Showing posts with label Capitalism's crisis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Capitalism's crisis. Show all posts

Friday, 4 March 2011

Fight the cuts at the ballot box! Punish Labour's cuts budget betrayal! Build a working class electoral alternative to defeat ALL cuts!

[By Peter Knight, Brighton Thursday branch]




(From top to bottom - The 300-strong trade union-led demonstration, the Socialist Party's Shona McCulloch addresses the rally outside Brighton Town Hall, Labour leader Gill Mitchell condemns the city to cuts, and Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition campaigners demonstrate in the town hall lobby after being denied access to the public gallery)

"In the early 1980s there were 20 Labour councils that started a battle against Thatcher's public spending cuts. Two stuck it out to the end - Lambeth and Liverpool. Now we can't even find 20 Labour *councillors* prepared to seriously fight the Tories. We need to step up the campaign over the next four weeks about standing anti-cuts candidates, socialists and trades unionists in the local council elections."

These are the words of Coventry Socialist Party councillor Dave Nellist on the night Labour disgracefully backstabbed a red-ribboned Tory knife into the working class of Brighton and Hove, condemning the city to £26 million of unnecessary and unjustified cuts with hundreds of preventable job losses and unemployment misery.

Socialist Party members in the Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition inside Brighton Town Hall, those threatened by imminent redundancies and service cuts, witnessed a horrendous farce of a council budget meeting that agonisingly swung an axe down upon our jobs, communities and services - its handle covered in the bloodied fingerprints of all the bourgeois parties represented in the chamber.

At the last moment the 13 Labour councillors cowardly abstained from the final vote, allowing the 24 Tories to vote through its Labour and Green amended cuts budget. The 13 Greens all voted against thinking it could provide Labour an opportunity to join them in outvoting the Tories and stop the budget from being passed. But it was a sham to think that this Labour Party, now long time bedfellows with the Tories in loyalty to the commands of bankers and the city, would attempt to prevent its own "slightly less nasty" attack on our living conditions from taking place.

For our collective class memory is not that short. We have all just suffered 13 years of a Labour government seduced by the Thatcherite charms of unregulated finance capitalism, in return for smashing our rights, housing, education, health, pay, pensions and conditions in awe of the "post-boom-and-bust" free-market, enslaving the world in debt, war and gross inequalities in their wake. Labour leader Gill Mitchell even tried to deny its previous administration had attempted to flog off all of Brighton's council homes, in one desperately pathetic squalk - a magnificant 78 per cent vote of tenants defeated Labour's costly privatisation plans when it led the council, with many of those Defend Council Housing campaigners present in the public gallery as living witnesses to defeating unjust plans before.

The joint Labour and Green amendment to the Tory budget means a pitiful £2 million difference in cuts. It signals the Green's willingness to work with an untrustworthy Labour Party in a false unholy alliance as an attempt at a united opposition, but the collision of petty differences in the council chamber stank of betrayal and naivety.

One bourgeois capitalist councillor after another stalked, lied and jeered at the public and their colleagues for most of the meeting - Tory Councillor Linda Caulfield gestured inappropriately in smug joy at protestors who had just witnessed losing their jobs at the backstabbing vote. Police were earlier dragooned into clearing the public gallery at the Tory's behest when members of the public protested for an apology after being insulted by Caufield. A group of 20 campaigners refused to leave and sent out a call for others to join the continuing protest. Trade union reps were threatened with arrest for no reason and assembling members of the public were denied entry into the public gallery. In one moment of ludicrousness, Mears forced a security guard to remove a plackard from the public gallery she had deemed threatening, which simply stated the word "Hope."

And no wonder she and her Tory and Labour cronies are scared. Hope is exactly what the people of Egypt, Libya, Tunisa and right across north Africa and the Middle East are wielding. It is flowing thick and warm in the blood of trade unionists in Wisconsin and the United States defending their rights - raising unity of working class consciousness. And it was brought to the door of Brighton council chamber with a Unison, GMB and Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition-led march before the meeting through the city by hundreds of workers, campaigners and socialists to demand an end to being punished for a crisis caused by the rich, and for a real alternative that will make those responsible pay.

Just a day before stalwart of capitalism Bank of England chief Mervin King had expressed that the weight of the crisis is being unjustly laid upon the innocent while bankers still continue to plunder £billions through tax evasion, bonuses and profits, untouched by unwilling ConDem and Labour governments to rein in their class collaborators and masters.

Labour's abandonment of working people could not be made any clearer after callously wasting this no cuts vote opportunity to prevent these unjustified cuts. Affiliated trade union members must be demanding to ask and discuss what there is to gain by clinging onto the dinner jacket coat tails of capitalism's "second eleven," that ceaselessly attacks its members' jobs and hard won rights and conditions in exchange for their obedience and £millions of their members' money.

The words of Socialist Party member Shona McCulloch, who proclaimed to the crowds at the rally outside that "we must reiterate that blunting the edge of the harshest cuts this country has seen for 80 years is not good enough," rang through those Brighton Town Hall corridors and cabinet rooms six hours later after the budget vote, with protesters' chants of "shame on you" at those guilty Labour and Tory councillors scurrying home during the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition-led demonstration, that symbolically voted through its own no cuts budget in the lobby after the meeting.

The Tories will attempt to force the people of Brighton and Hove off Beachy Head with their insidious cuts agenda to make us pay for a crisis that is not our fault. Yet the Labour Party could not help itself by shoving us nearer to the edge. The amended cuts we will see threatened this year, that trade union members and stop the cuts coalition campaigners will need to prepare for to take action to defeat, were drafted with Green Party assistance hoping it was the best it could get - and only in defeat, betrayed by Labour as though witnessing a most awful Shakespeare tragedy, its vote against their own cuts budget melted into a mere gesture of opposition to these ruling class attacks.

Across the city Labour councillors have failed to defend working class people once again, claiming their hands are tied to ConDem laws and bailouts carried out by its own previous Blair-Brown government. Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition campaigners including Socialist Party members demand that they should step aside in shame, if they are not prepared to vote against cuts and lead a charge of protest and strikes against the government's unjust agenda.

Socialist Party members alongside other stop the cuts campaigners are preparing to stand under the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition banner in May's council elections to give working class communities the chance to defend themselves and build an alternative voice in the council chamber. It is calling for people to stand and sign up to its socialist no cuts platform to offer residents in every ward the opportunity to elect real working class representatives - councillors who will follow in the footsteps of the Liverpool fighters of the 1980s, councillors who will vote no to all cuts, and for a real socialist alternative that will make the rich pay.

Visit http://www.tusc.org.uk/ and brightontusc.blogspot.com and help to fight against the cuts at the ballot box.

Tuesday, 11 January 2011

Don't cut our EMA!



"Be young and shut up" says Cameron? We don't think so! Join today's protest against the government's cuts to the vital Education Maintenance Allowance.

4.30pm Tuesday 11 January
Brighton Town Hall

On the 11th January the government will vote on scrapping EMA. Without EMA many students would not be able to attend college, let alone university! Click here to read on...

Tuesday, 14 December 2010

Brighton Socialists join 35,000 students and workers outside parliament to protest over tuition fee increases and education cuts!



On Thursday 9 December, while parliament debated the Con-Dem coalition government's plan to treble university tuition fees, a fourth day of angry protest took place across the country.
The debate ended with MPs disgracefully voting to increase fees to a higher limit of £9,000 a year, with 323 in favour and 302 against, and so the campaigning against this attack must now continue and be stepped up.

In central London, 35,000 students and education workers, many from outside London, marched to parliament to show their strong opposition to education cuts and increased tuition fees. Click here to read on and for an excellent video of the demonstration...

Lewes protests against attacks on education and cuts!

[by Holly Smith, Brighton Thursday branch]

Photos by Peter Knight

On Saturday 11 December up to 400 students, parents, and children marched through Lewes, to voice their anger at the proposed abolition of the EMA, and the decision to vote through the increase in tuition fees.

The peaceful march, organised by local students and parents from Priory School and helped by Socialist Party members, proceeded passed the local constituency office of Norman Baker MP, who last week said he was considering resigning his position as Junior Transport Minister in order to oppose the policy, yet ended up voting for it anyway.

There was a strong anti Lib-Dem feeling on the march, with many people saying they felt betrayed by Norman Baker's decision, and would not be voting for him again.

The march culminated with speeches in the High Street by local students, teachers and Socialist Party members. Many passers-by expressed support for the march, and said they would be attending the launch meeting of the new local anti-cuts group taking place tonight.

Click here to join the Lewes Stop the Cuts Facebook group. Viva la Lewes!

Friday, 26 November 2010

Socialists Students lead 3,000 Brighton demonstration against fees and education cuts!


[Photograph by Holly Smith]

Throughout this day of action, students across the country demonstrated, occupied and walked out against the government's attacks on further and higher education.

This day of protests followed on from the magnificent 50,000-strong show of student anger in London on 10 November.

Youth Fight for Jobs (YFJ) and Socialist Students initiated and participated in many of the protests nationally. Click here for reports from across the country...

In Brighton well over 3,000 school, college and university students walked out and demonstrated through the city in one of the biggest mobilisations outside of London. Click here for trades council reports...

Local student organisers are now planning for the next stage of actions and a petition has been created to build support for the growing movement. Please sign via here and get everyone you know to do the same.

Contact Ross on info.bhsp@gmail.com for local organising meetings and more information.

Wednesday, 3 November 2010

Brighton March Against Cuts - Now, Build the Movement!



2,000 people marched in the Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition demonstration on Saturday. Marchers included local parents and workers from Bright Start nursery, and Connexions service staff, both threatened with closure by the local Tory council.

The speakers included FBU, RMT, CWU and UNISON members, and workers in struggle, including a Bright Start staff member. Pete Offord from the Socialist Party spoke, pointing out that the anti-trade union legislation is designed to hold back struggle and urged the crowd to support workers even when they are forced to take action outside of the law. He also called for the movement to take up the slogan of no cuts to public services, this has a particular ring in Brighton where the hypocrisy of the council is clear for all to see. For example, just one of the four newly appointed strategic directors (hired axemen) earns more per year than the annual running costs of Bright Start nursery! He also called on city councillors to support the movement and not to vote through a cuts budget but warned that if they failed to do that, the anti-cuts movement should stand its own candidates that will!

Caroline Lucas MP from the Green Party spoke after, receiving an enthusiastic response from the crowd, showing the potential that an anti-cuts MP can have for encouraging and building a movement against the cuts.

The Socialist Party has been central to building this campaign. We had a vibrant and loud contingent near the front of the march, which led chants including 'Tory Council, hear us say, the bankers crisis, WE WON'T PAY!'

The march was a big step forward for Brighton. Its size has not been seen for years, and it attracted a lot of people who had never marched for anything before. The demands raised by the BSTC, which were called for by Socialist Party members, included opposing ALL cuts, and not falling into the trap of accepting some cuts while opposing others. When the government say 'cuts' they do not mean cuts to Trident, or cutting tax avoidance and evasion; they mean public services and jobs which ordinary working-class people rely on. As Socialists we call on the BSTC to rely on the united strength of the working-class in fighting all the cuts being imposed on us, and not water down our message to give those who are for some cuts an easy ride within the coalition. Such a compromise will be at the expense of jobs and services, none of which we want to see go!

Click here for details of the upcoming campaign meeting on Monday 8 November

Sunday, 24 October 2010

Join the Brighton March Against Cuts



We face an unprecedented attack on our public services in the form of huge budget cuts. Already vital services are being slashed and this is set to accelerate after the government's spending review last Thursday.

Brighton has had the biggest anti-cuts group launch meeting in the country and our unions have organised many events to spread the anti-cuts message. The march planned this coming weekend will be a huge demonstration of our will to halt the government and provide a big platform for workers whose jobs are under threat and service users who are standing up to defend our welfare state.

We need hundreds of local people, trade unionists and students out on the streets to make it clear to our local city councillors that we won't stand for any cuts in public services.

Despite what we are told these cuts are not only unnecessary they will damage the economy and more importantly millions of people's lives.

Saturday 30 October 12 noon, assemble at The Level. Join in, bring your friends and workmates, help publicise the march. Join the Facegroup event here and email brightontradescouncil@gmail.com to get publicity material or to offer help and suggestions.

Council lobby shows the anger of ordinary people!



Last Thursday, 21 October, trade unionists, socialists, council workers and local parents stood shoulder to shoulder protesting outside a meeting of the city's councillors. We were calling on them to reconsider not only the cutting back of Connexions services but also the closure of the Bright Start nursery and the transformation of Portslade Community College into an academy.

Alex Richards of Unison City Council Branch was quoted in the Argus saying: "The issues of Connexions and Sure Start did shine through in what people were saying today. We heard a lot of heartfelt stories about how this is going to affect ordinary people. But people are also concerned about the wider cuts and how they are going to affect a place like Brighton which is extremely expensive to live in."

Despite the efforts of the lobby the council group did not appear to listen to any of the protests, Bright Start nursery is still set to be shut and PCC is set to be hived off to privateer Rod Aldridge with our councillors' blessings.

It is becoming ever clearer that our so called representatives do not reflect the views of their constituents and have no stomach to fight for our public services. For all their fine posturing the "opposition" of Green and New Labour have done nothing to oppose Tory privatisation.

What is needed is an alternative political party to represent working class people, one built by ordinary people that takes up their issues and campaigns on their behalf.
Visit http://www.cnwp.org.uk/ and http://www.tusc.org.uk/ for information on one way we can make our working class voice heard in the corridors of power.

Thursday, 21 October 2010

Brighton socialists get the message out against cuts!



(Photos by Andy Cooper)

Socialist Party members unfurled a banner from the roof of Imperial Arcade opposite Churchill Square yesterday as part of a Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition afternoon protest against the "spending review" cuts.

Join us on the demonstration today at the full council meeting, 3.30pm outside Hove Town Hall. See post below for details...

Tuesday, 19 October 2010

Lobby the council! Stop the cuts!

Let your councillors know what you think about the cuts... Click here to join the event on Facebook

Lobby full council meeting
3.30pm Thursday 21 October
Hove Town Hall

Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition is building a united fight back against the cuts agenda with a wave of protests, lobbies and demonstrations over the next 10 days.

Organised by trade union branches affiliated to Brighton trades council - representing over 10,000 workers in the city - alongside community campaigners and political activists, the Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition is a force that has the potental to grow and link up with others to stop all of these unjustified cuts to jobs and public services.

Today, Wednesday October 20, Con-Dem chancellor George Osborne is set to announce the harshest cuts to public services and jobs ever made. The budget deficit created by bailing out the greed of the city and bankers is being used as an exuse by capitalists and the rich to secure ever more massive profits at the expense of our society's poorest and lowest paid by attacking the progressive achievements made by generations of trade unionists, socialists and working class campaigners. Click here to read on...

Bright Start nursery wins reprieve

The local Bright Start nursery threatened with closure and the loss of some 30 jobs has won a temporary stay of execution after a fabulous campaigning effort by staff and the trade unions. Over 1,600 signatures have been collected on petitions in a matter of weeks demonstrating the strength of feeling for this valuable service.

However given the chance some councillors will go backtrack on this position and the pressure must be kept up to ensure that this opening shot in the "cuts war" falls flat on its face!

The Brighton Socialist says; Save Bright Start nursery! No to cuts in care provision around the city! No to cuts across Brighton public services! City councillors must reject the ConDem cuts budget and set a budget based on what Brighton people need! Build the Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition with campaigning groups, trade unions and ordinary people!

Read the Argus article here... Click here for the BBC coverage of the campaign... and Click here to sign the online petition...

Workers bring France to a standstill


1968 and 2010...

France is increasingly becoming the centre of attention, not only for the European ruling classes, but also for many workers and youth around Europe. The battle around the pension reforms increasingly represents a crystallisation of the conflict between the forces of capitalism with their reactionary agenda of austerity, and the rising fight back of the working class.

A spectacular amount of people were drawn into the streets on Tuesday 12 October for what was already the fourth “day of action” (mass demonstrations and strikes) in France since the beginning of September, reaching the record level of 3.5 million demonstrators nationwide, a 20% rise compared previous marches. No less than 244 demonstrations were reported nationally. Even the police were forced to recognise that in every city, participation was, once again, on the rise.

Rarely in the rich history of the French class struggle could you find such a turn-out all on the same day. It seems like every move or comment coming from the government’s representatives is convincing more people to join the protests. Click here to read on...

Browne Review attacks higher education!

Socialist Students and Youth Fight for Jobs condemned the plans under discussion to raise or possibly abolish the cap on university fees, saying it will rule out higher education for a generation already deprived of opportunities to work or learn through apprenticeships. Youth Fight for Jobs is a national organisation with the support of six trade unions.

Claire Laker-Mansfield, Socialist Students national organiser, said "If implemented, this spells the end of access to university as we know it for future generations of young people. This will not lead to an improvement in education; ministers argue fees will be over £7,000 just to compensate for the cuts coming in the Comprehensive Spending Review next week, on top of those already implemented. There will be a huge anger from young people against this, and the demonstration on 10 November should only be the start." Click here to read on...

Wednesday, 13 October 2010

It Doesn't Have To Be Like This! Women and the struggle for socialism public meeting


Join the Thursday branch for an important discussion about class society's oppression of women, the unjustified tsunami of oncoming capitalist cuts aimed at working class women, and how we can organise to fight back to win a lasting victory for the emancipation of women in Britain and worldwide.

Join the Facebook event page here.

It Doesn't Have To Be Like This: Women And The Struggle For Socialism by Christine Thomas.

Sunday, 3 October 2010

Cuts: Do we have no choice? Fighting the cuts in Britain and Greece


Join us at 7pm Friday 8 October
at the Phoenix Community Centre, Phoenix Place, Brighton

Massive cuts in public services loom over Britain. The government wants to make 25-40% cuts in public services. They are being told to do this by the very financial markets that caused this mess, and continue to enrich themselve...s at our expense. However not a whisper has been made in protest at this by any of the main parties! Labour councils in Britain are implementing Tory/Liberal cuts saying they have no choice.

If they were against the cuts they would refuse to make them, instead they just apologise for doing so, and promise they will be different in office if elected again. We, on the other hand, say that councillors must refuse to make these cuts. They must not pass any cuts budgets, and should campaign to plug the gap in public spending handed to them by the Government.

Across Europe governments are using the financial crisis caused by the banking sector as an excuse to slash public services and lower workers living standards. Greece has been at the forefront of those attacks and has seen the most active resistance amongst ordinary working people who refuse to pay the debts of capitalism. There is much anti-cuts campaigners can learn from the actions in Greece and unions joining up across Europe is going to vital in every country. Mitsos Helaris will be speaking on the Greek movement and the growing international resistance to the bankers crisis.

The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition stood in the General Election pledging to, if elected, refuse to make the cuts. Our candidate, Dave Hill, pledged to take only the average workers' wage, not the huge salaries other MPs take without flinching! The Socialist Party and Socialist Resistance, key supporters of TUSC, are hosting this meeting.

Do we have no choice but to make the cuts? Do councillors have the choice to resist them? If no party pledges to do so, can we build a party of the working-class that will?

PUBLIC MEETING - ALL WELCOME

Brighton socialists join millions across Europe on day of action against cuts



300 trade union members from across workplaces all over Brighton and Hove marched through the city to join millions of workers demonstrating throughout Europe against brutal government cuts to jobs and services. Click here to read on...

For reports on the trade union and socialist fightback taking place across Europe and the world visit our Committee for a Workers' International website.

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Shop stewards lobby TUC


(Pictures by Suleyman Civi and Dave Beale)

The very successful lobby of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in Manchester, organised by the National Shop Stewards Network (NSSN), points the way forward for the trade union movement in the looming conflict between the organised working class and the brutal Con-Dem government.

In the very commendable demonstration, the meetings and the speeches that took place, the growing anger and demands for action now against cuts which will slash to the bone the welfare state and effectively dismantle it was forcefully expressed. Click here to read on and to see a video of the demonstration...

Brighton Stop the Cuts launch success



Over 200 people packed into Friends Meeting House in Brighton on Thursday 9 September to launch a community-wide campaign against the neoliberal cuts.

Speaking from the trade union movement, Chris Baugh (PCS) and Andy Richards (Unison) dismantled the received wisdom of reducing government debt through cuts and highlighted the vast long-term costs of cutting key public services and forcing thousands into unemployment and below the poverty line.

Chris Baugh called for united action within the labour movement, citing the need for greater organisation and recruitment, and for unions to develop links across the public sector and with local communities.

Ümit Ozturk from the Mediterranean Resources Network delivered a cutting refutation of Cameron's "Big Society" double-speak, describing it as a new battle in the war between the hungry and the greedy.

He emphasised the need for community organisations not to be coerced into self-censorship by the tightening of the purse strings.

An academic analysis of the cuts was provided by Oxford economist, Andy Kilminster, who cited evidence from the last century of British history to convey exactly why the cuts are unnecessary, highly ideological, and if permitted to proceed would wreak further havoc in the economy.

Caroline Lucas MP arrived late from parliament and delivered a message of unity whilst describing the cuts as an attack on the 'living wage'.

This point was emphasised by Brighton Benefits campaigners who called for employed and unemployed workers to unite, describing how cuts to welfare are intended to 'soften up' the labour market by driving the unemployed into destitution and desperation.

Pete Offord from Brighton Socialist Party welcomed the huge turnout and argued for a strategy to pressure the local councillors not only to reject the cuts but to propose an alternative budget that reflects the needs of ordinary people, and to wage a campaign for the difference in funding to come from the government.

Drawing on the example of Liverpool City Council in the 1980s, he pointed out that if no Brighton councillors are willing to stand up for the people who elected them, Brighton Stop the Cuts Coalition should consider standing its own candidates who will.

Angry Connexions workers described the appalling effects that planned cuts to their organisation would have for disadvantaged young people, whilst cuts to the meagre mental health budget were slammed by the NHS Support Foundation.

With the hall packed to bursting, activists lined the walls and aisles to participate in this launch event.

Organisations were welcomed to send delegates to plan for the European Day of Action against the cuts on 29 September.

Check out the Brighton Stop the Cuts Facebook page for more info and to get involved in the fightback.