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21 November 2012

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"Enough is enough!" - Fight all cuts

Build for a 24-hour general strike

Gavin Marsh, Southampton Socialist Party
Southampton council workers' strike 23.5.11, photo Southampton Socialist Party

Southampton council workers' strike 23.5.11, photo Southampton Socialist Party   (Click to enlarge)

Just before Christmas, the champagne coalition delivered a mean and spiteful present to local authorities, announcing additional cutbacks in government spending on top of those already planned.

In response, the leaders of Newcastle, Liverpool and Sheffield councils wrote to the Observer warning of "social unrest" as a consequence.

Yet even this dire prediction failed to ignite a New Year's resolution from Labour councils committing them to resist this hated government. Not a single council has had the courage to say "enough is enough".

There are a few honourable exceptions. In Hull a group of Labour councillors have declared that they will not vote for cuts. In Southampton, the two 'Labour Councillors against Cuts' are standing firm in their resolve to fight all cuts in the city.

Southampton refuse strike 23 05 11 , photo Southampton Socialist Party

Southampton refuse strike 23 05 11 , photo Southampton Socialist Party   (Click to enlarge)

As councillor Keith Morrell explained: "People in Southampton kicked out the Tories last May and won't look kindly on Tory policies being foisted on them this year."

This is absolutely true, yet members of the Socialist Party have been accused of being "from another planet" when we suggest that other councillors follow their courageous stance.

Instead of instigating a city-wide campaign and linking up local authority workers, service users and communities to refuse to implement these cuts, they resort to evasion, dishonesty and scaremongering, invoking the 'big bad wolf' of government minister Eric Pickles, ready to step on any council that dares to fight on behalf of its citizens.

Councillor Don Thomas added: "Labour councillors should stop whinging on about how 'tough' and 'difficult' it is for them to cut services. They should remember the fighting traditions of the labour movement and stand up and defend their class."

The fight to save youth services from extinction is receiving huge support throughout the city. Youth workers and their supporters are determined to "up the anti" and will be demonstrating outside the Extraordinary Council Meeting on Wednesday 16 January.

Under pressure the city council has been forced to ease off their 'bully boy' tactics of intimidating staff from speaking out. Now it is allowing council workers an unpaid two-hour lunch break to take part in an anti-cuts demo on 13 February when the council sets its budget. But it is essential that the unions organising the demo, Unison and Unite, call on the Labour council to side with Keith and Don and not implement cuts.

If the rest of the Labour councillors in Southampton and across Britain are going to carry on following Con-Dem orders, then we need to replace them with representatives who will fight for working class people instead of for the tax-dodging mega-rich elite.

That's why the Socialist Party is part of the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition, which stands candidates that oppose all cuts to jobs and services and says 'make the banksters pay' for their capitalist crisis.

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Finance appeal

The coronavirus crisis has laid bare the class character of society in numerous ways. It is making clear to many that it is the working class that keeps society running, not the CEOs of major corporations.

The results of austerity have been graphically demonstrated as public services strain to cope with the crisis.

The government has now ripped up its 'austerity' mantra and turned to policies that not long ago were denounced as socialist. But after the corona crisis, it will try to make the working class pay for it, by trying to claw back what has been given.

Inevitably, during the crisis we have not been able to sell the Socialist and raise funds in the ways we normally would.

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In The Socialist 21 November 2012:


Socialist Party news and analysis

"Enough is enough!" - Fight all cuts

2013: Prepare for a mighty battle against deeper cuts

Unite the Union general secretary election

More attacks on benefits...

Making it easier to sack workers

More Tory privatisation

Who's neglecting society, Mr Lamb?

Them & Us


International socialist news and analysis

India: Mass rage against rape

South Africa: Founding of Workers and Socialist Party


Socialist Party reports and campaigns

Prepare for strike action to save our hospitals

'The Eight Consultations of Christmas' in Southampton

Birmingham Labour's 'grotesque chaos'

Anti-cuts election candidates

Campaigns - In brief

2012 Fighting Fund target smashed

Socialist Party women's meeting


Obituary

Robbie Segal


Socialist Party workplace news

Standing firm in Mid Yorks hospitals pay cuts battle

London Underground cleaners strike over New Year

Tyne and Wear Metro strikers tell bosses to end poverty pay

Losing patience with Usdaw


 

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Related links:

Southampton:

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triangleRestore the stolen millions from councils - Workers' programme needed

triangleTrade unionists under attack - solidarity meeting

triangleReinstate victimised bus driver Declan Clune

triangleSouthampton trade unionists demand: "We won't pay for Covid"

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triangleFight the rotten establishment

triangleWhat councils can do to protect the environment

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triangleNorwich City Council workers vote for strike action over broken promises on pay and conditions

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triangleMembers of Democratic Socialist Movement in Nigeria (a sister organisation of the Socialist Party in England/Wales) on the streets in Abuja during the current protests

Labour:

triangleStarmer moves against Unite - No to the attack on Beckett

Council:

triangleTUSC is back

Socialist:

triangleSocialist Party national meeting: Perspectives for socialism after the elections

Article dated 21 November 2012

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