London Socialist Party regional conference


    Fighting for the 99% in the city with most millionaires

    Michael Wrack, Tower Hamlets Socialist Party

    Seventy Socialist Party members attended the London regional conference on 19 May.

    The conference opened with an international flavour with a report from South Africa. The Committee for a Workers’ International’s recent work in South Africa has resulted in a huge growth, both in numbers and influence, of the Democratic Socialist Movement (DSM, CWI South Africa) and in the recently successful launch of Workers and Socialist Party (WASP), which DSM comrades are playing a key role in building (see page 9).

    The next session, “London: political developments and tasks”, was introduced by London Socialist Party regional secretary Paula Mitchell. Paula spoke of the huge inequality in London, where there are more millionaires than in any other city in the world, yet unemployment (and youth unemployment) is at a higher rate than the UK average.

    The session heard from Socialist Party members playing a leading role regionally and nationally in the RMT, NUT, Unison, and Unite unions; from young people involved in the Sick Of Your Boss campaign; and in-depth contributions about local government cuts, attacks on benefits, and developments in the economy.

    There was agreement on the potential for campaigns opposing the bedroom tax. This session was followed by a fighting fund appeal that raised £1,025.

    The session on building the Socialist Party was introduced by Chris Newby, including promoting socialist ideas in the trade unions and campaigning among different communities in London. The discussion also went into detail on attracting new members to the party and the role they can play in building a socialist alternative.

    The conference then split into three commissions on the Socialist newspaper, party finance, and being a branch secretary. Conference reconvened to unanimously agree the conference document, with amendments on NUT work and election campaigning, and elect a new regional committee.

    The conference was not all serious work though – to end the day we enjoyed some political stand-up comedy from ‘Anti-Duhring Battalion’.