Discussion:
People’s Assembly – where to now? – Len Arthur
The People’s Assembly on 22 June was a
success. Around 4,500 attended and it was an exhilarating breath of fresh air
to hear speakers say what was needed to be said, with such telling turns of
phrase. If leaders of the Labour Party spoke and said the same things, I would
not be worried about taking the fight to the Tories or the outcome of the next
general election.
All the main speeches are on the
People’s Assembly website. I’ve
heard many TUC general secretaries speak, usually with the intention of
dampening down expectations but with Francis O’Grady stating that we are in a
situation of class war and undertaking to back workers when they take strike
action, she came across as the best so far. Len McCluskey gave clear support to
coordinated industrial action across unions. Mark Serwotka spelt out the
alternative social and economic programme that Ed Miliband should be
announcing, instead of the disastrous ‘Tory-lite’ stuff we’ve been hearing of
late.
Before the meeting, there was
considerable scepticism about its relevance but also some serious analysis such
as from James
Meadway writing for the New Left
Project. Since the meeting, most of the left have recognised its success, Socialist Worker and the Independent Socialist Network both catching the mood, the latter post drawing some political
conclusions about Left Unity that are relevant for us in the Labour party. Scepticism
remains on parts of the left, however – for example, on the Left Futures and Socialist Unity websites. Commenting
on the latter piece, Mark Steel brings his humour to bear, capturing the spirit
of the day.
‘Four
thousand people packed a hall with a commitment to build a movement against the
cuts, the most substantial gathering on this issue since the last election. I
encountered dozens of people throughout the day, some in political parties,
many of them not, some of them invigorated politically for the first time, many
re-invigorated having been part of other movements before.
‘I met
dozens of people throughout the day who felt exhilarated by the experience, and
have received hundreds of messages since from people displaying an infectious
enthusiasm, thrilled that at last there appears to be a genuine national
movement against the cuts.
‘So the
contribution to this sense of optimism [Mark is ironically commenting on a
Socialist Unity position piece that appears on this website] is one that
delivers the inspirational message “I fear that like all grand projects of the
left, it will dissipate before it meets its potential.”
‘That’s
how to build a mass campaign. We address thousands of freshly optimistic people
eager to resist the cuts, by telling them that although we didn’t manage to get
to much of their meeting, it’s obvious it won’t work. I salute your powers of
motivation, Phil BC, you’re like Martin Luther King and Spartacus rolled into
one.
This is what the left needs more of, as we’ve got far too many people organising campaigns against the cuts. Only once they all realise that everything we do is doomed will be able to build an effective movement.
This is what the left needs more of, as we’ve got far too many people organising campaigns against the cuts. Only once they all realise that everything we do is doomed will be able to build an effective movement.
‘In the
meantime, whoever you are, you’ll carry on with whatever it is you’re
organising instead, which appears to be going extremely well, as I doubt anyone
has ever heard of it, proving you haven’t made the mistake of getting people to
believe they can do anything worthwhile at all.”’
Where does it go from here?
At the end of the 22 June meeting, the draft statement was
adopted. It covers a lot of ground. Some of the key points include UK wide
action and the building of local groups. Key actions include a UK wide
‘national day of civil disobedience and direct action against austerity’ on 5
November and a national demonstration next spring. Supporting the NHS features
in the mobilisation for a demonstration at the Conservative Party conference on
29 September and local demonstrations on 5 July.
Local groups are being established. In Wales, an email list and
Facebook page have been set up and local meetings held in Cardiff, West Wales
and in Wrexham. We have already held a People’s Assembly / Left Unity meeting
in Pontypridd and are planning for another soon. From my experience so far, the
People’s Assembly meetings have been a success in terms of bringing together
old and new activists and are helping to inspire the development of campaigns
against austerity in areas where currently little is happening.
Politically, for the coming months, the key phrase in the
statement may very well be the one below, which captures succinctly the tension
within the UK left:
“We
have a plain and simple goal: to make government abandon its austerity
programme. If it will not it must be replaced with one that will.”
Making the government abandon its austerity programme
will require a level of coordinated and united action much greater than we have
been able to mobilise so far. The strength of the People’s Assembly is that it
aims to organise across the UK to say we will not pay for the bankers’ crisis,
working toward uniting the trade unions, fightback campaigns, the political
left and new activists to bring direct action to bear on the government. As one
speaker suggested, ‘we should aim to make Britain ungovernable’. Tony Benn
proposed that we should surround ‘the building down the road [Parliament]’ and
stay until the Tories left office. This is a big ask: a political leadership
prepared to take up this challenge will be required.
Which leads to the second sentence: replacing the current
government with one that will not follow austerity policies. At the 22 June
conference Owen Jones summed up the purpose of the Assembly as putting the hope
back into politics. We are at that stage where the confidence to fight back is
as much one of knowing we are justified in resisting and challenging the
government as taking action: the stick now needs to be bent toward political
leadership.
But where is that political leadership? As Peter
Rowlands argued in his recent post on this blog, the
Labour leadership has abandoned resisting and offering an alternative to the
politics of austerity. Jon
Lansman makes a similar point on Left Futures, indicating how this Labour
leadership position is undermining the confidence of the Party’s active
membership. As both indicate, this will not only lead to tensions within the
Labour party but will add to the arguments that a left alternative to Labour
needs to be considered.
Unlike Peter, I don’t have the expectation or even hope
that the Labour leadership will change its course before the next election. It
is also possible to read the trade union speeches at the conference as saying that
those leaders do not believe this is going to happen either. It could be that
the Labour leadership is even prepared to abandon the trade union connection. (My
my, I wrote the last sentence before all hell broke loose on the issue! I’ll
still stick by my analysis but here is some debate: Ed
Miliband; Owen
Jones; Labour List.)
Socialists in the Labour party now face a real crunch
point: if not Labour, then what? Do the People’s Assembly and Left
Unity offer the prospect of developing that
alternative? This debate has been opened up and will rapidly gather pace. We
are in a historical period very different from the 1980s: capitalism was then ‘on
the up’ and its contradictions had not been exposed by a massive global
financial crisis. Even to talk about the system we live under as ‘capitalism’
was difficult. Now a socialist alternative can be meaningfully spelt out, not
only by pointing out how capitalism, as a system, has caused this crisis but by
arguing directly for radical policies to replace it. Nationalising the banks,
for example, has in part happened. An extension of that policy would enable us
to have the ability to direct investment towards need by taking it out of the control
of ‘casino capitalism’.
Whether we as Labour party members like it or not, we will
be increasingly challenged to decide whether we are socialists or Tory-lite ‘One
Nation Labour’.
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