Left unity
Why is the left so divided? How can we bring about unity? Includes sections on the Socialist Green Unity Coalition and the (former) Socialist Alliance.
Left unity in the 1890s
Submitted on 7 March, 2008 - 19:37
From the mid-1890s, British socialists tried to unite under one umbrella. Tom Mann, as Secretary of the Independent Labour Party, was at the centre of the negotiations and debates that took place between the ILP and the Social Democratic Federation. These moves, popular with the members, were scuppered by the leaderships, mainly that of the ILP.
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For left unity in the student movement!
Submitted on 9 February, 2008 - 19:38
ENS has nominated four candidates for the full-time positions on National Union of Students National Executive.
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New Zealand Left meets
Submitted on 24 June, 2007 - 01:04
From 1 – 3 June the Workers Party of New Zealand hosted its annual “Marxism” conference which featured international speakers and interventions by other NZ left groups. Around 60 mainly young people met in a serious-minded, yet lively and comradely atmosphere to discuss the class struggle and the prospects for socialism.
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Socialist Alliance ended: we still need left unity!
Submitted on 9 October, 2006 - 15:53
By Martin thomas
After 12 years as a coalition of the left the Socialist Alliance was shut down at a conference on Saturday 5 February.
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Unite the rational left to stop the fascists
Submitted on 16 May, 2006 - 10:56
Fascism — rampant, unashamedly racist and would-be pogromist fascism — is now stronger than it has been in Britain since the 1970s. In the number of council seats held by the fascists, it is stronger now than in the 1970s.
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Why, what, when?
Submitted on 15 May, 2006 - 21:54
I want to hear from anyone.
I'm interested in the marxist movement in Briain/London and more importantly why it is so divided?
I would appreciate some answers from anyone
Workers' Liberty 52, January 1999
Submitted on 26 July, 2005 - 07:36
Click on "read more" to see articles.
Joint policy statement by SGUC
Submitted on 13 February, 2005 - 20:38
Socialist Green Unity Coalition: IN THE looming general election a joint campaign against Blair is being mounted by five left parties and some independent socialists.
We need a working-class voice
Submitted on 30 August, 2004 - 16:37
Unite the socialists for the general election!
Some union leaders are claiming that they have won significant concessions from Blair and reshaped New Labour's manifesto for 2005. But even they cannot seriously deny that John Cridland of the bosses' federation, the CBI, was basically right when he said that New Labour's deal with the unions at its 23-25 July Policy Forum "left things roughly where they were".
The disrespectful left
Submitted on 22 January, 2004 - 16:49
The Socialist Alliance, the Respect Unity Coalition and the future of the left
On 25 January, short of a political miracle, a tarpaulin will be pulled over much of working-class socialist politics in England. The Socialist Workers Party (SWP) and a large part of the activist left will sign up the "Respect" coalition as their political vehicle for the coming months.
Its politics: a bland collation of sops for various constituencies (peace, green, Muslim, trade-union). Its figurehead: George "I need £150,000 a year" Galloway.
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Will SWP wreck student left unity too?
Submitted on 25 November, 2003 - 17:48
The right wing of Labour Students and its allies have run NUS for more than 20 years, resulting in defeat after defeat for the student movement. Since 1998, however, they have faced increasing opposition, with a united left slate challenging the Labour/"independent" leadership in the elections at every NUS conference.
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The left: striking back in Hackney?
Submitted on 13 October, 2003 - 14:29
This article is from Hackney Solidarity, the local Workers' Liberty newsletter. It was published in an edition produced for a Socialist Alliance public meeting at which Tommy Sheridan and Michael Lavalette spoke, the title of which was 'The Left Strikes Back'.
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Debate & Discussion: When is it a workers' party?
Submitted on 10 September, 2003 - 13:03
Martin Thomas
To "campaign for a workers' party" means three things:
1. Setting out and grouping people round basic working-class political objectives-independent working-class political representation, a workers' government, a working-class "Third Camp" in international politics.
SWP wreck unity in Socialist Alliance, where now for left?
Submitted on 24 July, 2003 - 11:15
In June the Socialist Workers Party packed a meeting of Birmingham Socialist Alliance with newly signed-up SWP members to remove the entire executive of the local Alliance - including the chair, victimised FBU militant Steve Godward - and replace them with SWP members and fellow travellers. In Birmingham the SWP want to see a "Peace and Justice" candidate - mounted jointly with the leaders of local mosques - that is an alliance with a religious hierarchy. Comrades in Birmingham rightly fear that such an alliance would be a betrayal of independent working-class politics and full civil equality for lesbian and gay people and for women. Those comrades had to go.
Letters
Submitted on 2 July, 2003 - 20:27
- Two pleas for unity in action
- Protestant autonomy: imperialist prop?
A plea for unity in action
A bother, upset and disappointment I have is to see the continuing 'spat' between the many 'left'/Marxist groups. All seem to concentrate not on a main enemy, capitalism, but on each other.
The Left
Submitted on 26 June, 2003 - 21:51
Bolshy supports the Alliance for Workers' Liberty, but the AWL is just one of many socialist groups in Britain. Why is the left so divided? How can it be united? And, in the meantime, how do you choose?
Study Bolsheviks critically
Submitted on 16 May, 2003 - 20:30
Two comments on Alan Johnson's discussion of how to unite the left ("Left Unity with the movement of movements", Solidarity 3/28) - one positive and one negative. The negative one is that I think he spins fantasies about the SWP.
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Letters on unity
Submitted on 1 May, 2003 - 22:39
- "You are not the only true socialists" - Andrew Berry
- "The AWL wants unity" - Mark Osborn
You are not the only true socialists
Re Solidarity 28 editorial. You seem to behave very much like the SWP - "we are the only true socialists", etc. That is arrogant. How can you be sure that every left group was on a different side in the war and did not agree with you?
Left Unity: How will the Socialist Alliance organise the left?
Submitted on 1 May, 2003 - 22:36
In recent issues Solidarity has been running a discussion on left unity, opened by a statement in Solidarity 26. This issue we carry excerpts from two relevant proposals drafted for the Socialist Alliance conference on 10 May.
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Left unity with the movement of movements
Submitted on 22 April, 2003 - 16:56
In Solidarity 26 we printed an appeal for discussion and collaboration on the left so that we can united the maximum forces for effective action in the new political ferment around us. Over the coming weeks we will carry comments and responses, starting this week with a contribution from Alan Johnson, author of a forthcoming biography of Hal Draper. (Full text of the appeal here).
Discussing left unity
Submitted on 4 April, 2003 - 11:52
In Solidarity 3/26 we printed an appeal for discussion and collaboration on the left so that we can unite the maximum forces for effective action in the new political ferment around us.
Over the coming weeks we will carry comments, responses, objections, starting in our next issue with a contribution from Alan Johnson.
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EDITORIAL: Unite the left to meet the new challenge!
Submitted on 21 March, 2003 - 14:26
There are openings for the growth of the revolutionary left such as we have not had for two decades. The tremendous upsurge of opposition to Bush's and Blair's war on Iraq, together with the rise of the anti-capitalist movements and the as yet limited, but radically important, revival of real trade unionism in Britain, have combined to create this situation.
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Sects, democracy and revolutionary unity
Submitted on 10 March, 2003 - 19:13
A further response to Dave Spencer's article and letters in WW.
by Gerry Byrne
Dave Spencer’s extraordinarily self-serving explanation in the WW is that Workers Fight /ICL /WSL was all fine and then turned overnight into a sect – the AWL. That’s not how I remember it. Dave allows that none of the attempts at uniting the left were predatory exercises, that they were entered into sincerely.
Our 1984 split
Submitted on 8 February, 2003 - 01:27
In Weekly Worker 466, Dave Spencer gives an account of the history of the AWL, in which he concludes that after our split in 1984 with the 'Thornett group' (now in the ISG) - when Dave himself left - we became a 'sect'. See http://www.cpgb.org.uk/worker/466/awl.html
Clive Bradley replies
Unity leaflet
Submitted on 24 May, 2000 - 09:18
handed out at London asylum (SWP) rally, 24/05/00
On 4 May the London Socialist Alliance polled over 46,000 in the constituency ballots for the GLA. 2.9%, overall, is a useful start; the LSA votes for Theresa Bennett (6.2%) in Lambeth and for Cecilia Prosper (7%) are impressive votes for an organisation which has not contested an election before.
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