The Socialist

The Socialist 10 January 2018

NHS SOS - march and strike

The Socialist issue 977

Sustained mass movement needed to stop Tories wrecking our NHS


Movement challenges Iranian regime

Sweden: School strike against deportations


Cabinet chaos as shambolic reshuffle underlines Theresa May's impotence

Bigot Toby Young quits - now scrap the new uni regulator driving privatisation

Teacher recruitment falls by a third - cut workload, not funding

Them & Us


McDonald's strike wins biggest pay rise in ten years

RMT rail members buoyed by coordinated action

Amy Murphy for Usdaw president - vote for a fighting and democratic union

Newham academy strikes spread to Cumberland school

UCU members balloting for action on pension cuts


2017 was the best fighting fund total this century!

Socialist sales highest in years as mistrust in capitalist media hits record levels

Hoxton: "Stop this unwanted development"

Closure of Nottingham unit shows dismantling of NHS


Art can help expose sexual harassment

Debate: should tower blocks form part of socialist housing policy?

The Socialist Inbox

 
 
 
 
 

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Editorial of the Socialist issue 977

Sustained mass movement needed to stop Tories wrecking our NHS

Save our NHS demo 4.3.17, photo Paul Mattsson

Save our NHS demo 4.3.17, photo Paul Mattsson   (Click to enlarge)

Ambulances queued up outside A&Es. Trolleys carrying people in need of care stacked end-to-end in corridors. Long-awaited operations cancelled. Sick people lying on cold, hard floors because no beds are available.

The winter NHS crisis has provoked fury from patients and health workers alike, with many taking to social media to share candid photos of the situation. The Tory government cries crocodile tears but is, of course, unwilling to take the necessary action. We have to fight for our health service - starting with the important protests and demonstration planned for 3 February.

"Nothing's perfect," Theresa May told the BBC's Andrew Marr on 7 January. This was in response to a report that a woman who had suffered a stroke was left waiting in an ambulance for four hours before being seen. Whenever Marr raised the question of funding, May refused to contemplate the idea that money was the issue, repeating things like "you also need to look at how the NHS works, how it operates".

This is the very same language that the Tories use to justify their £20 billion of cuts (or "efficiency savings"). They want us to believe that the delays and overcrowding are not because of lack of resources but in fact because of 'waste' - best solved by further funding reductions and by handing yet more services to the private sector to leech profit out of.

It is in the very DNA of the Tory party to attack the NHS. It is the oldest capitalist party in Europe and by its nature fights to represent the interests of the capitalist class. Of course the bosses and their political representatives have to take into account the fierce attachment to the NHS that exists among the working class in Britain and the risk of provoking a huge movement if they go too far.

But a publicly owned and funded NHS, free at the point of use is not in the best interests of the super-rich. They want ongoing tax cuts for themselves and their corporations - money that could otherwise be used to fund the NHS and other public services. And they greedily eye the service for the potential profit that could be made from a more US-style system. The Tories dutifully cut, privatise and run down the NHS in an attempt to prepare the way for further moves in that direction.

Workers know this. A January poll by YouGov showed Jeremy Corbyn's Labour 18 points ahead of the Tories on which party would best handle the NHS, the highest lead of any of the issues asked about. Polls also consistently show that the vast majority of people want to maintain the NHS as a public service, and think people should fight to defend it.

Tories out

So the Tories' poor standing and blatant mismanagement of the NHS have the potential to bring the government down. But only if we build a strong, united, movement against them and their plans for our health service. In this context, the emergency actions called on 3 February by Health Campaigns Together (HCT) - with a major demonstration in London coinciding with local protests elsewhere - have the potential to attract huge support.

Socialist Party member Steve Score speaking at the demo to save Grantham A&E and the NHS, 14.10.17, photo East Midlands Socialist Party

Socialist Party member Steve Score speaking at the demo to save Grantham A&E and the NHS, 14.10.17, photo East Midlands Socialist Party   (Click to enlarge)

The HCT demonstration in March 2017 attracted 250,000 people. Since then the anger has only grown and the success for Corbyn's general election manifesto, including defence of the NHS, highlighted the popularity of anti-austerity ideas. Trade unions, health and anti-austerity activists and the Corbyn supporters inside Labour should build for these events seriously over the next few weeks. Rather than being the end of the story for another year, 3 February should be a springboard for a sustained mass campaign.

The trade unions, particularly the health unions, have a vital role to play. Health workers are suffering horrendous working conditions, long hours and stress trying to deal with the current crisis 'at the coal face'. And what do they get in return? A vague promise of an above-1% pay rise for the first time in six years - in exchange for considering changes to antisocial hours payments and pay increments.

The junior doctors, and then the ancillary workers at Barts Trust hospitals in east London, have shown the way with their determined strikes. If given a lead, and as part of a serious campaign to win a decent pay rise and to defend the service, workers across the sector would respond to a call for strike action. This should be coordinated across the different health unions. Jeremy Corbyn, John McDonnell and their supporters in the Labour Party should clearly come out in favour of such action and of the 3 February protests. Placing Corbyn's Labour at the head of a mass movement to defend our health service would be a key part of winning the mass working class support necessary to kick out the Tories and bring in a Corbyn-led government.

Building this type of movement can be the start of winning a socialist NHS - one that is fully publicly owned and funded to meet people's needs, and democratically run by health workers and service users.


Emergency demonstration - NHS in crisis: fix it now!

  • 12pm Saturday 3 February
  • Gower Street , London WC1E

In this issue


What we think

Sustained mass movement needed to stop Tories wrecking our NHS


International socialist news and analysis

Movement challenges Iranian regime

Sweden: School strike against deportations


Socialist Party news and analysis

Cabinet chaos as shambolic reshuffle underlines Theresa May's impotence

Bigot Toby Young quits - now scrap the new uni regulator driving privatisation

Teacher recruitment falls by a third - cut workload, not funding

Them & Us


Socialist Party workplace news

McDonald's strike wins biggest pay rise in ten years

RMT rail members buoyed by coordinated action

Amy Murphy for Usdaw president - vote for a fighting and democratic union

Newham academy strikes spread to Cumberland school

UCU members balloting for action on pension cuts


Socialist Party reports and campaigns

2017 was the best fighting fund total this century!

Socialist sales highest in years as mistrust in capitalist media hits record levels

Hoxton: "Stop this unwanted development"

Closure of Nottingham unit shows dismantling of NHS


Socialist Party comments and reviews

Art can help expose sexual harassment

Debate: should tower blocks form part of socialist housing policy?

The Socialist Inbox


 

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Related links:

NHS:

triangleReaders' opinion

triangleNottingham NHS pay protest

triangleCovid, capitalism and mental health

triangleFor a fighting, democratic, member-led union to stop the austerity attacks

triangleHands off our NHS

Tories:

triangleHartlepool sums up Labour crisis

triangleCladding: Tories refuse to protect leaseholders again

triangleProtesting works - Unite to defend the right to protest

triangleLiverpool hustings - only TUSC has a strategy to take on the Tories

The Socialist:

triangleWhy you should join the Socialist Party

triangleEstablishing factory sales of the Socialist in Leicester

triangleThe Socialist Inbox

Socialist:

triangleSocialist Party national meeting: Perspectives for socialism after the elections

triangleStop Israeli state brutality

Health:

triangleBeal school strikers suspend action after possible victory

Workers:

triangleUnited action needed to defeat fire and rehire

Labour:

triangleStarmer moves against Unite - No to the attack on Beckett

Unions:

triangleInternational Workers' Day - struggle, solidarity, socialism

Pay:

triangleNorwich City Council workers vote for strike action over broken promises on pay and conditions

Government:

triangleBobby Sands - Nothing but an Unfinished Song

Jeremy Corbyn:

triangleGoodlord strikers fight fire and rehire as part of day of action

Trade unions:

triangleWest London Socialist Party: How do marxists organise in the trade unions?

Austerity:

triangleCan the 'Preston model' beat the cuts?

Anti-austerity:

triangleDonate now to fuel our election campaigns

Labour Party:

triangleFight the rotten establishment

Theresa May:

triangleTheresa May admits tuition fees system is broken - but plans new attacks on students

Public services:

triangleTories keep bailing out bosses, while piling pain on workers and public services

Hospitals:

triangleNHS white paper: no solution to failed Tory policies

Doctors:

triangleUnder the microscope

Ambulance:

triangleDispatches from the front: shortages of NHS staff, equipment - and union leadership

Barts:

triangleNorth London Socialist Party: Save our NHS - the lessons of the Barts strike

John McDonnell:

triangleNon-fiction: Left Out - the inside story of Labour under Corbyn