My own personal blog. Labour Deputy Mayor & Cabinet Lead for Housing, UNISON NEC member for Communities, 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 the Labour movement family. Strictly no trolls please.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Sunday, December 30, 2012
A Modest Proposal on Cults, Trots, Socialist Unity, the Great Day and LaLa-ism
Since this is the season of goodwill to all I checked out
the Socialist Unity website to see the latest brother and sisterhood back stabbing,
infighting, petty point scoring, abuse and general hatred. I was not
disappointed. The reader comments are just amazing.
While the SWP are busy as usual ritually expelling “traitors”
in advance of their annual conference, I was surprised at the post by SU editor
Andy Newman “THE “ALLIANCE FOR WORKERS LIBERTY” – THE DYNAMICS OF A MALIGNANT CULT
I must admit to wondering why Andy has picked on the AWL?
Who in my perhaps limited contact so far, have not appeared to be as narrow and
dogmatic as the other various Heinz 57 Trotskyite/Anarchist sects? However, I think that this is actually all just
a bit of a red herring (no pun intended).
Since surely all of the “ultra left” are by definition going
to be in some form of a cult since they all profess to be “revolutionaries”. If you think the world is so horrible you need
revolutionary change, then you are going to have to have some sort of tight discipline
and control to try and bring it about?
The real problem is not that they are “cults” or that they
are “revolutionaries”. Good luck to them
if that is what they believe (dare I say, it’s
a free country!). The real problem is that they think that by their actions
they can bring about “the Revolution” in this country sometime soon.
How on earth can anyone honestly think there any practical likelihood
of there being any sort of a revolution in this country?
Now, I want radical change in our society. But all my adult
life I have seen articles and posters advertising meetings that proclaim the “great
day of the revolution” is just around the corner. What complete and utter rubbish.
The idea that if the unions were just more militant,
organised more demos, occupied some phone box and took more strike action, then
the masses would come to their senses and storm Buckingham Place is just fantasy
and indulgent politics. There was more chance of the Mayan prophesies
happening.
Since 2007 there has been an open goal due to the economic
crisis and there is not the slightest interest whatsoever in revolutionary class
politics.
This is not about the “politics”. I am a fully paid up
believer in reformism, parliamentary democracy, rule of law, equality in all aspects, strong trade unions and a genuine mixed
economy. Yet I will work with anyone who may completely disagree with me in the
long run but will sees the sense in unity to bring about common and achievable immediate
goals.
There cannot in my view be any unity with those who think
that their primary purpose is to bring about something (the Great Day) that is silly,
ridiculous and laughable. Everything they do is driven by this obsession. So we
cannot trust them nor their many and competing “Fronts”. We also cannot work
with those who will do what they are told by their central committees
regardless of what they believe in or were elected to do.
My father believed that communism in this country was
inevitable, but he thought it would not happen in his lifetime nor for many
generations. In the meanwhile he would support the Labour Party and work with
others such as the Communist Party of the time, in the interests of working
class people. While they and others may believe
in revolution, they are realistic about the prospects and will not sell out the
interests of working people to satisfy nonsensical dogma.
So my New Year 2012 Modest Proposal is - we can have a socialist unity of sorts. But not with LaLa-ism
Saturday, December 29, 2012
My 2012 Olympic Highlights: George Osborne getting booed at the Paralympics:)
Just thinking of some of my highlights of the Olympic 2012 year.
nuff said.
Friday, December 28, 2012
Payday Loans? Hopefully only the turkey will get stuffed this Christmas
I first saw this excellent poster in the window of the North Wales Credit Union branch in Denbigh. Check out their press release on the Christmas rip off here.
It shows up what thieves Payday loan companies are and how they exploit the poor and vulnerable.
You would pay over 4000% APR interest on a 38 day £400 loan from Wonga or 26.8% APR from a credit union loan over a year.
If you paid the £400 off over a year then you would still pay over £100 less in interest than with Wonga in 38 days.
Good luck to Stella Creasy MP and her #Sharkstoppers campaign.
It shows up what thieves Payday loan companies are and how they exploit the poor and vulnerable.
You would pay over 4000% APR interest on a 38 day £400 loan from Wonga or 26.8% APR from a credit union loan over a year.
If you paid the £400 off over a year then you would still pay over £100 less in interest than with Wonga in 38 days.
Good luck to Stella Creasy MP and her #Sharkstoppers campaign.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
"Pensions will not exist by 2050"
It seems that the Daily Telegraph has a silly season in December as well as August (some would argue it actually lasts 12 months).
Michael Johnson, a research fellow at the Centre for Policy Studies is quoted here as warning that private pensions will soon cease to exist since young people see having immediate access to money more important than long term retirement plans.
I need to check with Michael that he has not been misquoted since the Telegraph has been writing some complete hysterical drivel about pensions lately. The reasoning is also a bit odd and Michael is usually pretty "bang on" about private pensions (not public sector pensions).
Young people have always wanted ready access to their money and been reluctant to save for your retirement. That is why you and your employer need incentives to join a pension and (like taxes) for it to be made compulsory.
Also young (and older) people are not being completely stupid about not saving for their pensions. This is because for many the pension they are currently offered or have access to is just completely rubbish. They are being ripped off for a hugely expensive product that offers them no certainty in retirement.
While I think everyone should save for their pensions I can understand why so many make the understandable (and even rational?) choice not to save.
Auto-enrolment and universal pensions will make a difference. But unless people have the confidence to invest in a product that gives them some sort of guarantee of financial security in their old age then I think many won't bother. This future burden on the taxpayer should be the key issue for the Telegraph.
I suspect that Michael is being polemic in order to bring attention to a real serious problem.
Yet his reported solution is wrong. Saving in a short term ISA is not the answer but an affordable and sustainable defined benefit scheme for the private sector is. It is also going to have to be compulsory (at some stage).
Unless we sort this out I suspect we will soon be seeing future articles glamorising the workhouse for pensioners.
Michael Johnson, a research fellow at the Centre for Policy Studies is quoted here as warning that private pensions will soon cease to exist since young people see having immediate access to money more important than long term retirement plans.
I need to check with Michael that he has not been misquoted since the Telegraph has been writing some complete hysterical drivel about pensions lately. The reasoning is also a bit odd and Michael is usually pretty "bang on" about private pensions (not public sector pensions).
Young people have always wanted ready access to their money and been reluctant to save for your retirement. That is why you and your employer need incentives to join a pension and (like taxes) for it to be made compulsory.
Also young (and older) people are not being completely stupid about not saving for their pensions. This is because for many the pension they are currently offered or have access to is just completely rubbish. They are being ripped off for a hugely expensive product that offers them no certainty in retirement.
While I think everyone should save for their pensions I can understand why so many make the understandable (and even rational?) choice not to save.
Auto-enrolment and universal pensions will make a difference. But unless people have the confidence to invest in a product that gives them some sort of guarantee of financial security in their old age then I think many won't bother. This future burden on the taxpayer should be the key issue for the Telegraph.
I suspect that Michael is being polemic in order to bring attention to a real serious problem.
Yet his reported solution is wrong. Saving in a short term ISA is not the answer but an affordable and sustainable defined benefit scheme for the private sector is. It is also going to have to be compulsory (at some stage).
Unless we sort this out I suspect we will soon be seeing future articles glamorising the workhouse for pensioners.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
UNISON marching for a future that works October 2012
UNISON Housing Association Branch and London Regional Banner are in the opening sequences. A great video of a great 2012 day.
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
Christmas Sunshine Over Maeni Hirion
Off message-ish but I thought I would share my picture of the early bronze age stone circle, Maeni Hirion. It was taken on a marvellous pathfinder guide walk on Sunday in Penmaenmawr, North Wales. The far edge of the Snowdonian National Park overlooking the sea. Nowadays you may have driven past Penmaenmawr in minutes while along the A55 on route to Anglesey or Ireland. In the past it use to be a popular seaside resort. A favourite with William Gladstone.
This stone circle is better known as the "Druids Circle" yet it was built a 1000 years before the Druids first came to the area with Iron Age invaders.
Sunday was only a few days after the winter solstice. You would imagine in the past that the midst of winter and the shortest day, would have been an important time of the year for those who built it.
It is a breathtakingly beautiful and peaceful site even if the wind whips red raw any skin you foolishly expose to the elements.
Check out the balanced and thoughtful (as ever) Jack of Kent post on the origins of Christmas here.
Nadolig Llawen everyone!
This stone circle is better known as the "Druids Circle" yet it was built a 1000 years before the Druids first came to the area with Iron Age invaders.
Sunday was only a few days after the winter solstice. You would imagine in the past that the midst of winter and the shortest day, would have been an important time of the year for those who built it.
It is a breathtakingly beautiful and peaceful site even if the wind whips red raw any skin you foolishly expose to the elements.
Check out the balanced and thoughtful (as ever) Jack of Kent post on the origins of Christmas here.
Nadolig Llawen everyone!
Monday, December 24, 2012
Why a Living Wage is not enough
It may seem just a little churlish on Christmas Eve to try and take anything away from this very worthy article by the Archbishop of York, Dr John Sentamu, on the “imperative for a Living Wage”. This is also at a time that it seems likely that in the public sector at least, the Living Wage will become a reality for all directly employed and contracted staff.
Yet I think it falls on me to be a bit of a Bah! Humbug! Christmas misery guts on the issue.
While anything that increases the amount of money being put in the purses and pockets of the low paid should be welcomed, it will not get rid of the evil of low pay and poverty.
The Living Wage level is set right on the poverty line. There is no element for any saving. Nothing to put aside for being sick or for when you retire.
So if you do become ill while at work and there is no sickness pay you will go straight back into poverty and be dependent upon the taxpayer. The same thing will happen when you retire. With no company pension you will retire and die in poverty. Again, being dependent on the State.
What we need is a Living Wage “plus”. A Living Wage, a Living Sickness benefit and a Living Pension in the public and private sector. The best way to delivery this is by strong trade unions and binding national/sectorial pay agreements.
In the last depression in the 1930’s we had a Tory government introducing such “Wages boards”. Like their modern day counterparts, this was not so much any wish to get workers out of grinding poverty but unlike this lot, they realised that to get the country out of doldrums you had to increase demand. The best way of doing this is to increase the pay of the low paid who will spend any increase (and not give tax cuts to millionaires who will just save it).
A Living Wage in the public sector would (if it happens) be a huge advance but can only be a first step.
Yet I think it falls on me to be a bit of a Bah! Humbug! Christmas misery guts on the issue.
While anything that increases the amount of money being put in the purses and pockets of the low paid should be welcomed, it will not get rid of the evil of low pay and poverty.
The Living Wage level is set right on the poverty line. There is no element for any saving. Nothing to put aside for being sick or for when you retire.
So if you do become ill while at work and there is no sickness pay you will go straight back into poverty and be dependent upon the taxpayer. The same thing will happen when you retire. With no company pension you will retire and die in poverty. Again, being dependent on the State.
What we need is a Living Wage “plus”. A Living Wage, a Living Sickness benefit and a Living Pension in the public and private sector. The best way to delivery this is by strong trade unions and binding national/sectorial pay agreements.
In the last depression in the 1930’s we had a Tory government introducing such “Wages boards”. Like their modern day counterparts, this was not so much any wish to get workers out of grinding poverty but unlike this lot, they realised that to get the country out of doldrums you had to increase demand. The best way of doing this is to increase the pay of the low paid who will spend any increase (and not give tax cuts to millionaires who will just save it).
A Living Wage in the public sector would (if it happens) be a huge advance but can only be a first step.
Sunday, December 23, 2012
Sectarianism, Miserablists and opposing Austerity
I’ve been meaning to comment on this post made by my esteemed UNISON colleague, the NEC member for Skidrow-on-Sea, attacking an unnamed UNISON branch secretary (and as usual interfering in the internal democracy of other branches and Service Groups).
He selectively criticises the branch secretary for sending out an email to all staff warning them of attempts by the SWP and the SP to hijack their campaign to defend public services. However, he fails to mention or quote that part of the email that states the reason why it was sent out.
Which was due to the violence, abuse and thuggery shown by various outsiders in a “hate fuelled frenzy”. This and threats to patients safety is actively undermining the campaign and putting off potential supporters .
It's the old story of "rule or ruin" by "wreaking and splitting". Ordered by the so called democratic centralist leadership of the various ultra left sects (not by all their rank and file members) if they cannot get their own way.
This is not the way to oppose Austerity nor win anything.
Considering that my esteemed colleague publicly derides anyone who disagrees with him as a "poodle of the ruling classes" it is just hypocritical of him to criticise anyone else as being in any way sectarian.
I also note that the hard working and respected branch secretary he is having a go at started life as a porter in a hospital, who then put himself through night school to eventually become a fully qualified nurse. Who still works shifts as a nurse on the wards. Unlike the full time middle class bureaucrat who snipes at him from afar.
(ps I am also of course furious that anyone else apart from me should have been awarded “Sectarian of the Year” especially after my 2012 masterpiece Moanie fibbing miserabalists and the LGPS 2014)
Hat tip picture Rustbeltradical (and some interesting comments!)
UPDATE: I have been reminded how the Ultra left got up to similar tricks and destroyed any chance of forming a broad anti-austerity coalition in Local Government in 2011.
He selectively criticises the branch secretary for sending out an email to all staff warning them of attempts by the SWP and the SP to hijack their campaign to defend public services. However, he fails to mention or quote that part of the email that states the reason why it was sent out.
Which was due to the violence, abuse and thuggery shown by various outsiders in a “hate fuelled frenzy”. This and threats to patients safety is actively undermining the campaign and putting off potential supporters .
It's the old story of "rule or ruin" by "wreaking and splitting". Ordered by the so called democratic centralist leadership of the various ultra left sects (not by all their rank and file members) if they cannot get their own way.
This is not the way to oppose Austerity nor win anything.
Considering that my esteemed colleague publicly derides anyone who disagrees with him as a "poodle of the ruling classes" it is just hypocritical of him to criticise anyone else as being in any way sectarian.
I also note that the hard working and respected branch secretary he is having a go at started life as a porter in a hospital, who then put himself through night school to eventually become a fully qualified nurse. Who still works shifts as a nurse on the wards. Unlike the full time middle class bureaucrat who snipes at him from afar.
(ps I am also of course furious that anyone else apart from me should have been awarded “Sectarian of the Year” especially after my 2012 masterpiece Moanie fibbing miserabalists and the LGPS 2014)
Hat tip picture Rustbeltradical (and some interesting comments!)
UPDATE: I have been reminded how the Ultra left got up to similar tricks and destroyed any chance of forming a broad anti-austerity coalition in Local Government in 2011.
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