watermelon
Conference Newsletter of Green Left
Spring 2020 Online edition
COP 26: EFFECTIVE ACTION OR ANOTHER COP-OUT?
The 26th session of
the Conference of the Parties (COP 26) to the UN
Climate Change Conference will take place from 9-19 November 2020 in
Glasgow. Many organisations that campaign to combat climate change are
already preparing their presence and their responses, but perhaps many of the
more experienced are doing so with feelings of wariness and weariness.
No COP summit so far
has produced effective action on climate change, the number of promises and
pledges from governments has grown but so also have the indicators that human
caused climate change is happening, possibly even faster than many expected.
Nonetheless optimists hope for a positive
outcome: “the climate justice movement has a
clear opportunity to break out of the narrow green silo and advance an agenda
of system change.” (Thanki and Rehman.2019).
A worldwide upsurge in
activism against climate change is taking place. Notably, school students’
strikes and the emergence of Extinction Rebellion (XR) and this has sparked
governmental responses ranging from outright denial to fine sounding pledges
via declarations of ‘climate emergency’ etc.
In the UK we have a
recently elected PM with a fondness for grandiose gestures, so commentators
expect COP 26 to be used an opportunity to promote Britain as a ‘climate
leader’. Much may be made of the government pledge to remove fossil fueled cars
by 2032. If realized, this could be a significant step but many, recall Boris
Johnson’s empty promises to build a ‘garden bridge’ and an airport on an
artificial island.
Furthermore, as Thanki and Rehman point out,
even if a relatively clean, green capitalism could be introduced in advanced
industrialised economies, environmentally damaging projects and resource
extraction are still happening via a ‘green
colonialism’ in
the Global South.
Inspite of these reservations,
climate campaigners and NGO’s worldwide will
be going to Glasgow This has
the potential to strengthen an
international movement to save the planet and express massive opposition to the
world leaderships who look unlikely, yet again, to take effective action because they
cannot really enact the system change which any real solution requires.
Nathan Thanki and Asad Rehman. Red Pepper June 24, 2019
REPORT FROM “Fightback Against The Tories” By William Linegar
On the 1st of March the Young Greens
held an event in Manchester themed as a ‘fightback against the Tories’. The
room was buzzing first thing in the morning with people bragging about how
early they got up to be there (the earliest was 6am). The day started with a
welcome speech from YG co-chairs Rosie Rawle and Tom Hazell, who reminded us
why we should be angry about five more years under the people who brought us
austerity, the Windrush scandal, and the hostile environment more broadly. The
need for electoral reform was emphasised, seeing as the Tories won a
comfortable 56% of seats with less than 44% of votes.
We then heard an impassioned speech from GPEW deputy leader Amelia
Womack who hailed the power and opportunity presented by the YGs, who are
well-placed to advertise and campaign on the Green Party’s ‘radical but
rational’ ideas in communities up and down the country. Amelia was keen to
stress that young people are not merely ‘the future’ but are in fact the
present, setting up climate strikes and tackling un-Green policies within
universities and councils. She lamented that despite past movements like the Chartists
and the suffragettes, we still struggle with a system subsumed by the rich and
powerful, and she encouraged us to campaign on Green policies that can improve
standards for everyone. This is especially important when the Labour Party are
failing to do this themselves, running local councils as administrative
functionaries making poor decisions without combatting austerity from
Westminster. Amelia also suggested the neoliberal shake-up of universities had
left students feeling like customers paying for a service, making them less
likely to jeopardise their investment with strikes or political demonstrations.
Finally, she told us not to give up, despite frequently feeling like all our
energy is spent trying to preserve the freedoms and services we have, rather
than building towards bigger and better things in the future.
We then heard from Arran Rangi of
Green New Deal UK, who spoke of their aim to be an organising hub, coordinating
any and all local groups around the country who in their own way are already
creating some small part of the necessary changes in their community. Examples brainstormed
by the YGs ranged from energy co-operatives and parents’ associations, to trade
union councils and the fruit pickers of east Oxford (which took some
explaining). We all agreed that ideas need to have movements built behind them
in order to progress from the grassroots to mainstream discourse and finally to
the corridors of power, and we heard how a green new deal would promote secure,
unionised jobs and global justice of all kinds to combat climate breakdown,
neoliberal capitalism, and rampant poverty.
The next speaker was Sam Coates, a former YG co-chair and Oxford councillor, who spoke about austerity at the local level, and about the challenge faced by the poorest in society. He told us that since the Tories came to power, 600,000 more children are in poverty and there have been 120,000 excess deaths attributable to austerity. The cuts, unprecedented in peacetime, have led to failures of healthcare and progress indicators like life expectancy stalling and even reversing. The bogus economics of austerity was highlighted, along with the fallacy of comparing government budgeting to household budgeting. We were encouraged to brainstorm ideas on how austerity can be challenged locally, from calling out financial mismanagement of councils to concepts like ward-based participatory budgeting, and we were reminded that nobody is actively defending austerity anymore. The Tories claim it’s over, although it doesn’t appear to be in practise, but this could represent an important shift away from bellicose defence of austerity. At risk of sounding as tone deaf as Corbyn following December’s election, we may have won the argument.
The next speaker was Sam Coates, a former YG co-chair and Oxford councillor, who spoke about austerity at the local level, and about the challenge faced by the poorest in society. He told us that since the Tories came to power, 600,000 more children are in poverty and there have been 120,000 excess deaths attributable to austerity. The cuts, unprecedented in peacetime, have led to failures of healthcare and progress indicators like life expectancy stalling and even reversing. The bogus economics of austerity was highlighted, along with the fallacy of comparing government budgeting to household budgeting. We were encouraged to brainstorm ideas on how austerity can be challenged locally, from calling out financial mismanagement of councils to concepts like ward-based participatory budgeting, and we were reminded that nobody is actively defending austerity anymore. The Tories claim it’s over, although it doesn’t appear to be in practise, but this could represent an important shift away from bellicose defence of austerity. At risk of sounding as tone deaf as Corbyn following December’s election, we may have won the argument.
We then got to hear from the YG executive committee, who told us
about the reinstatement of the acclaimed ’30 under 30’ training programme, the
successful deployment of Green MEPs to climate strike rallies, the distribution
of ‘fresher packs’ to start-up university societies, a successful rapid
response press team to issue statements on events of relevance, and the advent
of a YG co-chairs’ speech at national GPEW conference for the first time in
years which was touted as a huge boost to visibility and credibility among the
wider party. The provision of central funding for a part-time YG administrative
supporter was similarly hailed as a brilliant development the benefits of which
would be immediate and profound. We also heard how the YGs international
officer has coordinated LGBTIQA+ events in North Macedonia and stayed in touch
with Scottish and Irish sister groups as well as the Federation of Young
European Greens despite Brexit. We also heard how in the run-up to the December
election, the YGs organised 18 action days in six weeks, equating to 138 days
of campaigning.
The day ended with a panel of former, current, and potential YG
councillors discussing local organising, trade union links, and how local Green
Parties are increasingly important given how many Labour councils are failing
to deliver, alienating voters and haemorrhaging support to the Tories, whose
dominance of Westminster also makes the parliamentary influence of progressives
less impactful. We heard how councils have powers to do more for their residents,
in areas like energy generation, transport, and waste services. We also heard
how Greens can have real power as a big group, such as in Brighton where they
secured budget amendments for insulating council homes and support for car-free
zones. The discussion ended with a reminder that Greens need to discuss things
they could and would actually do once elected, and a reminder that there is a
central GPEW strategy for Green councillors but this needs to be more widely
advertised. The final thought was that councils need to be made a platform for
struggle, and to make sure there are Green voices shaping that struggle, the
YGs have already pencilled in 27 action days leading up to this year’s local
elections.
CLIMATE SCIENCE & ECOSOCIALISM- the
changing public perception by Malcolm Bailey
(Photo: Michael Campanella / Getty
Images)
Extreme
weather patterns, fires across Australia, ocean and air pollution, decimation
of the rain forests, plastic waste, melting of polar ice, loss of species
diversity and other environmental degradations have recently shocked the public
imagination, especially the young. Human caused climate change and global
warming now meet growing public understanding and recognition of impending
catastrophe.
The
public mood is changing. Climate and environmental science is respected, in
contrast to distrust of politicians and anger at ‘fake news’. President Trump
and anti-science lobbies are seen as mistaken whilst recognition of climate change
is founded on evidence from decades of research by scientists. Our confidence
in what is happening to the global climate is testimony to the power of
scientific methodology.
This
positive view of science has spread beyond environmental science. This
evidence-based view is of intrinsic benefit.
Public interest in nuclear and particle physics has waned despite the
Large Hadron Collider and the Higgs Boson discovery, but enthusiasm, excitement
and wonder at amazing planetary exploration and merging
black holes is growing. Advances in biology and medicine yield
new approaches to treating disease.
Inevitably
there are areas of disquiet, conspiracy theorists are still
active. New 5G networks generate health fears which are not supported by adequate scientific evidence commanding scientific consensus, however,
surveillance issues go mostly unchallenged, and AI and robotics concern many. Some
still distrust vaccines but the importance of facts, rigorous science and
evidence-based policies is widespread and growing.
Applied
science and technology can be a scourge or boon for humankind, and it’s important
to recognise the difference between them. Scientific theories must be falsifiable,
and scientists accept that favoured theories may be wrong. Science is the
organised attempt by humankind to discover how things work. Waddington [1] has
defined the scientific attitude of mind as an interest in such questions.
Science is not neutral. Scientists have a social and ethical responsibility to
speak out on human behaviour.
Climate
science has moved forward driven and coordinated internationally since 1988 by
the work of the United Nations agency, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC). The remit of the IPCC is to report on the ‘scientific and
technical information relevant to understanding the scientific basis of risk of
human-induced climate change, its potential impacts and options for adaptation
and mitigation’ [2]. Thousands of
scientists contribute to IPCC reports,
Professor
Myles Allen, lead author of the recent IPCC ‘Special Report on Global Warming
of 1.5 °C’ has explained [3] what the 12 year scenario means: there is between
a 1-in-2 and 2-in-3 chance of keeping global warming below 1.5° C if emissions
are reduced to around half their present (2018) level by 2030: ‘Climate change
is not so much an emergency as a festering injustice: it means we have to act
now, and even if we do, success is not guaranteed’.
The
New Scientist [4] comments that ’thanks to the likes of Greta Thunberg, public
acceptance of the basic science of climate change, and awareness of the dangers
it poses, has, of late, grown hugely across the globe, even in parts that were
previously resistant, such as the US ….
the world seems to be waking up to the need for radical action on this
and other serious environmental challenges.’
Yet
there is failure to act on climate change and progress the Paris Agreement of
2015. There are obstacles and struggles, shown internationally by the tortuous
progress of the annual ‘Conference of the Parties’ (COP) meetings, under the
United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), which receives
the IPCC science reports.
The
latest COP25, last December, emphasised the difficulties. The 27,000 delegates
conferred for a record two weeks plus, but there was no overall consensus. UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said, ‘the international community lost an
important opportunity to show increased ambition on mitigation, adaptation and
finance to tackle the climate crisis’. Even the latest IPCC science reports
were merely ‘noted’ rather than ‘welcomed’ – a feeble response. Greta Thunberg
told the plenary session that COP25 ‘seems to have turned into some kind of
opportunity for countries to negotiate loopholes’.
The
New Scientist [4] states ‘Even when it comes to climate change, undoubtedly the
defining issue of the coming decade, there are grounds for cautious optimism
that we can pull together to stave off catastrophe’. But where? The present
global economic system depends on endless growth. Governments appear to act
with a misplaced confidence in the capacity of a greener capitalism to solve
the climate and social justice crises. It’s an unconvincing prescription of
greenwash, techno-fix and ecomodernism.
Ecosocialism
identifies and indicts capitalism as the enemy of nature (5), bringing together
social justice and environment crises, linked and interacting. The fundamental
significance of this linkage must be recognised, based on analysis underpinned
by a scientific, evidence-based approach, forming the foundation of a rational
response to the crises. Sometimes the current economic system appears
impregnable and permanent, but it has intrinsic stresses which will become ever
more tested under the deepening global environmental and social justice crises.
References
1 Waddington, C.H., 1941, The Scientific
Attitude, Pelican
2 IPCC, https://www.ipcc.ch/
3 Allen, Myles, 2019, http://theconversation.com/why-protesters-should-be-wary-of-12- years-to-climate-breakdown-rhetoric-115489
5 Joel Kovel: The Enemy of
Nature, Zed Books, 2007
The Irish General Election – The Green Shoots
of a new Ireland?
Dr Joseph
Healy (Principal Speaker & International Spokesperson of Left Unity)
The Irish general election result has totally transformed the Irish
political landscape but is also likely to change the Anglo-Irish relationship
and that between the two parts of Ireland. To understand the impact of
Sinn Féin gaining its largest vote in the Republic since 1922 and ending the
political duopoly of Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, it’s necessary to consider Irish
history. The two main parties were the opposing offspring of the Irish Civil
War, which was fought over the partition of Ireland in 1921 and cost more Irish
lives and caused more bitterness than the preceding Irish War of Independence. In
the aftermath of the Civil War, Fine Gael represented the winning Free State
and Fianna Fáil the losing anti-Treaty side. Post 1932 both parties recognised
the partition of Ireland to varying degrees and proceeded to create the
reactionary sectarian partitionist state which had its mirror image in the
other sectarian state in the North. The Irish Left remained weak and divided
and the new state never had a truly Left government, apart from short periods
where the Irish Labour Party failed to moderate the right-wing Fine Gael in a
series of coalitions. Any talk of the reunification of Ireland was also ruled out
for public discussion by both right-wing parties, this was the case until
Brexit.
Sinn Féin, though represented in the Dáil, was not a major force in the
political scene in the Republic. Bad election results in 2019 in both the
European elections and the local elections meant that the party did not have
high expectations in the general election in January. Varadkar was banking on
seemingly fending off the danger to Ireland of a closed border and securing apparent
economic security However, Brexit and the growing inequality in the Republic
have changed things fundamentally. The decline in the power of the Catholic
Church in the South and the development of a radical young electorate who voted
through the referenda on abortion and equal marriage have created a thirst for
change. The huge crises in housing and the Irish health service have created
anger. Added to that was the crass decision by the Fine Gael government, backed
by Fianna Fáil, to increase the pension age, an issue which Sinn Féin had
opposed, meaning that many older voters were also alienated from the right-wing
parties. Ireland has the youngest and most highly educated electorate in
Western Europe and these people want a progressive Left government. By Sinn
Féin and other Left parties also calling for Vote Left and Transfer Left in the
complex proportional representation transferable voting system meant that Sinn
Féin voters also voted in other Left TDs (MPs) and has meant a strong Left
cohort in the new Dáil (Irish parliament).
Where does this leave the issue of reunification? Has Sinn Féin watered
down its call for a border poll? This is not the case. Although reunification was
not the major issue in the election, the electorate in the South support it.
All the opinion polls point towards support for a border poll and the fact that
Sinn Féin support a poll within five years means that there is a mandate for
this among at least 25% of the Irish electorate. One Sinn Féin MP has
interestingly pointed out that Sinn Féin now has the most votes in two thirds
of Irish constituencies North and South, echoing the election of 1918, the last
election held on an all-Ireland basis.
This result will have a major impact on Anglo-Irish relations and on
Brexit negotiations. For a party which has major support in the North of
Ireland will be representing both its electorate in the North and South and
this will bring the North of Ireland into a much more central role in those
negotiations but also will increase pressure on the British government to call
a border poll. Furthermore, the EU has stated that any future reunited Irish state
will have automatic entry into the EU. Economically and politically many
Unionists in the North of Ireland can see that that their future now lies in a
new Irish state.
But there are major impediments like the absence of a free health
service in the South. Sinn Féin have always made clear that their aim is not to
bring the Unionists into the existing Irish Republic but to create a new
socialist state with a free health service, a Bill of Rights for the minority
community and many other safeguards.
The transformation of the Irish state into a modern progressive
socialist European state under a radical government as opposed to a right wing
UK state in hock to Trump and driven by reactionary English nationalism, could
well be the catalyst to create a new republic based on equality and justice for
all. The historic general election of 2020 can be viewed as the first step on
that road.
FRANCE IS NOW A POLICE STATE
Sylvian Savier
France has had a huge problem
with its police, long before the start of the yellow vests movement. The death
of Malik Oussekine while in police custody during the mass student protests of
1986 is regularly brought back to light. But there are other famous cases of
police murders in contemporary French history. The youths of the suburbs
("cités"), often unemployed and mostly of North African origins, have
always been at the receiving end of a relentless
police harassment which makes regular sordid headlines and caused three weeks
of riots in the suburbs of Paris in 2005. In 2017, 4 policemen were trialed for
rape, having introduced a baton into the anus of a young black man who they
were arresting. The victim will need a colostomy bag for the rest of his life.
Against this backdrop, in March last year, the UN's High
Commissioner for Human Rights condemned what she called the “excessive use of
force” by the French police. Since then, more eyes enucleations have occurred,
caused by unbridled use of rubber bullets and gas grenade launchers against the
yellow vests. Since the beginning of the movement, the police have killed 2
people, blinded 25, and 5 more protesters have lost a hand.
In a normally functioning democracy, the police don't kill, maim
or rape the population. But France is no longer a normally functioning
democracy. Macron has done something that will be extremely difficult to undo
he has let loose a police force that no longer answers to his government. This
is the very essence of a police state. Even if orders ever came down from the
political spheres to ease off the police ferocity on the streets, the Paris
police chief himself is not the sort of man to pass on moderation orders down
the chain of command. Hearing him snap at a demonstrator that he "isn't on
the same side as [her]", one could be forgiven for forgetting that France
is a republic. So, it is no wonder that glee can now be detected in these
policemen's demeanour as they give into acts of terror. They revel in their
impunity.
|
Is
Another Europe Still Possible?
Peter Murry
Looking
back as far as 2019, I sometimes wonder if there really were vast
demonstrations in central London, with thousands chanting: “We demand a
people’s vote!”. If we’d have got one my guess is that we’d still be in the EU,
just. However, we didn’t, and we aren’t and arguably the main political reason
for speculating about how and why this happened is to decide what to do now.
In
2019 there were two large organised remainer campaigns. The largest, the
People’s Vote, mobilised celebrities, capitalists, anti- capitalists, and
politicians from almost every party and organised the large demos. Also, there
is smaller more ideologically coherent organisation called ‘Another Europe Is
Possible’. (ANEIP). The Green Party of England & Wales supported both.
In
the immediate aftermath of the Tory landslide election victory ANEIP held a
public meeting on 14 December 2019. It was attended by several hundred and a
plan to draft a ‘charter’ was put to the meeting by the ANEIP leadership and
agreed. The aim was to outline a strategy conduct an internationalist left
opposition in Brexit Britain.
This
is still a work in progress and its political future, and possibly that of
ANEIP, is not guaranteed; but surely there is a need for something along these
lines to be launched and early drafts of the charter may give some indications
of what needs to be involved.
It
entails aiming to defend the rights, freedoms and protections of the EU and to
set out political alternatives to the current EU and some directions in which
it could be heading. It specifically aims to defend the right to stay for EU
citizens currently in the UK, to preserve existing freedom of movement and to
continue to accept refugees. It argues for continuation of the workers’ rights
and human rights protections derived from the EU. It also seeks to continue
environmental protections, food standards and to continue science and research
funding.
As
well as a defensive agenda, it is suggested that the charter should commit to
combat climate change and to net zero emissions by 2030, with the intention of
being in step with the EU doing the same.
This
a very brief and sketchy summary of a strategy being discussed in one
organisation, it is to be hoped that others will be thinking and working along
the same lines, because what is now needed is a renewed project of resistance for
an internationalist ecosocialist future for the whole planet.
SELLING OUR SOUL FOR A FEW SCRAPS FROM THE LIB DEMS; Green left statement on the 2019 UK general election. February 2020
The defeat for Labour in the General Election was disappointing,
because it happened inspite of Labour supporting countering Climate Change,
The Green Party should welcome the many in the Labour Party and
Trade Union movement who now want a green transformation of the economy.
Unfortunately, the Green Party made the mistake of linking up
with the discredited Lib Dems over the Brexit issue and, even on this, serious
differences emerged over the Lib Dems’ proposal to remain without a referendum.
The pact was not based on other shared policies with the Lib Dems.
Many members of the Green Party were surprised that it endorsed
Lib Dems in some 20 seats with sitting Labour MPs and candidates near to its
policies on austerity, Brexit and the Green New Deal. Why were the Lib Dems
allowed to use our good name to fight Labour?
The General Election strategy of the Green Party seemed to be
fixated on gaining an extra MP by selling our soul for a few scraps from the
Lib Dems; and in the event was of no benefit to Greens
Green Left has asked the Green Party what was the basis for this
mistaken strategy? Were its political implications fully thought out?
Green Left believes the task of the GPEW is to encourage debate
and discussion with those who share or are beginning to share our perspective
on the need to fight climate change and the need for a Green New Deal to
transform the economy.
Some reflections
on GE2019: A green left minority position by Chris Glenn
Electoral Pacts
Several positions have been put forward
about Green Party general election strategy including:
1. We should stand in
all seats in all circumstances to allow voters the opportunity to cast a vote
for us
2. We should not make
electoral pacts with the LibDems
3. We should be open to
electoral pacts with other parties, including the LibDems, in order to maximise
Green Party performance and representation
The first position is sometimes
associated with the ‘environmental’ wing of the party, some of whom seek to
de-emphasise our social justice policies. The second is the official Green Left
position. I argued hard against any electoral
arrangement with the LibDems, due
to their adherence to neoliberalism, when it was first floated at a London GP meeting in mid-2016. I changed my position
in response to the political context of the December 2016 Richmond by-election.
In the interim period we saw: the Brexit vote; UKIP and fascist support for Zac
Goldsmith; and judges accused on the front pages of the right-wing press. In
November 2016, during the by election campaign, Trump won the US presidential
election.
During GE2019 and within Green Left I
have argued, as outlined below, for the third position which both recognises
that we are at our weakest in FPTP elections and seeks to maximise the limited
influence we have.
"As someone very much on the left
of the Green Party, I fully support this tactical move. I have no problem with
this move given FPTP. We are not endorsing LibDem policies in any shape or
form. Assuming FPTP continues, if Greens gain second places in a small number
of seats, this will be important in future elections. Tactically I think this
is a very astute move - for me this is not primarily about Remain but how we
play the brutal FPTP system which means that even some Green Party members will
be voting for Labour in some constituencies where we are standing. Think of all
those people we have spoken to over the years who say they agree with us but
won’t vote for us because we can’t win. We can now build a significant vote in
a small number of constituencies which begins to undercut this argument. I
suspect a large majority of members will understand this electoral pact. Let’s
not forget that the Green Party remains easily the most radical and left-wing
party currently represented in Parliament. We have not compromised our vision
and policies. We want that representation to grow further”.
In GE2019 the LibDems stood down in
Dulwich and West Norwood (DaWN). Labour polled strongly - but those of us who campaigned
in DaWN, having seen our vote plummet in 2017, helped to achieve our first ever
2nd place and our highest ever vote and percentage in London, beating the
Tories by 51 votes. In DaWN and elsewhere the decline in our 2017 vote can in
my view be almost entirely accounted for by the election of a Tory majority
government in 2015 and the very understandable attraction of Labour under
Corbyn. This is psychologically and practically important for future elections
in London where we have historically 'underperformed' in both general and local
elections.
Marginal seats
I don't think we should agonise over
the size of the Green vote in the 10 seats where the combined Labour and Green
vote was more than that of the Tories. Given the many seats we unilaterally
stood aside in, the responsibility is with Labour who insist on standing in
every seat.
The Green vote is not a homogenous bloc
that would automatically vote Labour if we were not standing. In marginal Stroud,
I looked at local press and other comment threads where voters gave their views
Almost all of those who stated that they had voted Green in EU and local
elections were clear they would vote Labour in GE2019. Many mentioned the high
regard in which they held our candidate and that they would continue to vote
Green in the future. My hypothesis is that most of the Green vote in Stroud and
the other 9 seats came from
:
a. those who would
otherwise have voted LibDem
b. some Tory
Remainers (partly due to our growing base in the constituency)
c. members/supporters
who would ONLY vote Green -.
So, if we had NOT
stood the Tory majority may have been larger, rather than it now being a
Labour-held seat.
Unrealistic
expectations
In the 2016 London elections, a local
organiser visited Southwark branch and started off their contribution by asking:
does everyone agree that we can aim to win 3 to 5 London Assembly seats? I
immediately responded that we would do well to hold on to our 2 seats, which is
what happened. In 2017 I canvassed in Bristol West - it was very soon apparent
to me that although we had a good level of support we would not win. I agree
with much of Benali Hamdache's analysis in Bright Green, of the raising of
unrealistic hopes, which runs the risk of demoralising our activist members.
Conclusion
Labour will continue to be riven by
turmoil and divisions whoever is elected leader because none of the 'factions'
(and that is much more nuanced than just the 'left' and the 'right' in their
party) will easily or willingly leave. I continue to believe that the
primary way that we influence the political agenda is by building the size and
electoral impact of the Green Party.
If an Investment Banker Was the Answer, What Was the Question?
Alan Wheatley Speaks Out Against Neoliberal ‘Welfare Reform’
I hope to promote information not mentioned in the e-mail circulars from Green Party of England & Wales Co-leaders.
Human
catastrophe, a dodgy health insurance firm and the investment banker
In August 2017 the UN Disability Chair referred to
Neoliberal ‘Welfare Reform’ “’a human
catastrophe,’ which was ‘totally neglecting the vulnerable situation people
with disabilities find themselves in’.”(1)
More
recently, one of the UK’s top barristers represented the Department for Work
& Pensions at the inquest of Errol Graham whose corpse weighing just 4½
stone was found by bailiffs in the fallout from one of several thousands of
Employment & Support Allowance ‘entitlement’ debacles. Thus,
the coroner concerned did not call for a public inquiry into such deaths but
has since welcomed the public concern since expressed following reportage of
the case by John Pring of Disability News Service.(2)
News
articles and letters in Hereford Times emboldened a parent so affected
regarding Personal Independence Payment (PIP) to write the letters page Concluding her account of PIP denied her
epileptic child despite 24/7 medication demand resulting from severe epilepsy,
she asks: “Who are these people responsible for making these decisions and
causing such distress? Fortunately, my son has someone to speak up for him, how
many don’t?” (3)
I
commend the Hereford Times as a platform in which people can ask such questions
while the fact that such appalling decisions are repeatedly made helps to
demonstrate how undemocratic the Department for Work & Pensions (DWP) –
formerly the Department for Health & Social Security – has become.
Mo
Stewart, a medically retired RAF medical veteran asked such questions after
disability assessors downgraded her disability pension. She then put her
research skills to effective use. She discovered that the ‘revolving doors’
between government and ‘global public service delivery sector’ had facilitated
a legally disgraced American health insurance firm’s continued role as
‘adviser’ to successive UK governments on ‘welfare reform’ since the 1990s that
have since resulted in ‘welfare reform’. That was
Unum, who linked with Atos in creating the ‘Logic Integrated Medical
Assessment’ check box system by which both Employment & Support Allowance
and PIP awards are metricated.(4)
David
Freud, a Labour ‘welfare reform guru’ headhunted by Tony Blair (5) and
poached by David Cameron as House of Lords Welfare Reform Minister (6) was an
investment banker who, by his own admission, "[knew nothing] about welfare
at all when [he] started”(7). Prof.
Peter Beresford – a co-founder of Social Work Action Network – wrote in 2013,
“Lack of knowledge about state support systems is putting the system at risk.”(8)
“Policy-driven
evidence gathering” (9)
David
Freud’s ignorance manifested itself in the false perception that assessments of
Incapacity Benefit were conducted by the claimant’s own General Practitioner
and that the GP thus had a vested interest in keeping the patient and claimant
sweet. Thus — while conveniently ignoring the existence of disabled jobseekers
with a history of volunteering, he reckoned: "We can pay masses [to the
private sector] — I worked out that it is economically rational to spend up to
£62,000 on getting the average person on Incapacity Benefit into work."(10)
Such
ignorance regarding the circumstances of Incapacity Benefit claimants was
previously reflected in a Labour Health Minister’s earlier utterings. In
February 2004, Community Care magazine reported:
“The government has apologised after massively
overstating the number of obese people claiming benefits. Earlier this month,
health minister Lord Warner said that 900,000 claimants of incapacity benefits
were obese, prompting headlines in the national media. The Department of Health
now says that the actual figure is 900 and that this only relates to people who
receive incapacity benefit as a result of obesity. It blamed an ‘administrative
error’ for the blunder. It added that the total amount paid to this group a week
is £70,965 rather than the £70.9m figure initially used.”(11)
The DWP’s hiring of a top barrister to represent it in the inquest of
Errol Graham has earlier parallels in central government’s abuse of taxpayers’
money to embed public ignorance regarding those it wanted perceived as “a
burden on the taxpayer.” ‘Targeting Benefit Fraud’ televised adverts and
billboards throughout the early 2000s detracted attention from the misery
caused by transformations in DWP benefit delivery.
By
the tax year 2004/2005 the problem of call-centre overload had grown to the
point that welfare rights adviser Neil Bateman reported in Community Care
magazine in November 2006 that in 2004/2005, 21 million incoming calls to
Jobcentre Plus (JCP) call-centres had resulted in destitution in a number of
cases.(12)
Of
course, the advent of ‘digital by default’ Universal Credit has compounded such
problems enormously to the point of food banks being widespread, but they
existed way back in New Labour days and I know because JCP serially
miscalculated the level of my part-time earnings as being above the need for
Jobseekers Allowance top up.
Conclusion
The
current mess ties in with an apparent media blackout of ‘Writing off workfare:
for a Green New Deal, not the Flexible New Deal’ that Anne Gray wrote with me
in 2008 as Green Party response to New Labour’s ‘work for your benefits’
privatisation of the welfare state.(13) For
further Green Party follow-through on what has emerged since, go to the Green
Party Policy Pointer on Disability, last amended in 2012.(14)
Notes
- https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/uk-faces-un-examination-government-cuts-caused-human-catastrophe/
- https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/errol-graham-coroner-pledges-to-press-dwp-on-safeguarding-review/
- Hereford Times Letters, Thursday February 13, 2020, p45
- https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/disabled-researchers-book-exposes-corporate-demolition-of-welfare-state/
- https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/1577313/Welfare-is-a-mess-says-adviser-David-Freud.html
- https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2009/feb/16/freud-defects-labour-conservatives
- https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/1577313/Welfare-is-a-mess-says-adviser-David-Freud.html
- https://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/2013/jan/30/welfare-literacy-state-support
- I am indebted to researcher Paul Treloar for this phrase, which
he used at a talk to TUC London & South East Region event in 2008
- https://www.communitycare.co.uk/2004/02/25/minister-cuts-the-fat-from-figures/
- https://www.communitycare.co.uk/2006/11/16/jobcentre-plus-poor-service-continues/
- http://www.greenparty.org.uk/assets/files/GPEW_writing_off-workfare_final.doc
- https://policy.greenparty.org.uk/dy.html
A
Socialist Green New Deal? by Mark Douglas, Hackney
Green Left.
Introduction
The
original Green New Deal was created by the radical economist Ann Pettifor,
Caroline Lucas, Colin Hines and others in 2008. It was sponsored by the New
Economics Foundation, a leading British Green think tank. 2008 was also the
year of disaster capitalism when financial excess nearly brought the system
crashing down. Massive bank bailouts were followed by a decade of austerity and
misery.
Labour
and the trades unions utterly failed to combat or stop austerity, which
led to the Labour failure at the 2019 Election. The Green movement tried to
take it up and the most progress was made by the Green group of MEPs in the
European Parliament. Only in 2018 did Labour realise the worth of the Green New Deal in
tackling both the climate crisis and the effects of austerity by repairing the run-down public services. It’s probably the best
legacy of the left turn of Labour since 2016 and the Corbyn experiment that
resulted in the most radical Labour Manifesto of 2019 in its history.
Manifestos
Both the Green and Labour manifestos feature the
Green New Deal as the core chapters.
‘Its
time for Real Change’ is Labour’s 100-page manifesto, leading with a Green
Industrial Revolution on Economy, Energy, Transport and Environment. It’s
well written but repeats traditional terms of nationalisation, state control,
centralism along with nuclear energy and airport expansion cop outs. It is
verbose and ambiguous!
Green Manifesto 2019
The
Green Party Manifesto: 'If Not now, When?’ was an 80-page document,
starting on page 6 with ‘The Green New Deal– Unleashing a Green Economic
and Social Revolution’. ‘A comprehensive ten-year plan ambitious enough to
tackle climate and ecological breakdown at the scale and speed set out by
science.’
It goes on to advise a £100 billion total
investment, which will create millions of new jobs in energy, transport, land,
etc in a net zero carbon economy. It continues with detailed chapters on
Energy, Housing, Transport, Industry, Food and Farming. It is an impressive
manifesto and probably the most radical in Green Party history.
So,
both manifestos are very similar and represent the farthest that radical
Keynesian economics could go to reform late capitalism. The truth is that a
'radical reform programme’ will just end in green capitalism with most of the
promised reforms not evident. Capitalism cannot be ‘adjusted’ to socialism.
Transitional-Socialist
New Deal
It
was Blair who said that Labour’s new manifesto was so extreme it was like a
'transitional programme’; there are bold plans to nationalise many sectors of
the economy, implement worker-consumer control, create a ‘just transition’ for
millions of displaced workers, but it’s still left-reformist and social-democratic. Most socialists know that reformed capitalism
will not ‘save the planet’, but do most Greens know?
The
task of Green Left is to devise a programme that makes it clear that a
transition to Eco-Socialism is necessary. An example of this is the approach to land
in Britain. Neither manifesto deals with the gross inequality of land
ownership, control and use. Was it William Morris who stated that land reform
was the basis of a new society? Ownership and control of all great land estates
be must be divided to create local and regional agricultural worker
co-operatives. Another example is Energy. Production and distribution of
(renewable) energy must be devolved
to regional and district popular control which could only happen by a
democratic revolution of worker and people power.
Both Parties have fudged issues of democracy.
Labour, the most conservative social democratic party in Europe, fails to
change to proportional representation. Greens have good devolved policies for
renewed local government, but Socialists want real worker + consumer
control of industry and services at the local level, not just power in local
councils.
Universal Basic Services
Universal Basic Services (UBS) for health, energy,
welfare, housing, transport, etc. are supported by both parties; this is a key
socialist aim, but it would still be under private control in many places. All UBS
should be people-controlled at local or regional level. Radical
decentralisation is essential.
I invite Green Left members to create a
‘Transitional Socialist Green Deal’ platform which we can campaign for in both
the Green and Labour movements. Please
put forward your ideas soon to create a new pamphlet from Green Left
|
’
|
(West Central London Green
Party and Green Seniors Media Officer)
Imagine primitive computers, the size of a room, used exclusively by top companies, universities or government agencies. No internet exists and nobody knows what ‘social media’ is. To call somebody you use a rotary-dial telephone attached to a socket in the You have three or four TV stations, but they shut around midnight. To get your news, you purchase your favourite newspaper in print. To buy anything, you pay by cash or perhaps by cheque. If you are young and love music, you might carry a cassette Walkman around with you. And nobody can contact you if they don’t know where you are.Fast forward a few decades
to arrive in a world where computers have become ubiquitous and where their use
has changed the world beyond recognition – at least if you’re part of a
generation that has known life and work without them.
So, are today’s seniors
just relics of a bygone era; who should just adapt to new technology and accept
the realities of this Brave New World? That isn’t a fair assessment – there are
plenty of people in their 70s and older who have taken enthusiastically to new
technology, there are many more who confidently grew into the computer-age
during their careers but might be baffled and annoyed by the constant
introduction of new apps and ever more communication formats – and then there
are those who struggle with basic aspects of the digital age. There might be
health reasons or a disability making it difficult for them to use computers
unaided, or there might have been a lack of opportunities to gain exposure to
computers during their lives, and there might well be an element of
apprehension involved as well.
It is a sign of a
compassionate society to endeavour to have an inclusive attitude towards its
more vulnerable members by assisting those who struggle to achieve a level of
digital access. There are still too many occasions where older people are
simply excluded from social activities, or even meaningful work experience,
because they do not receive the comparatively modest assistance and
encouragement to enable them to fully participate fully in society.
We need to ask where
digital technology is leading us. There are many useful aspects that we would
not want to lose –web links about science, culture, literature and a democratic
level of political involvement enabled by digital media. Almost everyone has an
email address to communicate. And what about those miniature computers we carry
around with us? Calling them a ‘phone’, or even a ‘smart phone’ does not do
them justice.
But are we sure we know
all the potential consequences of the digitalisation of our lives? Can we be
confident with the structures in place that are supposedly safeguarding our
digital activities? Can we be assured that our data is not being misused? Have
we not had ample evidence recently about manipulative advertising on social
media to influence voters’ attitudes? Can we honestly say that this enormous
phenomenon called ‘social media’ is automatically a force for the good?
And if attempts to move
the entire payment structure onto digital platforms are successful, removing
our access to cash at the same time, would we be comfortable with the potential
for abusive control of our digital visibility? Similar questions can be asked
about any of the other digital information pieces about us, floating around in
cyberspace, be they of a medical, professional or political nature.
We have long arrived at a
point where questioning our almost total reliance, or perhaps even obsession,
with computers and digital media should be part of a civic debate. And I would
argue that the life experience of today’s seniors should have a voice. They
carry the wisdom of a life without any of that technology; they can tell us how
to have a human-to-human relationship not involving screens, keyboards,
passwords, apps, facebook or twitter. For the modest assistance needed by some
elderly computer users, that generation can more than pay back all of society,
if only we start taking them seriously as mature and insightful members of an
inclusive society.
|
THEATRE REVIEW:
Gabrielle Scawthorn
in
The Apologists
The Hat Factory Arts Centre,
Luton
Malcolm Bailey
|
First
performed at London VAULT Festival 2019, The Apologists explores the art of the
public apology. It’s refreshing to hear the familiar carefully deceptive words
of public faux apologies examined forensically in this production. The
one-woman drama by three writers is in three acts; Excuses, Seven - The
Sweetest Hour, and New Universe, written respectively by Iskandar Sharazuddin,
Cordelia O’Neill and Lucinda Burnett, directed by Jane Moriarty.
‘Excuses’
sees a Secretary of State for Health and Social Care attempting to atone for a racist
comment to a doctor. Her formal apology is mechanical, oozing insincerity’, a
typical Tory minister busy no doubt privatising anything she can lay her hands
on. Gabrielle Scawthorn’s gripping powerful performance is at its most
compelling and disturbing in the second act about a travel writer held
responsible for a suicide, and the final act dealing with the consequences of
rape in an aid organisation. Each act places a woman as the central character.
The
Apologists touches on many difficult aspects of the public apology. It’s
essential theatre for anyone with concerns about this feature of public life.
Edited by Steve Cushion and Christian Høgsbjerg: An Occasional Publication from The Socialist History Society
Available for £5 + p&p [£1.50 in UK, £5 to Rest of World] – for more details please contact Steve Cushion on s.cushion23[a]gmail.com –
This
volume focuses on events which are underplayed and, at worst, suppressed in
mainstream history. This is because they involve initiatives by those who are
expected to be obedient acting against the wishes of their superiors. For
instance, rebellious Polish soldiers in the French army who supported the
Haitian slave revolt, rather than suppressing it. Sometimes such “mutinous”, or
“treacherous” acts were carried out by groups, as in Haiti or by the St
Patrick’s Brigade of Irish-American deserters from the US army who joined the
Mexican resistance to a US invasion in 1846-8.
This
book also recounts instances of individuals following their consciences and
switching sides to join struggles against oppression and/or invasion. British
men joining Irish rebels, Germans fighting against the Nazis in internal
resistance movements or as partisans opposing invasions. Such “treachery” could
involve armed combat or covert espionage; as was the case with the French
‘porteurs des valises’ who smuggled money and propaganda for the FLN Algerian
revolt against French colonialism.
The
committed socialist historians whose work is collected here, record a tradition
of resistance dating back at least to the seventeenth century CE when Levellers,
English parliamentarian soldiers, refused to serve in an invasion of Ireland.
Reading this work enables discovering an undercurrent often masked by
conventional histories that are overly focused on the doings of powerful, often
male individuals, in powerful nations and self-congratulatory expositions of
‘western’ industrial societies. At a time when a resurgent right-wing advances ‘culture
wars’ as a part of a project to ‘regain control’ it is good to remember that
resistance is possible and necessary. P.Murry
Speakers from IWGB (Independent Workers Union of Great Britain https://iwgb.org.uk/) Wilson
(Chair of IWGB Cleaners’ Branch), and Jordi (also translating), visited the Green Left meeting on 18 January 2020. Points
raised included:
·
IWGB was founded in 2012, currently c. 4000 members. It had gained victories for its members in
employment rights and conditions, visibility and respect as human beings. Many migrant workers, often from Latin America and
Eastern Europe had precarious work conditions in the UK
·
Its branches are: Couriers/Logistics Workers, Foster
Care Workers, Private Hire Drivers, Security Guards/ Receptionists, Cleaners/Facilities
workers, Electrical Workers, Game Workers, Charity Workers, Higher Education
Workers, Cycle Instructors
·
Not recognised by TUC, but had good relations and support from many
union branches including UCU and Unison branches.
·
It was sometimes difficult to determine who an employer was, often
workers were nominally ‘self-employed’ which enabled low wages and high costs
for workers (eg buying vehicles, imposing congestion charges on hybrid
vehicles).
·
IWGB had secured some victories
in cases such as this, these ‘landmark cases’ could have repercussion across
entire employment sectors, currently such a case was being organised for Foster
Care Workers.
·
Problems of pollution arising
from Private Hire vehicles (eg Uber), were acknowledged.
Views expressed in Watermelon are those of the authors and not necessarily of Green Left
Make flame. Light the
dry leaves,
Suck the smoke into
lungs.
Which just makes you crave
Ignite, inhale, and repeat
Until eventually the powering lungs
That once got you up mountains,
won’t even let you reach
The end of the street
Unless you often stop
To wheeze, pant and cough.
And in Brazil or Australia
A thumb Flicks down, strikes flint on steel,
Makes flame, lights the dry leaves,
Burns a forest,
And this whole planet
Sucks the smoke into its lungs.
|
|
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Membership of GPTU is open to any current members of GPEW. Contact secretary@gptu.greenparty.org.uk.
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