This conference organised by the TUC unemployed workers centres looks like it will be well worth a visit if possible. I would have thought that "Challenging Poverty in Bloody Awful Times" would have been a more accurate but less diplomatic title.
The speaker list is "interesting". The Comprehensive Spending Review will be published (I think on the 20th October) a few days latter.
Will Simon Hughes turn out to be a progressive or a conservative - a Lib Dem or a CONDEM MP?
How will he respond to the likely outcomes of the morning workshops?
How will the TUC, its affiliated trade unions, Unemployed worker centres and NGO's work together? I don't think as a rule trade unions and NGO's really understand each other that well.
Is this about organising campaigning and opposition to "cuts" or is it about trying to influence and change policy?
I think we need to do both.
My own personal blog. UNISON NEC member for Housing Associations & Charities, HA Convenor, London Regional Council Officer & Chair of its Labour Link Committee. Newham Cllr for West Ham Ward, Vice Chair of Local Authority Pension Fund Forum, Pension trustee, Housing & Safety Practitioner. Centre left and proud member of Labour movement family. Strictly no trolls please. Promoted by Luke Place on behalf of J.Gray, Newham Labour Group, St Luke’s Community Centre, E16 1HS.
Showing posts with label Simon Hughes MP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simon Hughes MP. Show all posts
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Good Trot on Bad Trots in Good Cause

Did you know that Simon Hughes is not a Trotskyist.? I can exclusively reveal tonight that the Liberal Democrat MP is not in favour of nationalising stuff under workers’ control and that this is the view of his party.
Who’d have predicted that? Eh?
Shocked I was. Shocked and stunned.
The Campaign Against Climate Change (CACC) organised a pretty good impromptu demo in support of the Vesta occupation this evening outside the Department of Energy and Climate Change. Phil Thornhill kicked off by explaining that the ice up around the North Pole is melting rapidly and that this might cause a very sudden increase in the planet’s temperature. To this he added that wind turbines are one of the ways which will allow us to generate electricity without throwing millions of tons of carbon into the atmosphere and that the CCC had been down to speak to the workers and support their occupation of their factory.
Next up was Darren Johnson on behalf of the Greens. He gave his full support to the workers and gave the sort of speech that Tony Benn would have given. He was followed by a spectrum of Trots pretending to be random punters while accidentally holding a copy of a left wing paper they’d accidentally just bought for the first time ever.
The only political figure with any national profile who thought it worth giving up an hour of his time to support a group of workers occupying a factory was Simon Hughes. The cops had decreed that no megaphones were to be used and I can’t claim to have heard too much of what he said but there was something about the importance of skills, something about windpower being a good thing and global warming being a bad thing. Not quite the revolutionary programme but not worth getting your knickers in a twist about. Applaud mildly and see who’s up next is the sensible reaction.
Gosh no!
“It’s a popular front!” “He’s just grandstanding!” “Let’s occupy the ministry!” “Are you in favour of nationalisation???”
This was a bunch of Trots flashing back to the time they’d given Heseltine, Hurd, Prescott or Straw a rough time in their students’ union except this time it was a real campaign in defence of real workers’ jobs. So instead of Simon Hughes speaking for three or four minutes the revolutionary vanguard spent twenty minutes exposing him as a dreadful reformist in front of the revolutionary vanguard. Then, when he was finished, some tried to carry on the argument convinced that the one of the best known Lib Dems could be won over to Trotskyism by a five minute hectoring. It must work sometimes.
CACC done good. It worked out how totemic this dispute is and organised a demo in support of the occupation. A chunk of the far left pursued its mission of convincing the world that nothing is more important than selling a couple of papers and getting one of your people on the microphone.
Derek Wall, who has a more positive outlook on life has given a slightly different account here.
Support the Factory Occupation
Support the Factory Occupation
Public meeting
Speakers: Vestas Worker, Chris Baugh (PCS Ass. Gen. Sec, pc), Seamus Milne, Jonathan Neale
Friday 24th July, 6pm, ULU Malet Street, London WC1E 7HY
Called by the Campaign Against Climate Change Trade Union Group
(last night my UNISON branch Executive agreed to send a message of support to the factory occupation).
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