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Weekly Worker 572 Thursday April 14 2005
Service provider or trade union?
April 7 saw the beginning of a rather unusual three-day annual conference
of the National Union of Students in the Winter Gardens, Blackpool. Around
800 delegates attended to debate policy and elect the leadership for the
next year.
The NUS is now in a state of crisis. Currently it owes over £1.5
million, and projections indicate that this figure is likely to rise in
the next 12 months due to spiralling costs. Of course, cutbacks have therefore
been the name of the game, and this has given rightward-leaning elements
within the executive plenty of opportunity to present cuts in democracy
and accountability as the only viable course of action if the NUS is to
survive.
At the spearhead of this drive has been NUS president Kat Fletcher. Once
a supporter of the Alliance for Workers Liberty, she was elected
last year on a left ticket, standing in opposition to a 30-year legacy
of corruption under previous Labour Students-dominated leaderships and
for a militant, campaigning union.
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Kat Fletcher: turncoat
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Her endorsement of Labour NEC members plans for cuts in representation
and democracy spending, and the abject failure of this years demonstration
against top-up fees in Cardiff, which attracted little over 2,000 students,
has meant that we have seen little of the militant, socialist Kat who
addressed past conferences. Having cut her ties with the AWL and the Campaign
for Free Education, Fletcher now sadly appears to be aligned with a number
of meandering independents and Labour Students within the NEC.
This did not prevent her from being re-elected to the post by a 200-vote
margin, however - possibly as a result of her attempt to present herself
as the NUS saviour and a number of key factional endorsements: Labour
Students did not stand a candidate for the presidency, for instance.
This years conference was considerably smaller than previous ones,
due to cuts in delegation sizes and the conference budget. In addition
to its downsizing, conference was also rumoured to be made up of almost
50% first-time delegates, with many of them apolitical and/or inexperienced
in the factional wrangling within the union. The result was that conference
lacked any clear political coherence.
The biggest issue was closely linked to that of finance, and involved
a debate on whether the union should introduce an optional NUS card to
students which would offer a wider range of discounts and services, but
only to those who paid the extra for the card. This proposal was rejected
outright by the left as the harbinger of a two-tier membership
structure, but was passed by a large margin on conference floor, after
being presented by the leadership as part of its there is no alternative
scenario. Of course, if this had been presented to the membership last
year, the cuts in delegation sizes and student representation may not
have been necessary.
With the NUS card motion out of the way, conference went on to debate
other policy matters, which were broadly grouped under the themes of strong
and active unions, welfare, education and
society and citizenship. What ensued was a rather unusual
affair, with a range of unexpected anomalies.
A sizeable number of progressive items of policy were either rejected
by conference altogether or just scraped through. A motion calling for
the NUS to launch a campaign alongside the GMB union for a minimum living
wage of around £8 an hour was rejected by a large margin, and policy
on abortion rights narrowly passed after a heated debate - both areas
of policy which would have been almost entirely uncontroversial in previous
years.
Conference also voted down policy against faith schools and rejected holding
a demonstration on broad student issues for the first term of next academic
year.
The result of many debates appeared to boil down to which side of the
argument could give the most passionate speech, with the organised factions
representing a much smaller percentage of conferences make-up than
has traditionally been the case.
This stems from an apparent rejection of organised political intervention
by a large proportion of students, who view political affiliation and
collectivism as inherently corrupt and unatttractive. The only factional
elements which have grown have been those based around faith or single-issue
campaigning, such as the Federation of Societies for Islamic Students
(FOSIS).
Although the politicisation of a broad swathe of muslim students by the
Iraq war and the governments draconian approach to asylum has been
positive, in the sense that it allows the left to propagandise amongst
them and attempt to win them to socialist politics, this opportunity has
not been seized by the largest groups on the student left. Just as in
Respect, the Socialist Workers Party seems to prefer to remain silent
on areas of disagreement, or even tail reactionary approaches to class
questions espoused by their new-found bedfellows.
Perhaps the most disgusting and indicative example of this was the sour
and hostile reception given to Iraqi trade unionist and womens rights
activist Houzan Mahmood, a comrade from the Worker-communist Party of
Iraq who was speaking on behalf of the Organisation for Womens Freedom
in Iraq, an invited guest.
Following a hysterical display by delegates from the FOSIS, who denounced
her before her arrival as an unveiler of muslim women and
an islamophobe, conference seemed blind to her record as an activist and
democrat and came close to rejecting her completely. FOSIS delegates slow-handclapped
and then walked out when she began to criticise the islamist resistance.
Depressingly, they were soon followed by the SWP. The tailing of the FOSIS
line on this issue is undoubtedly another worrying indication of SWP readiness
to place reactionary politics above their own in an attempt to reach out
to the muslim community. The once staunch socialist and ex-NUS
womens officer, Kat Fletcher, was silent amidst this sorry episode.
There is a clear danger that the NUS will break altogether with its tradition
over the last four decades as a fighting body that views itself broadly
as a trade union for students that has often been aligned to the wider
union movement.
The leadership has more recently seen the negotiation of commercial services
as a better means of engaging with its membership than political agitation
- except for low-key campaigning around broadly acceptable and uncontroversial
issues. It sometimes seems that schemes to attract income or cut costs
can now attract more passion than the big political questions.
James Bull
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