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Weekly Worker 536 Thursday July 8 2004
Scapegoats and witch-hunts
The Italians and the Weekly Worker have together almost brought
about the collapse of the London European Social Forum - or so the
story goes. All the while, Ken Livingstone is allowed to exploit
the ESF for his own purposes, reports Tina Becker
"We are clear now that the funds to run the ESF will be in
place shortly. That was the reassurance those who attended
the July 6 ESF organising committee were given by Dave Hillman of
the Tobin Tax Campaign, who heads the office working group. For
a couple of weeks, it seemed as if there were some serious financial
problems, with rumours circulating that London mayor Ken Livingstone
had lost interest in the ESF and was considering withdrawing the
announced GLA donation of £250,000.
Job interviews for the six ESF workers had to be cancelled at the
last minute, because the finances were not in place.
It is difficult to understand the extent of this crisis
or the reason behind it. As with most aspects of this years
ESF, information is classified and only released to
those who are trusted by the two organisations firmly in charge
of the preparations: the Socialist Workers Party (aka Globalise
Resistance et al) and Socialist Action, the small Trotskyist sect
whose leading members enjoy very well paid positions in Livingstones
GLA bureaucracy.
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Whatever the reasons for the temporary
financial problem, it most certainly had nothing to do with the explanation
given at the last coordinating committee. Meeting on July 1, the whole
two and a half hours were spent attacking the Weekly Worker and the
Italian ESF mobilising committee, who were apparently to blame for
the crisis. At the centre of this claim was a sentence
in the Italians report of a recent programme working group meeting,
in which they urged the SWP-Socialist Action to find a much
better way of working together and relating to others, otherwise
we shall pull out of the process (see Weekly Worker June
17).
The Weekly Worker was equally (if not more) to blame - because we
published the report, which had of course been widely circulated on
the internet. The main funders were so worried about this
that they put their support on hold, awaiting reassurances
from the Italians that they would not pull out. Or so the story goes.
Mick Connolly (representing the South East Region of the TUC) went
on to claim that the Italians report had not been put together
by the Italians at all: I am not prepared to accept that, on
the one hand, the Italians go and sign this critical report and, on
the other hand, when I speak to them, none of them raise any of the
problems mentioned in it. Like Chris Nineham (Globalise Resistance/SWP),
he implied that the report was a fabrication by either the Weekly
Worker or those who are lobbying the Italians, giving them the
totally wrong impressions about the process.
The charge was then swiftly expanded and fire was directed at the
Weekly Worker and yours truly. Milena Buyum (National Assembly Against
Racism/Socialist Action) has doubted for a long time Tinas
commitment to the ESF. There should be no reports at all on any aspects
of ESF meetings, she demanded - and was backed up by a number
of her comrades. Louise Hutchins (National Union of Students) claimed
that she felt intimidated: You are silencing people,
because you might report what they say. Another SA comrade,
Sarah Colborne (officially representing the Palestine Solidarity Campaign),
felt that we have been at the receiving end of a witch-hunt
and have been scapegoated by the Weekly Worker. Lee Brown claimed
that our Urgent appeal against exclusions in the ESF (see
below) had been a despicable witch-hunt. And there was
me thinking that threats to exclude us from meetings and blaming us
for putting the ESF in jeopardy, constituted a witch-hunt against
the Weekly Worker! How foolish of me
The only SWP comrade sinking quite so low was Rahul Patel (wearing
his London Unison hat): You have paid your £250 affiliation
fee and you think that gives you the right to act as cheap columnists.
You constantly undermine the process, playing silly games with appeals
and it simply cannot continue. It has to stop immediately, he
snarled.
As the meeting went on, it became ever more obvious that SWP-SA comrades
had come with a fixed agenda. They have used some kind of real, last-minute
budgetary hiccup to attack all those calling for more openness and
transparency in the ESF - including in financial matters. Italian
comrades will undoubtedly have been horrified to be told that they
are to blame for the potential collapse of the ESF London. I would
guess, though, that they have had enough contact with the SWP-SA bureaucracy
to calmly judge this story for what it is - a smokescreen.
This was in fact pointed out by all members of the democratic
opposition present (which is basically everybody who is not
in the orbit of SWP-SA). Oscar Reyes from Red Pepper reminded the
meeting that every word spoken in parliament is published afterwards.
He added that the way to deal with the criticisms raised by the Italians
was not to arrogantly dismiss them or simply patronise the Italians
for having a distorted view (as Kate Hudson from the Morning
Stars Communist Party of Britain did). We surely need
to discuss how to overcome those problems, he urged. Javier
Ruiz (Indymedia) called the meeting a farce that has obviously
been pre-arranged to stop us from talking openly and properly about
finances. He urged the SWP-SA to produce a proper budget and
accounts - reminding them that it was precisely this lack of financial
and organisational transparency that has stopped most of the NGOs
from affiliating to the process.
Undoubtedly, this episode will be quoted over and over again to justify
the necessity of excluding CPGB members from ESF meetings,
to slap bans on reporting any ESF developments and to keep financial
matters secret.
Whose ESF is it?
Only one thing has become clear in regards to ESF finances: neither
Ken Livingstone (who notoriously called on tubeworkers to cross picket
lines during the June 30 strike) nor the unions are interested in
handing over their so-called donations to the ESF. They
do not want their money to be spent according to the wishes of the
70 affiliated organisations and the 200 or so activists who turn up
to ESF meetings, as basically happened at the first two ESFs in Florence
and Paris. Then, local and regional government bodies simply handed
over their money and left the details to the ESF activists.
Not in Britain. Here, it is simply announced that certain ESF expenditure
will be - or has been - covered by the GLA or a trade union. There
was no prior discussion about the need for a website that apparently
cost the GLA £40,000 (and which has just gone live).
Now the SWP-SA bureaucracy have announced that they want to hire a
finance manager, to be recruited from a professional agency
- the cost can be imagined. They have consistently rejected calls
for a finance working group that could democratically decide how the
ESFs money should be spent. If this really is supposed to be
an event for the anti-capitalist and anti-war movements across Europe,
then surely these are the forces who should be in charge of deciding
how it should be run.
Instead, the trade union bureaucracy and Londons scabbing Labour
mayor are paying the piper - and calling the tune. This sits rather
uneasily with the Charter of principles of the World Social
Forum, according to which all regional forums happen in a plural,
diversified, non-confessional, non-governmental and non-party context.
Only the dishonest ban on political parties has been upheld - on paper
anyway.
Like our French and Italian comrades, we must insist on the ESFs
independence. Donations - including from the GLA - are welcome, but
there can be no unacceptable conditions. To hand over the whole show
to Livingstone would be to bring discredit on the social forum movement
itself. Of course, nobody would want to see the ESF London not happening,
but if we cannot guarantee political independence from the London
government, we must seriously consider whether alternative (no doubt
less glossy) plans ought to be made.
Rewards for Kens cronies
Livingstone has made good use of his little helpers in Socialist Action.
He has surrounded himself with these closet Trotskyists, who literally
act as a sword and a shield for him. Were they amongst those briefing
the press about the political nutters in the RMT? We ought
to be told. Certainly in the ESF, SA have been behind the many bureaucratic
manoeuvres, backroom deals and stitch-ups, in order to ensure that
the whole thing is put firmly under Livingstones control.
SA members Redmond ONeill and John Ross have recently been promoted
to director for transport and director of economics respectively and
are now earning a whopping £111,000 per year. Also, it has just
been announced that longstanding SA member Simon Fletcher has been
re-employed as Livingstones chief of staff - for an annual salary
of £117,000.
Like other SA members employed by the GLA, Fletcher (who was Livingstone's
research assistant when he was MP for Brent East) has been appointed,
not elected. Nevertheless, in April 2002, when Livingstone went on
a long holiday in Australia, Fletcher was effectively in charge of
the GLA. The normal procedure would have been to put his elected deputy,
Nicky Gavron, in control. But then it is doubtful that she would ever
declare, I dont sneeze without the mayor's permission,
as Fletcher has done (The Guardian May 31).
This bowing and scraping loyalty to Livingstone has materially put
some SA leaders into the upper reaches of the middle class, of course
at the cost of their socialist souls. SA nowadays stands for Salary
Advancement. However, the mayors call for scabbing has greatly
increased the strains on this shadowy group, which still somehow imagines
itself somewhere within the revolutionary spectrum. Squaring the circle
between upholding socialism in theory, while in practice enforcing
the policies of Londons Bonapartist mayor, leads to pained embarrassment.
Eg, I am told that, when questioned about his attitude to scabbing
and the RMT strike, Peter Leary (NUS executive) claimed to have no
opinion on the matter, as he had been on holiday.
A new SA leadership is apparently waiting to take over; the likes
of Redmond ONeill and John Ross will supposedly be given less
prominence. But what is really needed is not a reshuffle of personnel.
Rather it is a complete rejection of the rotten politics that have
fatefully, step by step, taken SA to the point where, along with Livingstone,
it finally crossed class lines. |
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