The Socialist 15 October 2014
829

Fight for mass action to end cuts and low pay
Mark Serwotka: Building a strong, fighting union
How a mass campaign stopped the cuts
Challenging the austerity parties
Barking and Dagenham council at a crossroads
Tories and Labour in crisis after Ukip win
Ireland: Stunning byelection victory for Socialist Party
Obama's strategy to beat IS lies in tatters
First NHS pay strike for 30 years
Local government pay: reject offer, reinstate action!
Care UK workers mark 81st strike day
600 St Mungo's housing workers to strike for a week
Recycling workers strike over pay and conditions
Severfields engineers strike against bonus cut
Young workers say: decent jobs now
'Political awakening' continues in Scotland
We need YOU to join the Socialists!
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Ireland: Stunning byelection victory for Socialist Party in Dublin
Eddie McCabe, Socialist Party (CWI Ireland)
11 October 2014 will be a day that's remembered for years to come in Ireland. An estimated 100,000 marched in Dublin against the hated water charges. And on the same day, Paul Murphy, Socialist Party member and Anti-Austerity Alliance (AAA) candidate, won the Dublin South West byelection by leading the call for a mass campaign of non-payment and active resistance to this double tax.
Paul joins Socialist Party members Joe Higgins and Ruth Coppinger in the Dáil (Irish parliament). Ruth won a byelection in Dublin West five months ago.
AAA
Just over one year ago the campaign against the Property Tax was defeated, which undoubtedly demoralised many working class people. But out of that campaign the AAA was formed, on the initiative of the Socialist Party, to contest the elections in May 2014. It received a warm welcome from the working class with the election of 14 councillors nationally.
Those elections were an indication of a turning point in people's understanding of the potential to resist austerity after seven years of onslaught. 11 October was a social explosion based on that sentiment.
A delivery of posters arrived at Sinn Fein HQ in Dublin South West on the morning of Friday 3 October, one week before election day. They carried the slogan that had served Sinn Fein so well in the local and European elections just over four months prior, in which they had made an historic electoral breakthrough. They read simply: "Make the change".
This was part of their plan for a last big push to secure victory in one of their heartland constituencies.
But as teams of determined Sinn Fein activists set out across the constituency they suddenly became dejected and frustrated. They were met with a sea of red, black and yellow AAA posters carrying a response to the posters they hadn't even erected yet: "Make the REAL change - vote 1 Paul Murphy".
This was symbolic of how the election overall played out from beginning to end. The AAA set the agenda and was one step ahead in the cut and thrust of the political battle. AAA made the election not just about being against water charges, but about how to beat them, and crucially about who working class people can trust in this fight.
The choice was made clear: should people put their hopes in another political party, like Sinn Fein, to form a government that may abolish water charges (as many had done with Labour previously) or should they rely instead on organising in communities, on mass non-payment and protest, and on building political pressure that no government can ignore.
In keeping with the revolt that is emerging against water charges throughout the Irish state, a majority chose the latter and voted for the AAA.
All of the political analysts and commentators in Ireland agreed that this election was Sinn Fein's 'to lose' and nobody thought that the AAA could win. The bookies put Sinn Fein at 1/25 to win going in to the election and the AAA at 16/1. The local and European elections in May of this year were characterised by a swing to Sinn Fein, particularly in working class communities in Dublin where the Labour Party was turfed out on the back of their betrayals and broken promises.
Master stroke
A nationwide opinion poll published by the Irish Times two days before the election put Sinn Fein level with Fine Gael - the main right-wing party in government - indicating a continuation of that swing. Sinn Fein were extremely confident.
But they underestimated the AAA and its ability to convince people of the need for an active fight on the issue and to expose the weaknesses of Sinn Fein's own approach.
The Irish Times newspaper on the day after the election wrote that the AAA campaign was a "master stroke in political tactics and timing". The result was a major upset, which would have been impossible without a correct political assessment and an ability to give expression to an underlying anger. It also took a huge amount of hard work from many dedicated activists and supporters.
The lesson that must be taken is that the time to build a new movement to represent working people and against the water charges and all austerity, is now. That will be the focus of the AAA from here onwards.
In this issue
£££ Britain needs a pay rise
Fight for mass action to end cuts and low pay
Mark Serwotka: Building a strong, fighting union
Fight the cuts!
How a mass campaign stopped the cuts
Challenging the austerity parties
Barking and Dagenham council at a crossroads
Socialist Party news and analysis
Tories and Labour in crisis after Ukip win
International socialist news and analysis
Ireland: Stunning byelection victory for Socialist Party
Obama's strategy to beat IS lies in tatters
Socialist Party workplace news
First NHS pay strike for 30 years
Local government pay: reject offer, reinstate action!
Care UK workers mark 81st strike day
600 St Mungo's housing workers to strike for a week
Recycling workers strike over pay and conditions
Severfields engineers strike against bonus cut
Youth Fight for Jobs
Young workers say: decent jobs now
Socialist Party reports and campaigns
'Political awakening' continues in Scotland
Building the Socialist Party
We need YOU to join the Socialists!
Home | The Socialist 15 October 2014 | Join the Socialist Party
Related links:
Bobby Sands - Nothing but an Unfinished Song
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How partition of Ireland derailed a revolutionary struggle for national and social liberation
West London Socialist Party: Northern Ireland - a return to the Troubles?
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Socialist Party national meeting: Perspectives for socialism after the elections
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North London Socialist Party: Israel-Palestine flare-up - how can the conflict be ended?
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Ireland: Debenham's occupier speaks out
Ireland: Debenham's workers occupy stores
Chesterfield Socialist Party: Behind the Sinn Fein surge in Ireland
RMT: Militant industrial and political strategy must be fought for
What councils can do to protect the environment
Can the 'Preston model' beat the cuts?
The ongoing capitalist crisis and the struggle for a socialist world
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