New members explain why they have

Queues to sign up to the Socialists at a Black Lives Matter protest in Birmingham, 4.6.20, photo by Lenny Shail

Queues to sign up to the Socialists at a Black Lives Matter protest in Birmingham, 4.6.20, photo by Lenny Shail   (Click to enlarge: opens in new window)

Covid-19: Everyone I know hit by Tory failures

Eric Rickard, Plymouth Socialist Party

I’ve always been driven towards political activity by an aversion to injustice.

I concluded as a young teen that me and my loved ones’ suffering was as a direct result of capitalism. Injustices were interwoven in my area, and I noticed the material impact that right-wing policies were having on the people around me.

At university in Cornwall I was involved with anarchist factions and the Green Party. After graduating I moved back to Plymouth, but became too ill to work or to assist the party, and had to put all my time and energy into recovery. While recovering I saw the political situation around me crumbling and my anger only rose.

During the Covid-19 crisis, everyone in my life has been negatively impacted due to the inadequacy of the government. One of my dearest loved ones became trapped in lockdown in an abusive household. Local services were completely powerless to help them under Tory regulation.

Another explained the mistreatment they were facing from their employer. They had no alternative but to put up with it. Everything their employer was doing was technically legal, and they couldn’t afford to lose their job.

Others told me about healthcare they desperately needed but were unable to access. After years of seeing the NHS brutally underfunded, I felt I needed to do more to make material change.

I volunteered for the Albert Kennedy Trust, that helps young LGBTQ+ homeless people, joined climate change protests, and finally became a Socialist Party member. The imperative impulse to help improve life for everyone, not just an elite few – for all humans to coexist peacefully and prosperously – is the most significant motive I have in life. I recognise that involvement with the Socialist Party can help build a better future.

“We can only do so much alone”

Philip Nolan, Huddersfield Socialist Party

I joined the Socialist Party to strive for equality that does not exist in the UK. It is a regular perception that those who happen to earn less, those who are born into families that did not have the luck to be richer, are ‘lesser’. Therefore, they should not be granted the basic requirements of life – daily nutritious meals and a roof over their heads.

They are forced into an unfeeling and uncaring bureaucratic system that fails to provide them with what they need. I saw the Socialist Party as a mechanism to work against this.

We can only do so much alone. I saw the Socialist Party as a group of people who could support me in our goal – to create a better society, not just for the rich or the politicians, but for everyone. To make sure that the working class and impoverished children are not seen as tools to wring dry, but as people with lives and souls that should be brought up and allowed to live out their potential, free from the restrictions imposed upon them.

The Socialist Party has proved to be an organisation fighting for the betterment of society. Rather than step back from politics, and only engage by voting every election, I chose to step forward and help make a better society.