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Weekly Worker 231 Thursday March 12 1998
London Socialist Alliance press release
Socialist challenge to New Labour in London elections
The newly formed London Socialist Alliance has announced that it intends
to stand over 100 candidates against New Labour in the forthcoming London
council elections.
The Alliance is a broad based democratic organisation which has brought together
leftwingers from across the capital who are disgusted with the policies of
Tony Blair's New Labour Party.
In recent years Labour councils have forced through massive rises in Council
Tax and rents, introduced changes in essential services such as meals on
wheels, homecare, and day centres. They have sacked thousands of front-line
staff and closed down hundreds of vital community services.
In the past it was easy to blame the Tory government for these actions. Now
that Tony Blair is in power these excuses cannot be used. Yet the attacks
on vulnerable Londoners continue.
The LSA says enough is enough. Its time to fight against the cuts and present
a genuine working class alternative. This is why we are contesting the elections
- to offer working class people throughout London the opportunity to vote
for real socialist candidates who will fight to defend their interests.
The Alliance has the backing of Euro MEPs Ken Coates and Hugh Kerr.
For further details contact:
Southwark councillor Ian Driver on 0171 701 8090 or
Anne Murphy on 0973 231 620
Draft minimal electoral platform submitted for discussion by the London Socialist
Alliance
Where no Socialist Alliance candidate is standing, we urge voters to support
any candidate who can support the following minimum demands. Anyone that
cannot do so deserves no support from the working class:
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Democracy: there must be the fullest democracy in society. All elections
should be on the basis of proportional representation. No to Blair's London
Mayor - yes to an elected assembly. All hereditary privilege in the constitution
must be ended. The monarchy and the House of Lords should not be reformed.
They must go. The people of Scotland and Wales must have the right to
self-determination - the right to determine their own relationship with the
rest of Britain. Oppose separation - yes to the voluntary unity of the peoples
of Britain in a federal republic.
-
Ireland: no to Blair's 'peace process'. Britain must unconditionally withdraw
from the north of Ireland, leaving the people of Ireland free to determine
their own future.
-
Minimum wage: the minimum wage should not be set at what Blair says this
decrepit, anti-working system can afford. Workers needs at least £285
for a maximum 35 hour week in order to live decent, dignified lives.
-
Pensions and benefits: older people are treated as excess baggage. After
a lifetime of work, they must have the right to full lives with access to
all the necessities of the modern society that they have helped create. Pensions
and all other basic state benefits should be set at the level of the minimum
wage.
-
Unemployed: no to 'welfare to work'. Obscenely, the unemployed are blamed
for being unemployed. In fact, capitalism produces unemployment and all parties
- not least Blair's New Labour - which defend capitalism share blame for
the plight of the unemployed. Benefit should be set at the level of the minimum
wage. The unemployed must be guaranteed a full life whether or not the bosses
can employ them profitably.
-
Anti-trade union laws: nothing indicates more starkly the anti-working class
nature of Blair's Labour Party than the decision to retain the Tory's draconian
anti-union laws. Trade unions - the basic organisations of self-defence of
the workers - must be free from state shackles and interference and be
democratically run by the workers themselves.
-
Women: for real not just legal equality between men and women. Women must
have real control their own bodies. There must be free abortion and contraception
on demand. The state must provide free 24 hour nursery provision. There must
be moves towards the socialisation of housework.
-
Immigration: the product is free so should be the worker. Commodities move
freely around the globe in the pursuit of profit. Workers should also be
free to move wherever they wish. No to all immigration controls.
-
End discrimination against homosexuals and lesbians: no to discriminatory
legislation such as the age of consent. For the right of gays and lesbians
to adopt children.
-
Transport: in the major cities - not least in London - people are charged
exorbitant prices for substandard, antiquated, and overcrowd transport.
Coordination is nonexistent. The system must be integrated and buses, trains,
and the underground must be provided free of charge. Mobility is a right
for the able-bodied and disabled alike.
Resolution on London referendum unanimously agreed by CPGB members' aggregate
March 8 1998
-
Blair's proposals for a powerful directly elected mayor and a weak Greater
London Authority are an integral part of his project of reforming the
constitutional monarchy system. However unlike Scotland there is no mass
movement in London, latent or otherwise, which is committed to or yearns
for something higher. There is not even a sentiment for the return of the
GLC.
-
The May 7 referendum, because it contains only one pre-set take-it or leave-it
question, is rigged, designed to get the 'democratic mandate' the government
wishes for. Those on the left who stand for the maximum democracy under
capitalism have no official opportunity to test support for their ideas through
the official referendum. The CPGB will therefore call for a boycott of Blair's
London referendum.
-
Boycotting a rigged referendum is not the same as boycotting normal bourgeois
elections. There is no contradiction between urging a boycott of the May
7 referendum and standing candidates for the local elections on the same
day nor fighting for a leftwing candidate for the London mayor if the referendum
gives the government the 'yes' result it expects.
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