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Weekly Worker 545 Thursday September 23 2004
Abortion aberration
Teesside has hosted two Respect events in the last week, each addressed
by prominent figures from the unity coalitions national executive
and its candidate in the September 30 Hartlepool by-election.
The first meeting, held in Middlesbrough on Wednesday September 15, had
a disappointing turnout of only 15 people, compared with the second, an
election rally in Hartlepool itself on Tuesday September 21, which attracted
an audience of around 50.
John Bloom is Respects candidate to replace Peter Mandelson as MP
for Hartlepool. Unlike Yvonne Ridley, who headed Respects regional
list in the recent Euro elections, he has a strong track record of campaigning
for working class interests. The comrade is best known locally for his
leading role in the campaign to save Hartlepools general University
Hospital from closure and his prominent anti-nuclear activism in a constituency
with a nuclear power station. As a result, his candidacy has been well-received
by the many Hartlepudlians who are disillusioned with the Labour government
and the now confirmed suspicion that their ambitious MP, so closely associated
with creating the New Labour project, had simply used the town as a convenient
postal address for his curriculum vitae.
The early start to the Bloom campaign, his high profile and credibility
in the local community, together with the towns recent history of
electoral rebellion (most infamously resulting in the election of independent
mayor Stuart Drummond - aka Angus the Monkey - whose main
manifesto promise was free bananas for every school pupil), forced New
Labour to abandon plans to impose another Blairite policy wonk on the
town. Instead they have nominated Iain Wright, a young Hartlepool councillor,
whose political inexperience is rumoured to have led party minders to
remove his mobile phone to prevent him speaking to journalists without
supervision.
Mindful of the success of an independent candidate on an anti-closure
platform in Kidderminster in 2001, Labour is very anxious about the hospital
issue. Secretary of state for health John Reid visited the constituency
and assured residents that he did not want the hospital to close. The
populist mayor of Middlesbrough, Ray Robocop Mallon, has also
endorsed the Wright candidacy. Mallon is a popular figure in Hartlepool,
having developed his zero tolerance image as head of its police
force, and he is now actively courting New Labour, following his stated
desire to enter national politics.
Again in contrast to other Respect candidates, comrade Bloom has pledged
to take a workers wage if elected. The remainder of his salary would
be used to establish and run a constituency office - something that Mandelson
neglected to do during his 12 years as the towns representative.
Comrade Blooms impeccable leftwing credentials must have added to
the surprise shown by his co-speaker at the Middlesbrough meeting when
he answered a question about his views on abortion. Whilst looking moderately
uncomfortable as he said that he had real problems with abortion,
not from a religious point of view but a philosophical angle, Socialist
Workers Party member and prominent Stop the War Coalition leader Lindsey
German was visibly taken aback when Bloom went on to predict that one
day people will come to regard abortion as a holocaust. He believed
that the term limit for legal abortions was arbitrary and
thought that Respect should follow the practice of other political parties
and allow its representatives the right of conscience when voting on legislation
relevant to such issues.
Comrade German said that as a socialist, I disagree with John on
a womans right to choose, but she did not see it as a key
issue for Respect and thought it irrelevant to the Hartlepool campaign.
Respect, she reminded the audience, was a broad coalition
of people with different views on some issues. She agreed with comrade
Blooms view that Respect should allow a free vote on this and similar
issues, citing the Scottish Socialist Party as an example of this approach.
It certainly isnt an issue worth splitting over.
Comrade Bloom came back and said that abortion was a personal morality
issue. He repeated the holocaust phrase again, but said
that stronger support systems needed to be put in place for women before
it would be possible to seek further restrictions on abortion.
Other than this aberration, Respects campaign style in Hartlepool
has been reminiscent of the days of the Socialist Alliance. Lindsey Germans
speech in Middlesbrough described Respect as representing the values
of old Labour.
At the Hartlepool rally, Respects national secretary John Rees (SWP)
emphasised issues such as the economic insecurity that is leading to increasing
bullying in the workplace, the need to support pensioners and his contempt
for the government ministers who had benefited from a free university
education, only to pull up the ladder behind them and impose
fees and loans on those seeking to enter higher education. He said that
there were people in every town throughout the country who would be better
at running the country than the current government. Working class people,
Rees argued, have only ever won anything by organising themselves
to fight for change.
After a moving testimony from the family of Gordon Gentle, a 19-year-old
soldier who died in Iraq in June this year, Rees pointed out that the
army was largely made up of people who were economically conscripted,
especially in north east towns like Hartlepool. The government, he claimed,
were the people who really deserved to have anti-social behaviour
orders placed on them rather than the young people they spend so much
time condemning.
No questions from the floor were permitted at the second meeting.
Steve Cooke
- See also:
Needed: a party of the left. Hartelpool Respect
candidate John Bloom answers Peter Manson's questions on abortion
and the election campaign.
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