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NUT conference: Stop New Labour's old Tory policies

EVERY CHILD should have the right to a good education at their local school. But too many parents fear that their children may not be getting the opportunities they deserve. Now New Labour's Education Bill is going to make things even worse.

Martin Powell-Davies, secretary Lewisham National Union of Teachers

Selection and underfunding has already opened the gap between schools at the top and bottom of the league tables. Labour's latest plans to encourage schools to break away from the local authorities will only widen that divide.

These schools would be allowed to set their own separate admissions policies. Instead of schools working together, they will compete with each other for the pupils they want to choose.

For every family that wins the place they're hoping for, there will be many more that will lose out. For every school that succeeds in selecting the pupils it wants, another school will be plunged further into difficulties.

New Labour's ideas on education aren't "new" at all. They are just what the Tories tried under Margaret Thatcher. Blair even had to rely on the votes of Tory MPs to get his proposals through Parliament. New Labour are carrying out Old Tory policy.

When Labour are in trouble, they turn to "spin", but who believes them any more? Gordon Brown claims he is going to fund state education as generously as private schools! But his actual spending plans go nowhere near it.

We have some of the highest class sizes in Europe. Teachers work some of the longest hours. Schools are struggling to find the resources to meet the needs of every pupil.

Parents, teachers and students must not allow New Labour to get away with fragmenting and privatising our schools. Together, we must fight for schools to be united through a common agreed admissions policy and genuinely funded so that they can meet the needs of every pupil.

Local community campaigns, such as those that have successfully fought off the threat of privately-sponsored Academy schools, will be vital. But these campaigns need to be linked together into a national campaign to defend comprehensive education and all our public services.

The National Union of Teachers, meeting for its Annual Conference in Torquay over Easter, must take a lead in carrying the campaign against the Education Bill into local communities and the wider trade union movement.

Delegates must also make sure that the union builds on the recent victories that have been won where school groups have taken strike action to oppose pay cuts threatened by imposed salary restructuring.

Such a collective approach will be vital to win campaigns on pensions, pay and workload, as well as to defeat the threats from the Education Bill.

But while fighting these battles, more and more teachers will conclude that trade unions need a political voice as well.

That's why the Campaign for a New Workers Party will be calling on NUT delegates for support in building a new party that can challenge the big business parties that work together to tear apart comprehensive education.


Socialist fighter re-elected

SOCIALIST PARTY member Linda Taaffe has been re-elected to the executive of the National Union of Teachers, on an increased vote. Linda has one of the four seats in the Outer London area.

The left is continuing to make steady gains on the executive as more and more teachers look for a trade union which will defend their interests in the face of government attacks. Over the next two years, the life of the new executive, the union will have to fight back in particular, against the privatisation of education inherent in the Education Bill.

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In The Socialist 13 April 2006:


Socialist Party campaigns

Don't let Blair wreck the NHS

Hands off Cardiff's schools

Iraq - condition critical

Bush eying regime change in Iran

How to fight fuel poverty


Socialist Party election campaign

Huddersfield - the bandwagon is rolling!

"Standing up for working people"

Election campaigns boost sales of the socialist

Fighting fund target smashed - again!

May Day greetings


Socialist Party review

1926 General Strike - Workers taste power by Peter Taaffe


International socialist news and analysis

Mass struggle in France forces government retreat

Build for 1 May general strike in the USA

Italian opposition scrapes home but workers must stop the return of Berlusconi

Kazakhstan Riot police repelled by shanty town residents


Socialist Party workplace news

Stop New Labour's old Tory policies

Rail pensions in crisis

Vote Len Hockey

Organise to defend jobs at Visteon

New deal in the offing in local government?


 

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Related links:

Labour:

triangleCon-Dems' hypocrisy over children's care

triangleLeadership shows weakness at CWU conference

triangleBuilding the electoral alternative in Brent

triangleWales TUC - Oppose all cuts!

triangleElection results: How did TUSC do?

triangleLabour's best Wales result in 21 years will not stop cuts

NUT:

triangleStrike at Sussex Downs College

triangleLincolnshire academies in crisis

triangleSolidarity against far-right thugs

triangle10 May sees united strike - but teacher unions shirk their responsibilities

Teachers:

triangleLondon teachers and lecturers strike to defend pensions

triangleThem & Us

triangleStand up to Tory bullies

Education:

triangleOur education under attack

triangleGood result for Socialist Students candidates in NUS elections

triangleNUS conference Support for left and for action

Schools:

triangleHaringey takes action against academies

triangleHaringey parents say: No to academies!

triangleDisaster for local government

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