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A Week in Politics . . .

Udo Erasmus

Well-Known Member
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'What thoughtful rich people call the problem of poverty, thoughtful poor people call with equal justice a problem of riches.' - RH TAWNEY

Joe 'Red' Redmond & Karen Tyre are standing for the Left Party (RESPECT) in Adamsdown & Butetown - they have been out and about this week campaigning against war, racism, privatisation and poverty.

This is a record of the final few days of our campaign. We have encountered huge disillusionment with mainstream politics and politicians. In Butetown we met some of the poorest communities in Wales, surrounded by luxury apartments, next door to the Welsh Assembly. If we have in a small way helped empower people to organise at the base of society against the rich and powerful, then our campaign will have been a success.


Thursday - Picket Lines, Radio Wales, Militarisation of Education

A day of strike action all over South Wales meant an early start and plenty of picket lines for Respect activists to visit before joining a huge teachers’ rally for in Cardiff. After chatting with members of the NUT and other unions, Joe and Karen were interviewed by Radio Wales, who asked whether today’s strike signalled the rebirth of the trade union movement – we told them “having been on civil servants’ and postal workers' picket lines we know there is already a mass movement against Gordon Brown’s attack on public sector pay and conditions. We applaud teachers for joining the struggle and will continue to build links between all unions.”

“Inflation and the cost of living are spiralling out of control at the same time as New Labour enforces the abolition of the 10p tax rate and hands billions of pounds in public money to Northern Rock. The government keeps telling us there is no money for workers in the public service to earn a fair wage and clearly this is a lie!”

Teachers also seemed very interested in Saturday’s demonstration against the St Athan, especially as several schools in the area are discussing investment from private companies which will underwrite the curriculum and groom pupils for the Military Academy.

Friday - (Almost) A Quiet Day

A quiet day as far as canvassing goes – all our energy is focussed on making sure there is a strong turnout for the weekend’s two major events. Like every other day for the past few weeks though there are always more leaflets to be posted!

Saturday - No to the War Machine!

Joe & Karen join March against £14 billion being spent on a huge Military Academy being built near Cardiff run by private companies like Raytheon who manufacture cluster bombs. We think this is a massive waste of public money - why are we told there's no money for pensions and public services, but there's always money for war? There are lots of young people on the march and a big delegation from the PCS trade union, many of whom we have met on the picket lines in the last year.

Police serve Public Order Act on the demonstration to prevent us marching in the City Centre where people can see us - it seems the political establishment in Wales is rattled. The highlight of the day is an impassioned speech from Davy McAuley from the Derry Raytheon 9 campaign; he talks about meeting a family in Lebanon who lost 20 family members to a Raytheon bomb, and seeing children with their limbs blown off. Later in the bar, we have a long conversation about socialism, setting up an organised trade union faction and the living wage campaign.

Sunday - Rock against Racism Carnival/On the knocker

With many of our members up in London joining thousands at the LoveMusicHateRacism Carnival against the Nazi BNP, the rest of us canvass a couple of neighbourhoods in Adamsdown.

It's good to see a local shop with our election leaflet up. On the doorstep a major issue seems to be lack of youth facilities and anything for young people to do in the area. People complain about politicians making promises to the local community but not delivering, the local park for example needs work. We try and connect the local issues to the big issues of privatisation and the government’s refusal to tax the rich to fund public services, and the lack of decent council housing.

We also challenge those who want let our politicians off the hook by blaming immigrants for bad housing and the state of the NHS - we defend our multicultural society.

Monday - Butetown Rock/Save Our NHS

Joe and Karen visit Butetown Community Centre to hear a presentation from the Local Health Board on the future of health services in Cardiff and specifically the future of Butetown Community Centre which has been threatened with closure. There is a great turnout - local people are extremely worried about the disruption to services and question why other parts of the city are getting a better deal. One woman says she’s been seeing men in hard hats outside her window every day for 25 years – but all that gets built is luxury flats.

After the meeting we speak to community leaders who believe the council wants to force residents off the land so they can sell it to property developers. Just like people in Adamsdown they are angry about the lack of investment in leisure facilities. They blame lack of amenities for contributing to rising tension between young people from different cultures – creating rivalries rather than cohesion. We meet some really passionate people who are extremely sceptical about promises from politicians and interested in hearing what Respect has to say about offering something new and not just looking out for big business.

Tuesday - Power in the Union

Karen attends a public meeting organised by Cardiff Trades Council to mobilise people to defend public services. A small meeting, after all, it was competing with election canvassing and the Champions League semi-final! During the discussion, we talk about how different ways of trying to reach people need to be used, relating to people enthused by the anti-war movement and anti-racist work. We've made a start at getting new forces involved in this campaign, lets hope we can keep up the momentum.

Meanwhile, our other candidate is getting the message out in the Adamdown ward, he says "I'm visiting the people in my block and surrounding streets – make sure they know the name!"
Other supporters are at the anti-Military Academy campaign meeting.

Wednesday - Reasoning with the Elders

Karen and Joe have been invited to Red Sea House (home of the Butetown Elders’ Centre – an important meeting place, particularly amongst Somali men). We’re visiting after evening prayer so there should be plenty of people there. Later on we visit some local hang-outs around Loudon Square, we chat to a guy who tells us, "I was really angry when I saw your leaflet. My asylum claim has been refused - I can't vote, I can't get a job, I have no income, and when I saw you handing out leaflets it made me mad". What can one say? As activists we don't have a magic wand that can solve this guy's problems. We make it clear for us, 'no one is illegal' and talk about the rich, how they are destroying public services, but get away with it by making people think that migrants are to blame for bad housing, lack of jobs and services etc. and how we are trying to challenge racism. We meet as enemies and part as friends.

Thursday Election Day - Our Lives Are Worth More Than Your Profits!

On the ground in both wards!
 
What Left Party/Respect candidates have been doing in the last week.

http://www.respectcoalition.org/?ite=1922

Police serve Public Order Act on the demonstration to prevent us marching in the City Centre where people can see us - it seems the political establishment in Wales is rattled. The highlight of the day is an impassioned speech from Davy McAuley from the Derry Raytheon 9 campaign; he talks about meeting a family in Lebanon who lost 20 family members to a Raytheon bomb, and seeing children with their limbs blown off. Later in the bar, we have a long conversation about socialism, setting up an organised trade union faction and the living wage campaign.

It was indeed a highlight of the day, but that's a slightly odd summation of what he said, I think.
I was more struck by his description of very militant direct action (taken to prevent further such attrocities) by a small group of anti war protestors who got inside a Raytheon factory and completely trashed the offices, smashing computers and throwing them out of windows before starting an occupation.
The kind of action which has in the past been roundly condemed and strongly discouraged by SWP/Respect members on this side of the Irish Sea.
Can we expect more support for this kind of action in the future?
You thinking of some other organisation?

I've no problem with the sort of direct action you describe. I admire the people who do it. But this sort of direct action excludes those of us who are not willing to get arrested or to put themselves in harm's way.Like me.I've a yellow streak a mile wide.

I like to see mass movements where as many people as possible are involved.

Mass action and industrial action are far more effective.

The Raytheon direct action was great and it raised awareness of what's going on but Raytheon are still in business.

On the other hand South African trade unionists have stopped arms reaching Mugabe's regime from South Africa.
I don't think I'm thinking of another organisation. I remember being continually frustrated by SWP members arguing against the use of direct action during the run up to the war and during the war. What struck me was a doctrinaire refusal to accept, let alone encourage, forms of protest which were not being backed by those at the top of the Stop The War Coalition.
I argue for a diversity of tactics depending on the situation at hand. And of course mass industrial action like that in S Africa is more effective than a small-scale one in Derry. But it's not either or. Workplace organisation, marching from A-B, leafletting, agit-prop and media activism, and small and large-scale direct action can all be effective and appropriate weapons.
I've got a fairly healthy yellow-streak, too, but the times I've participated in direct action have been some of the most powerful and empowering aspects of my political education so far.
 
With due respect, the passage quoted wasn't a report of the demo and campaign, but just a quick summary of what people have been up to. Nor was it a summary of Davy's speech, the reason why that particular image was highlighted was because it gives a glimpse of the reality behidn Raytheon coming to Wales - children getting their limbs blown off.
yeah, Davy and many of the Raytheon 9 are members of the Irish SWP.
Fair enough, but I couldn't help noticing this when reading the piece is all. I think it's really heartening to see that Davy and his comrades didn't subscribe to the views that were dominant this side of the water in the SWP over the last 8 years or so. It's great to see a full battery of protest tactics being used.
 
Then why didn't YOU stand, getting 10 signatures on a form isn't that difficult.... :rolleyes:

Me, I'm not high profile enough, also I have no desire to enter that nest of vipers that is Cardiff City Council. Fred Nietzsche's words seem apt: Man is a polluted stream, one must be an ocean to absorb him and not be defiled. (Substitute word "Cardiff Council" for "Man"!)
 
Me, I'm not high profile enough, also I have no desire to enter that nest of vipers that is Cardiff City Council.

What?! I thought it was about the cause not the candidate? Putting up a radical alternative, whether it wins or not, is important - especially if it poses an election alternative to the BNP.

On that note, would the anarchists amongst us refuse to vote if there was a BNP candidate with a chance to win? I would have sympathy with the view that Lab/Tory politicians are responsible for stoking much of the xenophobia and racism that feeds the BNP, but at election time there has to be an alternative on that ballot paper to the BNP or they will get a foothold on councils that will grow (this is probably a new thread... )
 
Personally I'm not against voting per se. Just think that it's an almost completely empty exercise at the moment.
I've been involved with Vote Nobody campaigns because they are a good chance to raise awareness of anarchism, spread prop, engage with people about alternatives, and tap into the genuine dissengagement people feel from politics and try to argue that not all politics has to be like this (eg politics can be done locally (in the workplace, where you live), in a particapatory way, and it can be used by people to empower themselves, whereas representative democracy seems to cause apathy, disengagement and disempowerment).
I do reckon that if I was to vote in the near future it would be in a local election on local issues as that's where people can have the most impact. Some interesting things are being done around the world with groups standing in local elections who are grouped around Murray Bookchins ideas of Social Ecology (Democratic Alternative in Sweden, for example - their website's in Swedish, sorry).
About the BNP - the argument you raise (Niclas) is a fair one in a 1st past the post system where tactical voting is an option. Not sure it stands in a PR system. I guess my answer would depend on the circumstances. Perhaps I would. I'd pretty much always argue for using political energy outside the ballot box, though.
 
I think that if the BNP were a possible winner in my ward I'd have a lot more on my plate than voting for the local Tory every 4 years!

It is effective anti-fascist activity on a regular basis that denies the BNP an effective platform to electioneer that stops fascist councillors from getting elected.
 
What?! I thought it was about the cause not the candidate? Putting up a radical alternative, whether it wins or not, is important

I was being flippant, when are you gonna quit Plaid and get with bringing some right-on RED revolutionary attitude to the masses?
 
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