Left groups and people

Socialist Green Unity Coalition, Respect, SWP, Socialist Party, Weekly Worker, IWCA, RDG, Green Party, Ken Livingstone ... and a few others.

AEIP conference, issues and debates

After opening itself out so that people can join as members, rather than just being an office with initiatives which activists on the ground can support, Another Europe is Possible is calling a conference on 8 December in London. Members will be able to debate and vote on structures and strategy. Workers’ Liberty will be attending the conference, and we encourage all socialists to attend and join the campaign to stop Brexit. We will be supporting a number of proposals and amendments. One, also backed by some leading AEIP figures, calls for a specifically Labour anti¬Brexit campaign, supported...

Sickening jokes

On 13 November, the left Labour website The Clarion put out an appeal against the “culture of lying and harassment... poisoning the environment of the left” promoted by the anonymous “Red London” Facebook page. New signatories to that statement in the last week include Sean Hoyle, national president of the Rail, Maritime and Transport Union (RMT), and other RMT activists: Marie Harrington, London Transport Women’s Officer; John Leach, London Transport Regional Organiser, etc. Also Lily Madigan, a well-known activist in Lewisham Deptford CLP; Michael Chessum, known for his work in Another...

Another Europe's conference: what we think

On 8 December Another Europe is Possible is hosting a democratic conference , where members will be debating and voting on documents relating to the organisation's structures and strategy. With Brexit round the corner, continued division in the Tory Party and the Labour Party, at the moment, just standing aside - it is more important than ever that the left builds a strong, grassroots campaign against Brexit, with positive demands for free movement and workers' rights, and a vision for a socialist Europe at its heart. Workers' Liberty will be attending the conference, and we encourage all...

A Dave Spart for our times

Private Eye magazine used to carry a regular column ("The Controversial Voice", sometimes "The Alternative Voice") by a fictional character called Dave Spart who specialised in banal non-sequiturs in a parody of leftist jargon, usually ending up contradicting himself. I was reminded of Comrade Spart as I watched Aaron Bastani’s denunciation of the Royal British Legion (RBL) on his Youtube vehicle The Bastani Report , part of the Novara Media operation run by Comrade Bastani, and streamed live on 6 November. It is an incoherent stream of consciousness (complete with much effing and blinding)...

Due process and a fair hearing

There is now a single unified “left” slate for the expanded Labour Party National Constitutional Committee. With the backing of the Campaign for Labour Party Democracy, Momentum and several smaller organisations, this slate will probably receive many Labour Party nominations and the majority of the delegate votes. The opposing slates from Labour First and Open Labour are yet to write anything publicly on what they see as their role on the NCC. The united left candidates have co-signed an article for the Labour Hub website. Some of what they have to say is promising if vague. Other questions...

Bolshevism and NGO politics, in history and today

Martin Thomas discusses In Defence of Bolshevism and some other modes of politics. This book, by way of polemics and discussions from different eras, explains what “Bolshevism” means in the field of left-wing political organising. Another way of summing it up would be: the opposite of 38 Degrees. 38 Degrees is a left-wing movement which sees itself as exceptionally progressive, democratic, and attuned to “people power”. It declares that its “campaigns are chosen and led by our three million members”. Its leaders would, I guess, consider “Bolshevism” to be old-fashioned and too hierarchical...

French Trotskyists debate Israel-Palestine

A debate is ongoing in the pages of French revolutionary journal Convergences Révolutionnaires, on the topic of Israel and Palestine. Convergences is the publication of the Étincelle group, with whom Workers’ Liberty has longstanding links. An article by Pierre Hélelou and Gil Lannou, Israël-Palestine : une nouvelle donne [Israel-Palestine: a new situation], points out reasonably enough that the “embryonic Palestinian state, whether in the West Bank or Gaza, has been unable to live up to any of its promises and limits itself now to being a mere security apparatus, politically and financially...

Left must reshape the Remain movement

The headlines following from Saturday’s People’s Vote demo have, understandably, focused on its size. Organisers say 670,000 people took part. If true, that is bigger than the Trump demo this summer. It’s plausible that it was bigger that the anti-austerity March for the Alternative in 2011, at the height of the public-sector strikes. It’s possibly the largest since the anti-war demonstrations in 2003-4. Whatever the truth, it certainly dwarfed the overwhelming majority of protests that have taken place in recent years. Workers’ Liberty took part in the “left bloc” organised by Another Europe...

Due process, not personalities

The rancour that has been produced by the upcoming nominations for the expanded National Constitutional Committee has reopened the row between the Campaign for Labour Party Democracy (CLPD) and Momentum. The Centre Left Grassroots Alliance, which included both organisations in its negotiations, was unable to reach an agreed slate. Depending on who you believe, CLPD then released the details of their preferred slate, as agreed or without agreement. There is now an ongoing back and forth as to why Momentum were unable to agree to the slate which now has the backing of the Labour Representation...

New facts on undercover cops

More than a thousand political and campaigning groups have been targeted by undercover police operations over the years since 1968. In the latest instalment of a slowly-accumulating mass of revelations, the Guardian on 15 October published a list , compiled by the Undercover Research Group, of 124 groups within which police agents were placed between 1970 and 2007. The undercover cops quite often enticed activists (generally women) into sexual relationships, and even had children with them. The list also records claims that in some cases the cops acted as provocateurs, making the groups...

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