The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) is an electoral alliance between the RMT union, Socialist Party and others to give an electoral alternative to cuts-making and pro-capitalist politicians, photo Socialist Party

The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) is an electoral alliance between the RMT union, Socialist Party and others to give an electoral alternative to cuts-making and pro-capitalist politicians, photo Socialist Party   (Click to enlarge: opens in new window)

As the Tories discuss their public spending cuts plans to make working-class people pay for the Covid crisis, the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) national steering committee has set out the core policies TUSC candidates will be committed to fight for in next May’s local council elections.

TUSC is an electoral coalition, offering the opportunity to trade unionists, community campaigners, socialists and others to stand candidates under a common anti-austerity banner, distinct from the mainstream, establishment politicians.

The core policies are the minimum basis on which someone can stand as a TUSC candidate rather than ‘Independent’ – the only legal alternative if you are not endorsed by a registered political party – which doesn’t say whether a candidate supports austerity and cuts or not.

The individual candidates and different organisations appearing on the ballot paper under the TUSC name and logo will almost certainly campaign for and promote far more issues than those covered in the core policies, which their individual election material will explain.

But they will all fight to implement the core policies. Voters will know the minimum they can expect from any councillor elected under the TUSC banner.

Draft core policy platform for the May 2021 local elections

We need a working-class socialist voice in the council chambers to resist Covid austerity.

Tory governments have inflicted nearly eleven years of savage austerity, cuts and privatisation on working-class people. The results have been laid bare by the dire situation millions of us find ourselves in as the social, economic and health effects of the Covid-19 pandemic hit our workplaces, schools, services and communities.

Against this background, it is necessary to ensure that politicians, from whatever party, who try to pass the costs of Covid onto the working class, face the possibility of a challenge at the ballot box. And the council elections in May 2021 – taking place alongside elections for the Scottish and Welsh parliaments and the Greater London Authority – will be the first opportunity since the start of the Covid crisis to do so.

Covid has revealed both the drastic situation our local public services are in – with councils massively underfunded by central government – but also some of the many things local authorities have the power to do to improve our lives. In the first lockdown, for example, councils acted against homelessness in their local areas through the ‘Everybody In’ scheme. Many councils stepped in during the autumn half term to continue free school meals.

But they could go so much further. Councils could ensure not just a free school meals programme for current recipients for all future holidays, but organise access to decent quality food and meals for all children, the elderly and the vulnerable in immediate need. They could use their powers to begin a mass home-building programme to tackle the housing crisis.

Most current councillors however – including unfortunately, the majority of Labour’s 7,000 or so local representatives – would say they cannot use their legal authority to act without first getting funding from the government.

But that’s the wrong way round. The Tories have made deep cuts to councils, but they still account for over one-fifth of all public spending, with responsibilities for adult social care, housing, education support, transport, recycling and rubbish collection, libraries and many other services. That’s a powerful position from which to organise a fightback. Councils should first spend what’s needed – and then demand the money back from the government.

The multiple U-turns made by Johnson and his chancellor, spending billions when the pressure is on them, show that if just a handful of councils used the powers they have to refuse to implement any more cuts ,and spend what is necessary instead, the Tories could be made to pay up.

TUSC has a policy platform for the local council elections (see below) which could make a difference. Even one councillor in a local authority taking a stand, if they used their position in the council chamber to appeal to those outside, could give confidence to local trade unionists and community campaigners to fight. A network of rebel councillors across the country could have an even bigger impact in fighting for what is needed to meet the Covid crisis.

They would link up with those taking action against climate change, the Black Lives Matter movement, and campaigns against attacks on women’s rights and services. TUSC councillors would be at the heart of any struggle that is a step towards a society in which people can enjoy life to its fullest without the fear of unemployment, homelessness, poverty and discrimination.

Agreement with the platform below is the minimum basis on which any prospective council candidate can stand under the TUSC name in the 2021 local council elections – but it is a minimum, not a limit to the issues candidates will raise.

Every trade unionist, anti-cuts campaigner, community activist, and all those who want to see an alternative to austerity politicians can become a TUSC candidate. But voters should know that any councillor elected under the TUSC banner will:

  • Oppose all cuts and closures to council services, jobs, pay and conditions. We reject the claim that ‘some cuts’ are necessary to our services or that the Covid crisis is a reason for austerity
  • Support all workers’ struggles against government policies making ordinary people pay for the crisis
  • Fight for united working-class struggle against racism and all forms of oppression
  • Reject council tax, rent and service charge increases for working-class people to make up for cuts in central funding, support a redistributive revenue-raising system to finance local council services, and demand central government restores the cuts in funding it has imposed
  • Use councils’ powers to begin a mass building programme of eco-friendly affordable council homes to tackle the housing crisis
  • Vote against the privatisation of council jobs and services, or the transfer of council services to ‘social enterprises’ or ‘arms-length’ management organisations, which are first steps to privatisation
  • Use all the legal powers available to councils to oppose both the cuts and government policies which centrally impose the transfer of public services to private bodies. This includes using councils’ powers to refer local NHS decisions, initiate referenda, and organise public commissions and consultations in campaigns to defend public services
  • Vote for councils to refuse to implement austerity. We will support councils which, in the first instance, use their reserves and prudential borrowing powers to avoid making cuts. But we argue that the best way to mobilise the mass campaign that is necessary to defend and improve council services is to set a budget that meets the needs of the local community, and demand that government funding makes up the shortfall

The core policy platform above agreed by the TUSC steering committee at its November 2020 meeting is still a draft document, now out for discussion within the different component parts of TUSC before final adoption. In non-Covid times TUSC usually organised a conference in January or February, and the steering committee will meet in December to discuss what might be possible in the new year.

  • Comments on the draft platform are also welcome from individuals and organisations not yet participating in TUSC, and can be sent to the National Election Agent, Clive Heemskerk, at [email protected]