rebel warrior
Soca Warrior
One other problem with abstaining though is that it lets the Government off the hook and doesn't encourage accountability - they just claim your non vote as 'contentment' with war and privatisation.
jiggajagga said:I used to be an old labour voter then they turned right. I'd rather die than vote tory at any time.
I thought at least with the Lib Dems that they had retained some semblance of fair play and their stance on the Iraq war strenghened that view.
I have just heard that they have agreed to partly privatise the post office and to cut benefits to single parents ( in reality that means cuts to single parents kids!! ) http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4774314.stm
I have no-0ne left to vote for in my area. I'm disenfranchised. I wonder how many more there are out there?
bluestreak said:voting eh? i'm with in bloom and einstein on this one.
no point. you vote for a politician, you elect a politician.
And if you vote they count it as unqualified, absolute support for their agenda. The government is going to come out with propaganda of one sort or another, no matter what. The important thing is to take action that you know makes a difference.rebel warrior said:One other problem with abstaining though is that it lets the Government off the hook and doesn't encourage accountability - they just claim your non vote as 'contentment' with war and privatisation.
This line of thought is a straight road to America style two-party bullshit, IMO. Everyone joins one of two monolith parties and tries to swing their internal politics to the left or right, then both put them forward for national election resulting in probably half the voting population rather unhappy with their lot.memespring said:IMO that's only going to happen when people start rejoining the Labour Party and it starts getting it's balls back a bit.
Vote Green.jiggajagga said:I used to be an old labour voter then they turned right. I'd rather die than vote tory at any time.
I thought at least with the Lib Dems that they had retained some semblance of fair play and their stance on the Iraq war strenghened that view.
I have just heard that they have agreed to partly privatise the post office and to cut benefits to single parents ( in reality that means cuts to single parents kids!! ) http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4774314.stm
I have no-0ne left to vote for in my area. I'm disenfranchised. I wonder how many more there are out there?
For the forthcoming local elections respect are standing maybe 50 candidates and the Green Party are standing maybe 900 or so.rebel warrior said:Well, the best hope seems to me for now is if Respect and the Greens can get their act together by agreeing not to stand against each other wherever possible. That could help pave the way for the sort of radical new 'Red-Green alliance' that is needed.
Hopefully, these discussions on a local basis are taking place...
KeeperofDragons said:that's no alternative
KoD
memespring said:If you look at pretty much any advance (in lefty terms) in the last century it came from or through the Labour Party (either in government or part of a national government).
treelover said:... It is a network with massive growth and potential, however, unfortunately because of its nature, it is 'up for grabs' for power mongers, opportunists, as it were, and the dead hand of the trots/swp are trying to take it over already. Just google the list of speakers at KONP meetings.
http://www.keepournhspublic.com/index.php
...
TeeJay said:For the forthcoming local elections respect are standing maybe 50 candidates ...
Haller said:Beveridge?
TeeJay said:For the forthcoming local elections respect are standing maybe 50 candidates and the Green Party are standing maybe 900 or so.
Since Respect have already carefully picked areas with high numbers of Muslims to stand in London and Birmingham, what exactly does the Green Party stand to gain in any "deal"?
What kind of "deal" would you like to see? Is the party with the best track record in a certain area allowed to stand and the weaker one should agree not to stand? How exactly would you work this out if the two parties had not run head-to-head in that kind of election and/or in that area? Couldn't you only work this out somewhere down the road?
Also in the case of General Elections for example, where for the majority of seats neither party really thinks its going to win (withy the exception of Brighton (Greens) and Bethnal Green (Respect)) then surely both parties should run because iot will help raise their local profile and build the local party for other elections and campaigns?
The best case for not splitting the vote is in local elections when each party could agree to pick a differemnt target ward and not run in these ones, but still there is the problem of proving who has the best track record in a particular ward.
Fisher_Gate said:Respect are expecting to stand 51 candidates in Tower Hamlets alone and contest most, if not all, of the 60 seats in Newham. They'll also be standing candidates in a number of other cities. I'd expect the final tally of candidates to be at least double your estimate - over 100, probably nearer 150. There will also be Respect candidates for Mayoral elections, such as that in Hackney, which means that every elector there will have the chance to vote for a positive alternative to the three main parties.
mutley said:There may well be areas where Respect and the Greens can help each other by not standing. In Brum, the seat where Salma Yaqoob got 10,500 votes also had a Green candidate who got 800. As the labour candidtae got 13,500 we will clearly be interested in avoiding this happening next time. I don't know where else the Greens may seriously target outside Brighton but I'm sure there are possibilities.
If all the poor people starve and/or freeze to death, everyone will be better off by averageposter342002 said:Why do people on the left put some much hope in various forms of "green-ism" when all the "solutions" they appear to offer to the worlds' problems seem to involve pricing the poor off everything?
jiggajagga said:I used to be an old labour voter then they turned right. I'd rather die than vote tory at any time.
I thought at least with the Lib Dems that they had retained some semblance of fair play and their stance on the Iraq war strenghened that view.
I have just heard that they have agreed to partly privatise the post office and to cut benefits to single parents ( in reality that means cuts to single parents kids!! ) http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4774314.stm
I have no-0ne left to vote for in my area. I'm disenfranchised. I wonder how many more there are out there?
MatthewCuffe said:Hear Hear.
Ditto Evo Morales in Bolivia.
There ARE differences between one politician and the next.
snadge said:sorry but it is to me.
If nobody voted, what would happen?
Haller said:Beveridge?
Sorry, that made me laught - using a collective pronoun in that context.fela fan said:We have not learnt how to free ourselves from collective thought.
having seen thru'out the 90s, a never-ending stream of just about every decent and even semi-socialist activist in the GLLP (and half those in brum) leaving in disgust, and having left meself in 1999, I really, really can't see it happening for a long, long time, if ever.memespring said:IMO that's only going to happen when people start rejoining the Labour Party and it starts getting it's balls back a bit.
a) the 1910 budget - 'people's budget', pensions, welfare and all - was a 1005 Liberal's budget.If you look at pretty much any advance (in lefty terms) in the last century it came from or through the Labour Party (either in government or part of a national government).
Given that the poorest people in London for example use public transport (particularly buses) the pricing is falling on car drivers and the money is going towards public transport - this concrete example from a place where the Green party has had an impact by being on the London Assembly doesn't fit in with what you are claiming at all.poster342002 said:Why do people on the left put so much hope in various forms of "green-ism" when all the "solutions" they appear to offer to the worlds' problems seem to involve pricing the poor off everything?
Red Jezza said:Why should we? to get sold out and fucked over again?
my reading is that a membership (what's left of it) which lets blair & brown do all they've done is hardly waiting its' first chance to rise up.
I think the leadership have SDPised the party too much for it ever to be reclaimed.
Red Jezza said:a) the 1910 budget - 'people's bufget', pensions, welfare and all - was a 1005 Liberal's budget.
Red Jezza said:b) the 1944 education act, whilst coming from a coalition govt - was the handiwork of a Tory Education secretary (rab butler).
Red Jezza said:3. Any progressive easures that come from ANY govt do not happen solely as a result of MP's altruism; they come about ultimately due to pressure or impetus from the people.
memespring said:Quote:
Originally Posted by Red Jezza
a) the 1910 budget - 'people's bufget', pensions, welfare and all - was a 1005 Liberal's budget.
Didnt know about that one
January 1910 Labour Party General Election Manifesto
A general election has been forced upon the country by the action of the House of Lords rejecting the Budget. The great question you are to decide is whether the Peers or the people are to rule this country.
Each Session since the last general election important Bills, upon which the House of Commons had spent much time, have been mutiliated or destroyed by the House of Lords, an irresponsible body which represents nothing but its own class interests. Not content with this, they now claim the right to decide what taxes shall be paid, upon whom they shall be levied, and for what purpose they shall be spent. They also claim to dictate the date at which Parliament shall be dissolved. The time has come to put an end to their power to override the will of the Commons.
The country has allowed landowners to pocket millions of pounds every year in the share of unearned increment, and yet they object to pay a small tax upon what, in justice, should belong to the State. They wish at all costs to preserve their power to plunder the people.
The Labour party welcomes this opportunity to prove that the feudal age is past and that the people are no longer willing to live on the sufferance of the Lords.
The issues you have to decide are simple. Our present system of land ownership has devastated our countryside, has imposed heavy burdens upon our industries, has cramped the development of our towns, and has crippled capital and impoverished labour.
The Lords must go
...
The experience of the last four years has demonstrated the value of the Labour Party acting on independent lines. There still remain many problems to be solved.
The right to work has still to be won, but is now well within the range of practical politics.
The Poor Law must be broken up and pauperism abolished.
Old-age pensions must be extended and increased on their present non-contributory basis.
Restrictions upon the franchise, including the sex bar, must be swept away.
The working and middle classes are still overburdened with rates and taxes. All these problems will demand the attention of an active, determined, and independent party, drawn from the people and in touch with the people. The Labour Party, therefore, appeals to you to renew your confidence in it, to add to its ranks, and increase its power.
Vote for the Labour candidates.
The land for the people.
The wealth for the wealth producers.
Down with privilege.
Up with the people.
http://www.labour-party.org.uk/manifestos/1910/jan/1910-jan-labour-manifesto.shtml