The Socialist

The Socialist 16 June 2010

Millionaire ministers savage public services

Millionaire ministers savage public services

'Bloodbath budget' day protests and meetings


Comprehensive education under attack

Opposing 'Dickensian' academy schools in Waltham Forest


Come to the NSSN conference

Unison local government conference: Delegates face huge struggles

Northern Rock throws workers on the dole

Wales Unison: Socialist Party member elected

NHS Scotland - ConDemned to terminal decay

Southampton library staff strike to save jobs

Save the Big House


Labour leadership contest dominated by right wing


TUSC plans for future elections

BP's value plunges as oil spill worsens

Willetts approves tuition fees hike

Bloody Sunday report appears 38 years late

IDS's 'anti-poverty drive' attacks the poorest!

High speed trains and high priced fares

Why we don't back the Queen's pay claim

Fast news

Diary dates


Tower Hamlets: Jobs, homes and services - not the racist EDL!


Greece: A test bed for 'austerity' and resistance

Spain: Millions of public sector workers strike over brutal cuts

Portugal: Mobilisation against austerity reaches new level

Socialist Party Scotland launched at packed and inspiring meeting

 
 
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TUSC plans for future elections

TUSC Launch rally, London March 2010, RMT Regional Organiser London Transport, Steve Hedley, and Socialist Party councillor Dave Nellist, photo Alison Hill

TUSC Launch rally, London March 2010, RMT Regional Organiser London Transport, Steve Hedley, and Socialist Party councillor Dave Nellist, photo Alison Hill   (Click to enlarge)

"THE Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) is not the answer for everything that we need to do as a movement to resist the austerity measures that will come from this Tory-Liberal government", said the RMT transport workers' union general secretary, Bob Crow, to a post-election meeting of TUSC candidates last week. "But in my opinion, speaking in a personal capacity, TUSC should carry on, it should stand in future elections, and it should be at the forefront of anti-cuts campaigning as well".

"The votes for TUSC candidates were small on this occasion", he went on, "and a report will be presented to the RMT's annual general meeting listing the votes of all RMT-endorsed candidates. But I'm looking forward to having the argument with those who say the unions shouldn't be involved with election campaigns that get small votes. When do you start to offer an alternative?

"And what's the alternative if you don't stand, other than to back a New Labour party that has held down the working class in the interests of capital for 13 years?"

The meeting heard reports of how well the TUSC campaign had been received whenever candidates had a chance to address a public audience. Particularly in this election, however, even sympathetic workers were not confident that a vote for TUSC could make a difference and so voted for Labour as 'the lesser evil' against the threat of the Tories. But, the meeting agreed, that mood can change as struggles develop against the new government. TUSC, precisely because it is a coalition involving leaders of the most militant trade unions in Britain today, could be a catalyst in developing the independent working class political representation that is needed.

Proposals were presented to the meeting from the TUSC steering committee on how to take the coalition forward into 2011.

While TUSC will consider contesting parliamentary by-elections as they arise, it will also actively seek to encourage and coordinate challenges in the elections scheduled for 2011.

A conference will be organised in the autumn for local groups planning to stand candidates for the Welsh assembly and English local councils, where policy statements relating to these elections will be discussed, while the Scottish TUSC steering committee will prepare for the Scottish parliament elections.

A campaign will be conducted to take TUSC into the trade unions in particular, to get more leading trade unionists to participate on the steering committee. But the steering committee proposals also recognised that the structure of the coalition is "only an interim arrangement" which will need to be reviewed as TUSC develops in the future.

"TUSC was established more for the events to come than the election just past", concluded Dave Nellist, the Coventry Socialist Party councillor and former Labour MP. "The first priority in the immediate future is to back all efforts to force the TUC to organise an autumn demonstration against the cuts, or to back an alliance of those unions prepared to fight to do so if the TUC won't.

"But all participants in TUSC have a responsibility to keep up its profile as struggles against the new government unfold".


In this issue

Millionaire ministers savage public services

'Bloodbath budget' day protests and meetings


Education

Comprehensive education under attack

Opposing 'Dickensian' academy schools in Waltham Forest


National Shop Stewards Network

Come to the NSSN conference

Unison local government conference: Delegates face huge struggles

Northern Rock throws workers on the dole

Wales Unison: Socialist Party member elected

NHS Scotland - ConDemned to terminal decay

Southampton library staff strike to save jobs

Save the Big House


Socialist Party editorial

Labour leadership contest dominated by right wing


Socialist Party news and analysis

TUSC plans for future elections

BP's value plunges as oil spill worsens

Willetts approves tuition fees hike

Bloody Sunday report appears 38 years late

IDS's 'anti-poverty drive' attacks the poorest!

High speed trains and high priced fares

Why we don't back the Queen's pay claim

Fast news

Diary dates


Anti-racism

Tower Hamlets: Jobs, homes and services - not the racist EDL!


International socialist news and analysis

Greece: A test bed for 'austerity' and resistance

Spain: Millions of public sector workers strike over brutal cuts

Portugal: Mobilisation against austerity reaches new level

Socialist Party Scotland launched at packed and inspiring meeting


 

Home   |   The Socialist 16 June 2010   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

TUSC:

triangleAnti-blacklisting campaigner run over

triangleTories in turmoil over Europe

triangleSouthampton TUSC rally

triangleCardiff: TUSC Against Cuts fringe meeting at Wales TUC

triangleTUSC builds support in Leicester byelection

Elections:

triangle2013 Local Elections: The TUSC results in full

triangleTUSC Doncaster Mayor candidate wins 1,900 votes in Ed Miliband's backyard

triangleUnison elections: Vote for Socialist Party and Reclaim the Union candidates

trianglePCS elections: vote Democracy Alliance/Left Unity

Unions:

triangleUniversity backs down: students and workers win!

triangleTrade unions recommend more cuts in Neath/Port Talbot

triangleUnite - build a fighting union

Election:

trianglePCS national executive election results

triangleCapitalist parties rejected: Time for a new mass workers' party

Bob Crow:

triangleDoncaster TUSC: 'Mary for Mayor' rally

Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition:

triangleBlacklisting protester badly injured by hit-and-run driver