

The Socialist 9 June 2010

Reject these brutal cuts

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

Fast news


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

College campaign success

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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Fast news

General strike

A GENERAL strike involving 2.5 million public sector workers hit Spain on 8 June. The trade unions involved in the mass walkout are opposed to the Zapatero government imposing a 5% cut in salaries, starting this month, followed by a pay freeze, ie a further cut, in 2011. Pensions and public investment programmes will also be adversely affected.

The cuts are part of a 15 billion euro austerity package designed to satisfy Spain's capitalist class and international finance capital. But like fellow workers in Greece, Portugal and other European countries, Spain's workers are not prepared to pay for the banking failures and the crisis of capitalism.

Good for business

HAVING WRITTEN to 20,000 school head teachers in England encouraging them to opt out of local authority control and set up academies and 'free schools', education minister Michael Gove spelt out the motivation behind his privatisation plans.

"I am a Conservative, I do not have an ideological objection to businesses being involved but the professionals should make that decision," Gove told teachers at the recent Hay literary festival.

Gove continues to peddle the switch to academies despite the absence of evidence that the opt-out road leads to the improvement of education standards.

Using current laws, academies' governing bodies can contract out the running of their school to a company that can charge a management fee. While the school governing body remains 'not-for-profit', services such as teaching can be run by private companies.

As pointed out in last week's Socialist, Gove's Academies Bill will result in more privatised, selective schools against a background of spending cuts.

Beijing massacre vigil

150,000 PEOPLE attended a candlelight vigil in Victoria Park, Hong Kong, to commemorate the 21st anniversary of the 1989 Beijing massacre on 4 June.

The huge turnout follows last year's record-breaking 20th anniversary vigil. It also follows a year of struggle in Hong Kong itself, demanding the end of the undemocratic election system, alongside fear and anger over a growing crackdown on dissent in mainland China.

Hong Kong is the only place on Chinese soil where the 1989 army invasion of Beijing and subsequent massacre of youthful protesters is publicly commemorated.

Thousands may have been killed in 1989, with workers and pioneers of independent trade unions - feared most by the Chinese dictatorship - bearing the brunt of the repression.

Socialist Action (CWI in Hong Kong) participated in both the vigil and a subsequent university demonstration. CWI material stressed the need to draw out the lessons from 1989 for today's developing mass struggles in China and Hong Kong. A vital lesson from 1989 was the role of the working class - this scared the so-called 'communist' dictatorship even more than the movement of students.

Full report here on www.chinaworker.info

In this issue

Reject these brutal cuts


National Shop Stewards Network

Come to the NSSN conference unite the fightback!


Socialist Party Marxist analysis

Why public sector cuts are not inevitable


Socialist Party news and analysis

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

Fast news


Socialist Party workplace news and analysis

CWU ballots BT workers for strike over pay

Unite conference - union at the crossroads

Wales TUC - rank and file delegates support socialist fightback


Socialist Party youth and students

Future of cuts a nightmare for youth

College campaign success

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


Socialist Party feature

Soccer World Cup 2010: South Africa, the ugly backdrop to the beautiful game


Environment and socialism

Oil spill shows hazards of the profit system

Bhopal - little justice 25 years on


News and comment

Will the Lib Dems survive coalition?

Bradford murders and prostitution


 

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Related links:

Spain:

triangleA world in turmoil

triangleLambeth & Southwark Socialist Party: Spain after the elections - Lessons for workers in Britain

triangleRuling PSOE battered in Spanish general election

triangle15 October: day of intercontinental resistance

triangleWorld economy: Capitalists unable to stop the turmoil

triangleSpain:"Throwing a shoe at the system"

Strike:

triangleBBC report: Unite may hold new NHS pensions strike ballot

triangleNUT and PCS launch consultative surveys to build for ongoing pensions action

triangleJet tanker drivers force employers to negotiate

triangleLondon - a tale of two cities

Hong Kong:

triangleWestern governments more concerned about business deals than human rights in China

triangleGlencore - Profiting from global hunger

triangleChinaworker.info journalist refused entry into China

Academies:

triangleHaringey takes action against academies

triangleHaringey parents say: No to academies!

triangleSave community schools - no to academies

School:

triangleGreenwich Unite takes fight to cuts councillors

triangleTory bribes to promote socially divisive 'Free Schools' agenda

triangle'Oppose physical force in schools' say YFJ and YFE

China:

triangleDerby Socialist Party: China - Will the economic boom continue?

triangleDithering in Durban

triangleNo progress at climate conference