Enjoy
the Send cheques, payable to CPGB, BCM Box 928,
London WC1N 3XX or donate online: |
Weekly Worker 546 Thursday September 30 2004
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Latest updateAt the September 30 programme group meeting, not one single important amendment to the list of chairs was accepted. The meeting - this time packed with members of the SWP and Socialist Action - again took to voting in order to make sure that no minority or dissenting voices would be heard in the plenary sessions (despite the fact that the list of plenary speakers was once thrown out precicsely because it was voted on). The democratic opposition (basically everybody who is not a member of either SWP or SA) proposed only seven changes to the list of 27 chairs. But only Jo Hamilton from the anti-cimate change group Rising Tide was accepted (and it is unclear if she will actually accept the position after the stitch up of the rest of the list). So there will be not one single rank and file trade union militant - but nine fulltimers of the top of the union bureaucracy. No Mike Marqusee - only 'trusted' people from the SWP's Stop the War Coalition. And no representative from any anti-racist organisation that is not linked to London's mayor Ken Livingstone. Instead, there will fourteen people on the plenary platforms linked to either Socialist Action or the SWP. |
Last weeks meeting of the programme group discussed which chairs
residing in Britain should be put forward for the 27 plenary
sessions to be held during the ESF, which takes place in London from October
15-17. These sessions are the only ones which are the property of the
whole ESF - the majority of meetings (seminars and workshops) are organised
by groups from across Europe themselves. Having pushed through an unimaginative
list of rightwing speakers for these sessions against considerable opposition
(see Weekly Worker September 16), the organisations in control of the
ESF have unsurprisingly not changed their undemocratic ways when it comes
to the selection of chairs (though, apparently, that is what they promised
some disgruntled ESF activists).
Chairs at plenary sessions do not simply choose contributors from the
floor - they have also been given a five-minute slot do a bit of intervening
themselves. In fact, they are the most powerful people on the platform.
No wonder then that we have seen fierce arguments when it comes to who
should be chosen. The ruling clique of Socialist Action and the Socialist
Workers Party once more put together a slate, which was - as usual - not
circulated in advance. Heaven forbid that anybody should actually look
at it beforehand, let alone make suggestions for potentially better choices.
Apparently, according to programme group chair Rahul Patel (SWP), this
list was put together after broad consultation with the different
movements. This process of consultation basically consists
of SA- and SWP-sponsored organisations phoning each other up and haggling
over lists between themselves. Only the NGOs are actually able to put
forward their own suggestions - because neither the SWP, Socialist Action
nor the mayor have any foothold in them.
The meeting did not actually come to any final decisions - on the insistence
of Redmond ONeill. Livingstones adviser on transport (and
a leading member of Socialist Action) insisted right from the start of
the meeting that the whole list should only be discussed as a whole
and argued against going through it one by one. He also proposed (successfully)
that a further meeting should be called for September 30 to discuss the
list again. In the meantime, some more mysterious consultation
would be going on.
The real reason for comrade ONeills suggestion was quite obviously the make-up of the meeting: for some reason, the SWP only managed to bring a handful of their members to the 50-strong gathering. Socialist Action and GLA-sponsored groups brought another 15 or so - and the rest was made up of members of the democratic opposition (basically anybody who is not in the orbit of either SA or the SWP). The SWPs Chris Nineham - always far more blatant than comrade ONeill - suggested that at the next meeting, we should come to decisions with indicative voting.
Undoubtedly, he will be making sure that enough of his comrades show
up on that occasion.
Incidentally, as of the evening of September 28, the September 30 meeting
has still not been advertised on the ESF website or by mailshot: quite
obviously, the consultation is only supposed to involve groups
and individuals who are on message. No doubt, the list of
potential chairs that will be presented to this meeting will be pretty
identical to the first one.
The proposed list for the Peace section is filled with friends
of Ken Livingstone in and outside the Labour Party: Jeremy Corbyn MP,
Alice Mahon MP, Bruce Kent from the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and
the SWPs Chris Nineham.
After having elected only general secretaries to speak in the plenary
sessions, the trade unions have apparently again chosen exclusively
high-ranking members of their own bureaucracy to become chairs: Diana
Holland OBE (TGWU womens officer) sits on the Labour Party national
executive, where she has played a rather unimpressive role. On crunch
issues, she often chooses to abstain - like when it came to decide if
George Galloway should be re-admitted into the Labour Party, for example.
Gloria Mills MBE (Unisons organiser for equality) was appointed
by the then home secretary, Jack Straw, to serve on the Commission for
Racial Equality and she also sits on the Labour Party national policy
forum. Lucy Kelly (deputy general secretary of Amicus) is the only suggested
trade union chair without any awards from the queen.
Jeremy Dewar from Workers Power suggested that the CPGBs Lee Rock
(London regional organiser of the civil services union, PCSU) should be
considered for chairing one session, so that we have at least one
rank and file union activist on the platform. However, Rahul Patel
refused to take this on board: We have been told by the PCS that
they do not want to be part of the ESF, as they are too busy preparing
their forthcoming strike.
As this was news to Lee Rock, he asked comrade Patel after the meeting
who exactly in the PCSU told him that. Unfortunately, comrade Patel could
not remember. Strangely, he also could not recall how he might have come
by this information. Needless to say, comrade Rock will again be put forward
as a chair at the next programme meeting - in the meantime he will be
seeking official support from his union. The SWP-SA had previously refused
to allow the PCSUs leftwing general secretary, Mark Serwotka, to
be a speaker from an ESF platform (although he is one of dozens of speakers
at the final demonstration) - and that despite the fact that the union
is engaged in defending tens of thousands of jobs that are about to be
wiped out by chancellor Gordon Brown.
The Anti-racist, black, Asian and minority ethnic section
has supposedly chosen almost exclusively people from organisations closely
associated with Livingstone or SA: the National Assembly Against Racism,
Jewish Council for Racial Equality, Society of Black Lawyers, Unite Against
Fascism, etc. The most important plenary in this section is of course
the one in which Livingstone himself will be speaking. It is suggested
that the plenary entitled Stop fascism and the far right should
be chaired by the SWPs Weyman Bennett. Weyman used to be the chair
of the SWPs Anti-Nazi-League (ANL), before it closed down shop in
favour of Unite Against Fascism. He is now co-secretary of UAF - Livingstone
himself holds the position of chair. No doubt comrade Weyman will be asked
to make sure no troublemakers get to speak - those who might criticise
Livingstones controlling role in the ESF or his disgusting call
for RMT tubeworkers to break their unions strike.
All in all, there are three straight members of Socialist Action on the
list (Redmond ONeill, Anne Kane and Milena Buyum), along with four
from the SWP. Two members of the Morning Stars Communist Party of
Britain are being put forward to speak in plenary sessions on Political
parties and the social movements (the only plenaries where the speakers
are not yet finalised). While Andrew Murray is supposed to speak as a
representative of the social movements, his general secretary,
Rob Griffiths, has been suggested on behalf of the communist family
(and their comrade Kate Hudson has been confirmed as a speaker in an anti-war
plenary).
Not bad for an organisation which has had so little input into the ESF
process
The important thing here is the quality, no doubt: over
the years, the CPB has proven itself to be very loyal to Livingstone indeed.
CND chair Kate Hudson has only recently changed her official membership
from Socialist Action to CPB - though her links to her former comrades
are quite evidently still going strong.
Needless to say, the CPGB has not been approached by the rest of the family
to choose our representative for this particular plenary session. But,
come on, who really wants to listen to the young cousin when they can
have boring old uncle telling the same story over and over again instead?
Anyway, its best to ignore that rude upstart who keeps wanting to
talk about those embarrassing family secrets
As in previous years, this years ESF is to end with a demonstration.
However, ever since the SWPs Chris Nineham announced that he would
be forming a working group to prepare for it, he has not been
able to report much to the various ESF committees (nothing apart from
the route of the march, in fact). And now it turns out that this ESF demonstration
has been miraculously changed into a demo called by the Stop the
War Coalition, Campaign against Nuclear Disarmament and the Muslim Association
of Britain (Stop the War website and leaflets). Neither the ESF
website nor any of the ESF publicity material has even mentioned it.
Not only that. The main theme agreed for the demo at the last ESF preparatory
assembly in Brussels was For another Europe in another world,
with additional, but lesser emphasis, on the war and the US elections.
A wide range of representatives from Europe were very outspoken in their
criticism of the SWPs attempt to focus the demonstration mainly
on the forthcoming US elections. We are all against Bush - that
is surely not the question, said Annick Coupé from the French
delegation, for example. However, we can only really fight his neoliberal
agenda if we take up all the struggles that are currently going on in
Europe. This is where we live. A remark that was greeted with loud
and extended applause from about three quarters of the audience.
Unfortunately, the Stop the War Coalition (run by the SWP) has not only
decided to take the demo off the ESFs hands - it has also changed
the theme. The only leaflets and posters advertising the demo carry the
huge slogans, Time to go: Bush out! Troops out! Not even on
the back of the leaflet has space been found to reproduce the ESF slogan
agreed in Brussels. In short, there is not a word about Europe in any
of the propaganda.
Leading comrades from across Europe have now taken up the call for daily
meetings at the ESF to plan for the Assembly of Social Movements, which
takes place on the last day of the ESF. The ASM is a way around the ridiculous
rule that bans social forums from taking any actions or deciding on any
statements, a rule imposed by the self-appointed elite running the World
Social Forum.
On the international email list, comrades Sophie Zafari (for the French
delegation) and Franco Russo (for the Italians) have in the last few days
repeatedly insisted that these meetings should go ahead to ensure a more
democratic and inclusive set-up of the ASM. They have been backed up by
a number of organisations from Britain and delegations from other countries.
However, when CPGB comrades brought up this issue at a number of ESF meetings
in London, both the SWP and Socialist Action were less than keen on it.
Chris Nineham, for example, announced that there would be no need to reserve
any rooms for such daily ASM meetings (see Weekly Worker September 23).
No wonder, really. Socialist Actions main interest in the ESF is
to make sure it will be a tame and fully controlled Livingstone jamboree.
October 17 will not only be the last day of the ESF - no doubt it will
also mark the end of SAs involvement in this forum for European
left unity.
The story is a little more complicated with the SWP. It had hoped that
by staging the ESF in London it could become another big player
in Europe, alongside Rifondazione Comunista, the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire,
etc. Unfortunately, though, with only around 1,200 active members and
next to no weight in the trade unions or local communities, the SWP does
not really match up. Its cloned sects in the International Socialist Tendency
have even less impact.
However, the SWPs biggest problem is not so much its reduced size.
The reason why the comrades will not even come close to Rifondaziones
or even the LCRs influence over the working class is their deep-rooted
economism and total dismissal of important political questions. In the
undying words of Chris Nineham, to talk about Europe and its new constitution
is boring. Questions of democracy and how we are ruled are
seen as a diversion from the real issues: trade unions, the
NHS, public services, etc (important as these are). The state, and how
our rulers rule - either in individual countries or on the level of Europe
- is a non-issue.
Our comrades from across Europe, on the other hand, have made it very
clear that their main interest in the ASM is precisely to launch a European-wide
campaign against the EU constitution. However, it is the war or nothing
for the SWP. Vital as it is to build up a movement against the occupation
of Iraq, it is criminal to waste this opportunity to take steps towards
closer left unity across the continent in opposition to the EU of the
bankers.
| |
|
|
|
|
|