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Weekly Worker 416 Thursday January 24 2002
Welsh socialist alliance
WSA journal to be launched
Up to 60 people attended the fourth annual conference of the Welsh Socialist
Alliance in Rhayader on Saturday January 19. Members of the Socialist
Workers Party, Socialist Party, Cymru Goch, Communist Party of Great Britain
and the Alliance for Workers’ Liberty participated in the conference,
as well as around 20 non-aligned socialists.
Contrary to rumours that had been circulating, neither the SP nor CG
walked out. Both organisations behaved in a comradely way and business
was conducted in a largely fraternal atmosphere. Among the many positive
proposals passed were motions for a ‘Socialism in Wales’ day or weekend
school, to take place in May or June, and one calling for closer links
with our Socialist Alliance and Scottish Socialist Party partners in England
and Scotland (see below).
The most significant decision was to set up a regular WSA publication.
A large majority of the delegates (including the SP) voted for the Gwent
branch motion moved by comrade Richard Morse. Disappointingly, most members
of the SWP abstained, perhaps indicating that, had the vote been less
clear-cut, the SWP would have voted against.
In fact, SWP members made a lame attempt to prevent debate on this motion.
They seemed to hope that by carrying over a debate from the morning and
requesting that the Ogmore by-election candidate speak to the conference
in the 75 minutes allotted for organisational motions, there would be
no time left to debate the issue of a publication. It was placed eighth
on the order paper for that section. However, Gwent WSA outmanoeuvred
the SWP by formally moving five of its other motions. The debate on the
publication went ahead.
In the discussion that followed supporters highlighted the crucial need
for our own journal. In a telling contribution, comrade Danny Bowles from
Swansea WSA noted that a regular paper would help to move the WSA from
appearing to many merely as a flag of convenience wheeled out at election
time. It could start to be an organisation that was serious about moving
in a partyist direction.
Thus, in spite of the palpable weaknesses of the WSA, the organisation
has, in one important respect, achieved something the SA in England failed
to at its December 1 conference in London. The SWP voted down the proposal
for an SA newspaper; in Wales the alliance will have a journal. Let us
hope, though, that SWP comrades in Wales now wholeheartedly seek to ensure
that the new publication is the a resounding success. An editorial board
was elected consisting of Steve Bell (independent), Mark Jones (CG), Des
Mannay and Alan Thomson from the SWP, Jamie Loftus (independent) and Catrin
Williams (SP). Initially, a monthly magazine format is planned and comrades
are keen to see the first issue hit the streets as quickly as possible.
However, a worrying feature of the day was the SWP’s lacklustre approach.
Although the biggest organisation in the alliance, it does not command
a natural majority. This fact appeared to dictate its behaviour at the
conference.
As previously reported, the SWP had originally planned to move its constitutional
amendment which would have given the WSA an almost identical constitution
to the one adopted by the SA on December 1. This would inevitably have
led to an SP walkout, as in England. However, at the request of the WSA
national council the SWP agreed to withdraw its amendment until the convening
of a special conference to debate the future of the alliance.
Yet the SWP was none too keen that this take place too soon. When an
amendment was moved by the CPGB to confirm May as the date of the special
conference, the SWP held back and instead supported a proposal that the
conference be delayed until October. An indicative vote took place and
the CPGB amendment (supported by the SP) was defeated by 22 votes to 23,
although the national council will take the final decision. The SWP is
obviously wary of WSA developments, given its inability to command an
absolute majority.
The alliance is still fragile. One good conference has not changed that.
The winter 2002 edition of the SP’s Socialist Wales - the quarterly
supplement to The Socialist - comments that, while the SWP’s constitutional
proposals have been “temporarily withdrawn”, this “merely delays the decision
that the WSA must make to remain a voluntary alliance or become a centralised
political party in all but name ...” Clearly, storm clouds still loom.
The decision not to press ahead with the conference in May encouraged
CG to argue that it had been correct not to withdraw its constitutional
amendment on an independent Welsh socialist republic. A debate followed
later in the day on the national question. CG’s amendment was overwhelmingly
defeated, with only eight votes in favour.
Time pressures meant that debate on the three motions on the international
conflict since September 11 - from the SP, SWP and the CPGB - was restricted.
At one point it appeared that the SP might bring itself to support the
CPGB motion, which combined opposition to the imperialist war with intransigent
rejection of the politics and deeds of islamic fundamentalism.
However, after comrade Julian Goss of the SWP confirmed to the SP delegates
that the sentence in his motion which stated that “the WSA does not try
to be even-handed in its condemnation of both sides” did not imply tacit
support for islamic fundamentalism, the SP capitulated. Both the SP and
the SWP motions were passed, whilst the CPGB motion was defeated by 28
votes to 11.
The SP couldn’t be heroes, just for one day.
Cameron Richards
Key resolutions
Socialism in Wales
This conference agrees to organise a ‘Socialism in Wales’ day/weekend
along the lines of the SWP’s Marxism week and summer/day schools held
by other socialist parties. A central theme at such a conference should
be a perspectives-based ‘Which way forward for the WSA’ and the national
question. The WSA day/weekend should also set time aside to discuss international
issues and provide a forum which includes sessions such as an introduction
to socialism and a history of Welsh labour, etc.
This conference shall assign/elect one member from each party represented
and three non-party members to organise the conference and speakers. The
conference/event should aim to take place in May/ June 2002.
Closer links
This conference notes that many issues that we campaigned on during the
general election were issues that affect our class regardless of where
they live. To that extent a greater pool of resources, ideas and personnel
between the English and Welsh Socialist Alliances and the Scottish Socialist
Party could have resulted in us making bigger gains than we actually did.
To that extent we seek to reaffirm closer links with both organisations
and representation at their meetings in an observer capacity in order
to exchange news of developments, political ideas and resources.
The WSA will write to the SA of England and the SSP giving them a fraternal
invite to be represented at all national council meetings and seek a reciprocal
arrangement for national council meetings and conferences.
WSA publication
This conference believes that is essential for the WSA to produce a regular
publication for distribution/sale among its members and the general public.
This conference believes that such a publication, if successful, could
raise the profile of the WSA and be a very useful forum for debate about
socialism in Wales.
This conference resolves to elect an editorial board of five members
at this conference to establish such a publication.
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