The Socialist

The Socialist 8 July 2010

Mass action can stop cuts

The Socialist issue 632

Mass action can stop cuts


Build united action to stop the cuts

What the Socialist Party says


Con-Dem budget cuts: Hitting those on benefits hardest

How will George Osborne's budget affect families?

Housing benefit cuts - increasing homelessness

Cuts to disability benefits will increase misery


Fight the savage cuts by Neath/Port Talbot council

Hull: Rallying against the austerity budget

'Godfather' turning in his grave


NUS anti-cuts conference

Youth Fight for Jobs Protest!


BNP forced to abandon its 'festival of hate'


South Africa: 5,000 sacked miners on strike

Kazakhstan: The fight goes on

News in brief


Organise against academies now!


Limited new 'final' offer facing BA cabin crew


PCS will fight new attack on redundancy pay


Unison by-election: fighting leadership needed

Shrewsbury Pickets march for justice

Lindsey refinery fire death: inquiry needed

Workplace news in brief


Unite general secretary election:


Interview: Ken Clarke's prison plans


Pride, prejudice, fightback and hypocrisy


A warm welcome at Summer Camp

Socialism 2010 Saturday 6 - Sunday 7 November


When the financial wizardry lost its magic

Mali's master of the ngoni

 
 

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Unite general secretary election:

support Len McCluskey

The general secretary election in Unite will take place between 25 October and 19 November this year.

Nomination papers have now been sent to branch secretaries and shop stewards can order forms for workplace nominations, all of which have to be in by 6 September.

Kevin Parslow, Branch Secretary LE/1228 (personal capacity)

Socialist Party members in Unite are supporting Len McCluskey, the candidate of the left organisation, United Left.

Len is the assistant general secretary of the union, having previously been a national officer from the T&G section.

He is a long-time supporter of the left and of Liverpool city council in the 1980s which took on the Thatcher government to improve the lives of working people in that city.

Alliance of resistance

He recently told the Guardian: "If workers have confidence, then my experience tells me that anything is possible.

Look at what happened with Thatcher and the poll tax. It was people power that brought down a person who seemed impregnable."

On the attacks of the Con-Dem government he said: "We need to create an alliance of resistance because our members don't want pay freezes, pay cuts and a tax on their services and communities. The unions have to be responsible for coordinating that action."

And on strike action against these attacks, he added: "They talk about public sector workers as if they're devils.

We're talking about people who teach our children, treat the sick, clean our streets, people who are responsible for building the fabric of the communities in which we live.

We need to tell our private sector workers that this is their fight too."

Unite members, up against the onslaught of the government, will welcome such statements, but whoever is elected general secretary will face a different economic and political climate than did their predecessors Tony Woodley and Derek Simpson.

If he or she does not lead a fight with the members, then members will have to initiate struggles from below against cuts and redundancies.

Jerry Hicks

Len McCluskey is not the only candidate standing from the left; sacked convenor from Rolls Royce Bristol, Jerry Hicks, is also putting his name forward.

Jerry stood in the Amicus general secretary elections in 2009, coming a credible runner-up to Simpson.

Jerry was the only genuine left candidate in that field and received nearly 40,000 votes (24.8%). The Socialist Party supported Jerry in that election from the beginning, unlike some of his current supporters, who initially endorsed a right-wing candidate, covered in a left banner.

'Left' programme

His programme appears more 'left' than Len McCluskey's. Jerry is in favour of the repeal of anti-union laws and confronting them when necessary.

He would like to see the election of all officials and the general secretary on an average member's wage.

He would prioritise public ownership and pensions, and puts forward the need for a public works programme.

Those are all policies we would support. But Jerry made a crucial mistake in walking out of the hustings of the United Left in autumn 2009 and that act has lost him a lot of support in the union.

He is seen as not wanting to explain his policies.

Socialists have influence inside the left by vocalising the pressure for action. This will be absolutely necessary in the next period. Excluding ourselves at this stage is a mistake. Labour

Also, Jerry Hicks' position on the Labour Party is not fundamentally different to McCluskey's.

Jerry believes disaffiliation "will also alienate the very best of Labour members, MPs and councillors"! Len calls for resources to be poured into the party; yet this can only be financial resources - Unite spent £4 million on Labour in the general election!

There is not the appetite among most Unite members to re-enter the party to reclaim it, particularly if Labour councils act as Cameron and Clegg's agents locally.

And John McDonnell, who the union's policy conference strongly wanted on the ballot paper, could not even get enough nominations for party leader.

Sooner or later Unite must decide to no longer back the pro-big business Labour Party

Split vote

The danger of Jerry Hicks standing is that a split candidature of the left could let in a right-wing candidate, either Les Bayliss or Gail Cartmail, and this would set the union back.

The programme of Bayliss in particular does not gain an echo amongst Unite activists, even more from the Amicus tradition.

He will be relying on the more passive layers of the membership for support.

We cannot ignore these points or consider them irrelevant. If a right-wing candidate is elected in a first-past-the-post election, and the left vote is fatally split, then recriminations will break out in the union.

But we will not give Len McCluskey or any other left candidate in trade union elections carte blanche support.

Our support for McCluskey is qualified by demands for a socialist economic programme for the union, democratic election of officials, withdrawal from the Labour Party, an open election campaign, democratic procedures in United Left and so on.

These are the issues at stake in Unite in this election.


In this issue

Mass action can stop cuts


Socialist Party editorial

Build united action to stop the cuts

What the Socialist Party says


Socialist Party feature

Con-Dem budget cuts: Hitting those on benefits hardest

How will George Osborne's budget affect families?

Housing benefit cuts - increasing homelessness

Cuts to disability benefits will increase misery


Anti-cuts campaign

Fight the savage cuts by Neath/Port Talbot council

Hull: Rallying against the austerity budget

'Godfather' turning in his grave


Youth fight for jobs

NUS anti-cuts conference

Youth Fight for Jobs Protest!


Anti-racism

BNP forced to abandon its 'festival of hate'


International socialist news and analysis

South Africa: 5,000 sacked miners on strike

Kazakhstan: The fight goes on

News in brief


Education

Organise against academies now!


BA dispute

Limited new 'final' offer facing BA cabin crew


Civil Service

PCS will fight new attack on redundancy pay


Workplace news

Unison by-election: fighting leadership needed

Shrewsbury Pickets march for justice

Lindsey refinery fire death: inquiry needed

Workplace news in brief


Workplace analysis

Unite general secretary election:


Interview with Brian Caton

Interview: Ken Clarke's prison plans


Socialist Party LGBT

Pride, prejudice, fightback and hypocrisy


Socialist Party events

A warm welcome at Summer Camp

Socialism 2010 Saturday 6 - Sunday 7 November


Socialist Party reviews

When the financial wizardry lost its magic

Mali's master of the ngoni


 

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