
The Socialist 2 December 2020
Better for billionaires, Worse for workers

Spending Review. Unions must resist return to austerity
What will the spending review mean for me?
Napo kickstarts fight against pay freeze
Better for billionaires. Worse for workers
Arcadia and Debenhams closures: Nationalise to save jobs and pensions
Scotland: Campaign wins end to period poverty
NHS: Underfunded, understaffed, underpaid
Don't let the festive season be one of misery for retail workers
Equity union conference calls for radical change - now lead a fight!
Solidarity with Brighton UCU strike - we won't pay for Covid crisis
East London teachers strike in support of victimised union rep
Heathrow workers strike against 'fire and rehire' plans
Hackney: Stop plan to halve school support staff!
Pay freeze protest Homerton Hospital
Unison general secretary ballot closes
'Building back greener' - yet more Tory greenwash
Review: Friedrich Engels - Condition of the working class in England
Wales TUSC plans to mount an electoral challenge
Rent strikers' victory in Manchester student halls
Labour meeting lets MP get away with 'Spycops' abstention
Fast fashion, big profits, low pay
Diego Maradona - Working-class rebel, football genius
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Scotland: Campaign wins end to period poverty
Lynda McEwan, Socialist Party Scotland
In a first of its kind globally, the Period Products (Free Provision) Scotland Act was enshrined into law in Scotland on 24 November, laying the foundations for eradicating period poverty for Scottish women.
Following a four-year campaign by Labour's Member of the Scottish Parliament Monica Lennon, backed by trade unions, student unions and women's campaigns, the act will place a legal duty on local authorities to make period products available to all.
One-in-four school, college and university girls, women and trans people, stated they have struggled to access period products, and 10% said they were unable to afford them pre-Covid.
The pandemic has massively increased this problem as colleges and universities closed and many women, particularly low-paid working-class women, lost their jobs, faced eviction, and grassroots organisations struggled to provide an effective service.
Women spend, on average, £13 a month on period products. The alleviation of this gendered burden will have a significant impact not only financially, but physically and mentally as well.
Importantly, the act will include promoting education to end the stigma surrounding menstruation. This has, encouragingly, opened up discussion about menopause, endometriosis and product sustainability.
The cost of this scheme is estimated to be around £8.7 million a year. Initially opposed to the scheme, the Scottish National Party (SNP) government was ridiculed for suggesting "cross-border tampon raids" would follow its implementation into law. It was finally forced into a U-turn as the campaign gathered more support.
The SNP and Scottish Labour's refusal to fight Tory cuts, despite standing on anti-austerity platforms has seen brutal cuts to council budgets across Scotland, with severe and detrimental effects for women and girls; 250,000 Scottish children live in poverty.
This concession has to be seen in the context of how much they've cut women's vital services to the bone, including social work services in my deprived area, West Dunbartonshire.
SNP and Labour refusal to defy Tory cuts means that the Scottish Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition will be standing in the Scottish elections next May on a platform of implementing no-cuts budgets and fully funding services.
The free period products victory should be welcomed, but all the social problems of inequality still exist, so we should fight on.
This law should now be built upon and pushed to be implemented across the rest of Britain. A mass campaign could force the weak and divided Tory government to follow the successful implementation in Scotland, ending period poverty for all.
In this issue
What we think
Spending Review. Unions must resist return to austerity
Spending Review
What will the spending review mean for me?
Napo kickstarts fight against pay freeze
News
Better for billionaires. Worse for workers
Arcadia and Debenhams closures: Nationalise to save jobs and pensions
Scotland: Campaign wins end to period poverty
NHS: Underfunded, understaffed, underpaid
Devolution
Workplace News
Don't let the festive season be one of misery for retail workers
Equity union conference calls for radical change - now lead a fight!
Solidarity with Brighton UCU strike - we won't pay for Covid crisis
East London teachers strike in support of victimised union rep
Heathrow workers strike against 'fire and rehire' plans
Hackney: Stop plan to halve school support staff!
Pay freeze protest Homerton Hospital
Unison general secretary ballot closes
Environment
'Building back greener' - yet more Tory greenwash
International News
Marxism
Review: Friedrich Engels - Condition of the working class in England
Campaigns
Wales TUSC plans to mount an electoral challenge
Rent strikers' victory in Manchester student halls
Labour meeting lets MP get away with 'Spycops' abstention
Reader's opinion
Fast fashion, big profits, low pay
Diego Maradona - Working-class rebel, football genius
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Related links:
Books that inspired me: The Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
UNICEF feeds children in the UK for the first time
No surprise, poverty is rising
Luxury for some, poverty for the rest of us
Book: The national question - a Marxist approach
Socialist Party Scotland: Book launch - 'Scotland and the National Question'
Cardiff East Socialist Party: Is Scotland on the road to independence?
Socialist Party national women's meeting: Perspectives for women and class struggle in Britain
West London Socialist Party: What are the roots of women's oppression?
Engels on the origins of women's oppression
Londoners suffer and Khan piles on pressure
Nottingham City Council: Major battles against cuts ahead
Scotland and coronavirus - a catalogue of government failure