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Weekly Worker 544 Thursday September 16 2004
More
articles on the ESF can
be found by clicking here
Unchallengable consensus con
At the second attempt, we have finally chosen the 26 speakers residing
in Britain who will address
the 27 plenary sessions at the European Social Forum in October.
Our first list was thrown out by the two main groups controlling the event,
the Socialist Workers Party and Socialist Action. They suddenly discovered
that the agreed speakers had been chosen in a manner that was in
contradiction to the principles of the World Social Forum - despite
the fact that it was their own comrades who pushed through the prohibited
voting procedure (see Weekly Worker September
9). Supposedly social forums are meant to operate according to the
undemocratic and usually unworkable principle of consensus
- in reality decisions are taken behind closed doors by small cliques.
Was the second list achieved through consensus? You must be kidding. This
time around, the comrades simply presented their speakers chosen
after a broad consultation process of the various sections of the movements.
So the trade unions presented a list of five speakers, as
did the NGOs and the anti-racist, anti-fascist and black, Asian
and minority ethnic organisations. The anti-war and peace
movements were allowed to put forward four speakers, the Irish
organisations one (they chose Gerry Adams), ditto the whole of Scotland
(which put forward not Tommy Sheridan, but the pretty much unknown Veronica
Rankin, who chairs the womens committee of the Scottish TUC).
How exactly it came to pass that those making up the amorphous category
of personalities and independent left were able to consult
with each other and choose Hilary Wainwright, John Pilger, George Monbiot
and Ann Pettifor (Jubilee) is a bit of a mystery
Nevertheless,
it was stated by SWP-SA comrades that the outcome of these consultations
cannot be challenged, as Jonathan Neale from the SWP put it.
SAs Redmond ONeill expressed the same sentiment a little more
mildly when he said they should not be challenged. Needless
to say, the consultation meetings where speakers were chosen
were not publicly advertised. Comrades who have, for example, attended
various meetings of the trade unions involved in the ESF were not informed
about any selection process. It looks like our comrades in the SWP and
SA have, with the aid of a number of organisations in their orbit, simply
stitched up a list that suits them much better than the first one did.
The differences between the two lists are small, but crucial. If anything,
a pretty inoffensive - though conservative and unimaginative - first list
has been ditched for a slightly more conservative one. The NGOs get the
five speakers they wanted - nobody even questioned who their particular
speakers were, although most of them are total unknowns. The Green Party
will be represented by Jenny Jones and Caroline Lucas - maybe their presence
in the GLA helped them get two servings. The SWP appears to have thought
better of its previous omission and made sure that the main figurehead
of the Respect coalition, George Galloway, is after all on the list (at
the meeting last month, they voted against him on four different occasions).
Most of the trade union representatives are as rightwing and pro-establishment
as those on the first list: Unison will be represented by Dave Prentis
and Frances OGrady (the highest ranking woman in the trade
unions ever - I cannot believe how anybody could question her right to
be on the list, fumed Socialist Actions Sarah Colborne when
somebody suggested she should be replaced by the politically far more
radical Mark Serwotka from the public services union, PCSU). Barry Camfield
from the TWGU and Debbie Coulter, deputy general secretary of the GMB,
round up the list of trade union bureaucrats. The RMTs Bob Crow
is the only union speaker with a commitment to some kind of socialism.
The real reason why the first list was ditched was that one particular
person did not make it onto it. SWP-SA withdrew Ken Livingstones
nomination after Lee Jasper (Livingstones adviser on race relations
and the police) was soundly defeated by Asad Rehman, George Galloways
political adviser and, as a representative of the Newham Monitoring Project,
a prominent figure in the anti-war movement. On the new list, comrade
Rehman was demoted to chairing one session, not speaking at it.
Londons mayor has finally been chosen for a plenary on anti-fascism.
He is the chair of Unite Against Fascism and one of the leading
left politicians in Europe, gushed Lee Jasper. UAF was, of course,
set up by, amongst others, Livingstone himself, so I imagine it would
not have been too difficult to grab the top job. Jasper himself has been
put forward to speak on a plenary on anti-racism - and brought with him
a group of cheerleaders to make sure neither he nor Ken would be challenged.
Naturally, some did. I proposed that Asad Rehman should not chair the
anti-racist meeting, but actually replace Lee as one of the platform speakers,
as it seemed to me to be a bit of an overkill to have two representatives
of the Greater London Authority speaking on pretty similar issues. That
went down well. Simon Woolley of Operation Black Vote (of which Lee Jasper
happens to be the chair) was deeply offended that a white woman
comes here and tells me which speakers the black and ethnic minorities
should choose. I am deeply, deeply upset.
He was effectively challenged by Naima Bouteldja, herself a black muslim:
I find it really wrong that somebody uses their ethnicity or their
religious background to stop a political opponent challenging them. Surely
the main point is whether they have a valid point to make, she said
pointedly. Needless to say, Lee was confirmed as the speaker thanks to
the serried ranks of SWP-SA and Operation Black Vote members in the room
(Simon Woolley, Lee Jasper and 10 or so of their colleagues showed how
deeply interested they are in the ESF process by leaving the meeting immediately
after the list of speakers had been agreed). Similarly, my proposal to
move Ken Livingstone to speak in the plenary session on Labour rights
across Europe, in which he could have effectively been challenged
over his disgusting call on RMT workers to scab on their colleagues, was
unfortunately not agreed to by the majority.
Interestingly, the SWP was able to push through only one of its own speakers
and Lindsey German will now speak in a plenary on Troops out of
Iraq - with her Stop the War Coalition hat on. This is interesting,
as Chris Nineham had made it quite clear that the SWP and/or its Globalise
Resistance front would insist on an additional speaker. But
it looks like their friends in SA-GLA convinced them not to bother.
However, two additional plenary sessions have been agreed at the small,
international programme working group that met on September 13 in Paris.
These two meetings will see debates between political parties and
the social movements. This is a very welcome development - it is
ridiculous to try and keep political parties and politicians locked out
of the process. They always come in through the back door, hiding behind
this or that particular front. Much more honest to have the debate out
in the open.
Undoubtedly, the SWP will have been promised a speaker or two in these
extra plenary sessions. The speakers from Britain will be decided upon
at the next programme group. But most certainly there will be no repeat
of a similar meeting that took place at last years ESF in Paris:
There Chris Nineham addressed a meeting as a representative of the
social movements in Britain - as opposed to a representative of
the SWP, of which he is, of course, a leading member.
Tina Becker
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