AGS Answers Sham Democracy Shargh of Iran Whistleblower Wins
Transcription
AGS Answers Sham Democracy Shargh of Iran Whistleblower Wins
Green Socialist AGS Alliance for Green Socialism Elections 2015 Issue No 71 ISSN 1741-5497 Spring 2015 £1.00 Journal of the Alliance for Green Socialism www.greensocialist.org.uk AGS Answers Sham Democracy Shargh of Iran Whistleblower Wins Green Socialist is published by the Alliance for Green Socialism Editor: John Sillett Guest Editor for this issue: Mike Davies Editorial correspondence to: The Editor, Green Socialist, NEA 5794, Leeds LS7 3YY email: editor@greensocialist.org.uk www.greensocialist.org.uk/ . The AGS is a political alliance seeking to build a future based on the twin principles of socialism and environmental sustainability - we see these two things as being inextricably linked, each being impossible without the other. If you share our concerns and our principles, if you care about the survival of our civilization on this planet and about social justice for all who live on it, then why not join us? Membership details are on page 10. Issue No 71 - Spring 2015 Election Special In this issue: Editorial 3 Whistleblower Wins books: Tribal Next Issue Peoples Pete Relph 4 Marks 5 Shargh of Iran: election interview Nozhan Etesadosaltaneh 6 Sham Democracy Mike Davies 8 Juliet Boddington 10 Being a Candidate review: Laurel Join Us AGS Answers to Voters’ Questions The next issue of Green Socialist, no 72, will focus on foreign policy, foreign trade and foreign news. British foreign policy seems to lean more and more towards “lob in a few bombs” whenever the USA says so. Two big prospective EU trade agreements - the Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership with the USA and the Comprehensive Economic & Trade Agreement with Canada will make democracy subservient to transnationals. Countries the world over face similar struggles to those we face. If there are issues or stories you would like to see covered, please tell the editor. 10 AGS Candidates 11 Articles in this journal do not necessarily reflect the policy of the Alliance for Green Socialism unless specifically stated. Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 2 Editorial May 7th The general election is on Thursday 7 May - in case you hadn’t noticed. There is a lot of media coverage: newspapers, TV, radio. But that coverage is rather like that of the cup final or the Eurovision song contest. Most of it is about the thrill of the contest, as though this were a gladiator fight rather than a decision on how Britain is governed. In keeping with the gladiator analogy, there is a focus on individuals, who is “strong” or “weak”. A big chunk of the “news” is about the leaders and their personalities. The issues, which surely ought to come first, are trivialised or left out entirely. A good example is the coverage of the NHS. It is absolutely clear that the one really big question on the NHS is whether it is to be privatised. Is that question covered? Hardly at all. Instead we get a sequence of items about funding commitments for different initiatives, which are anyway presented in such a way as to prevent sensible comparison. Ignoring the NHS privatisation issue also enables the media to cover up the stunning extent to which Labour are complicit in the Tory plan for privatisation. It was Labour that tied the massive albatross of PFI around the neck of the NHS. It was Labour that forced hospitals to outsource (ie privatise) operations when there was no need. Most important, it was Labour that “marketised” the NHS, breaking it up into pieces that “traded” with each other, to prepare it for full privatisation. This despite a manifesto promise to do the opposite. More broadly, the fundamental issues facing the country are capitalism and whether it is viable; and the environmental crisis. These manifest themselves immediately as austerity (moving money from the poor to the rich) and global warming (are we going to do anything to save our civilisation?). There is no real discussion of these matters in the election campaigns of the major parties. Indeed, Labour is signed up to ConDem austerity, while none of the three have any serious policies to stop climate change. Mike Davies Vote ? For any individual, the answer to the whether to vote or not is simple. If you don’t vote, you are passively accepting what you get. You forfeit any moral right to criticise anything the next government does: cuts, climate change, war, oil, ... Stand ? For a political organisation like the AGS, the question of whether to stand candidates is not much more complex. A “political” organisation that fails to put its position to electors is simply not serious about its politics. The situation described above and the rigged electoral system don’t alter that. More practically, the election campaign gives huge opportunities for making AGS policies known and getting them discussed. As one candidate, I have received over 600 emails on topics like the NHS, tax and Palestine. This has not only enabled me to provide an AGS view in reply but also to send a copy of our manifesto. That kind of opportunity does not come up often! As well as emails and sending out the manifesto to media and relevant organisations, AGS members have delivered leaflets to tens of thousands of homes; and Royal Mail will be delivering tens of thousands more. There have been informal discussions on the doorstep and a diverse series of hustings meetings are in progress. As a part of the political activity of the AGS, standing in elections is important. You may perhaps ask what you should do if there is no AGS candidate in your constituency. The very simple answer is that you should stand yourself as an AGS candidate, or get someone else to stand and campaign for them. Don’t think you are not “good enough” to stand for council or parliament. You’d be a better MP than most of the corrupt rubbish we’ve got now! The only parties addressing real issues are electorally minor. The AGS manifesto and election addresses highlight these genuinely big issues. The so-called Green Party concentrates on the environment while largely ignoring capitalism. Left parties like TUSC focus solely on capitalism, totally ignoring the environmental crisis. Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 3 Whistleblower Victory at Tribunal by Pete Relph Charlotte Monroe Is a recipient of the Alliance for Green Socialism “Whistle-blower Award”. She made trade union history when she was totally cleared of the so-called charges brought against her by her employers – Barts NHS Trust. It was an outrageous attempt to rid themselves of a sincere and honest trade union representative at Whipps Cross Hospital, part of the Barts group which is in serious financial and other troubles. This hospital serves a heavily populated catchment area covering large swathes of North East London and South West Essex. Charlotte who was sacked for her good works, described as whistleblowing (a crime in their eyes) has now been recognised for her worth and reinstated in her employment by the new, ‘caretaker’ Trust governance. Charlotte Monroe has worked for the NHS for 26 years and had an impeccable record. Charlotte for ‘her sins’ once received the ‘Employee of the Year Award’ from her employers. Her apparent ‘guilt’ before fair trial was that she ‘whistleblowed’. As a trade unionist representing health staff, she made public the impending cuts planned by the Trust to the rank and file – workers and patients, factually and accountably. The appointed (by whom? – not democratically elected) leaders of the Trust were furious that this upstart dared to raise her head above the parapet and state loud and clear the Trust’s Machiavellian intentions to cut staff jobs etc. Charlotte also drew attention to the massive debt due to a scandalous PFI contract at London Hospital which is now shared by all this Trust’s hospitals at the cost of £2,000,000 a week - £100,000,000 per year paid directly from the overall health budget before a single penny is spent on actual health services. This Con-Dem Government and the New Labour predecessors consider this to be the priority. Charlotte is a fighter and did not succumb. Her union, UNISON, backed her with a supportive legal team and she gained wide-spread support from her colleagues and the local community in the hospital’s catchment area. Organisations like ‘Keep Our Health Service Public’, especially active in Waltham Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 4 Forest; ‘Redbridge Trade Council’ and others in that borough along with ‘Epping Forest Green and Democratic Left’ (an affiliate of Alliance for Green Socialism) backed her without hesitation. Media coverage e.g. by the West Essex Guardian and the Morning Star has been generally objective and supportive. When Charlotte spoke at an AGS public meeting in Loughton she demonstrated her worth and her tenacity. We applauded her and presented her with a token award – a Whistleblower’s mug, hope she enjoys drinking tea from it ha! and a book recently published by EDG&DL secretary, Pete Relph, hope she enjoyed the read if she found time to. So, what now? Prior to the announcement that cleared Charlotte at the tribunal, a swathe of management has seen fit to rapidly resign like rats quitting the sinking ship. They included: Sir Stephen O’Brien, Chair of Barts Trust; Chief Executive Peter Morrison; Chief Nurse Professor Kay Riley; and Finance Director Mark Ogden. Believed, they have received very generous monetary sums but, the details of their salaries, expenses and resignation packages are deemed confidential. In their words, ‘sensitive personal data’. No doubt exceedingly sensitive. Previous leaving packages for trust managers have been between £100,000 and £200,000 per person. All paid out of our NHS budget. The Tribunal cost an arm and a leg too– who’ll pay? Now for the Good News. Barts Trust now praises her as ‘an energetic campaigner on patient care issues’ and further states she will be able to assist in ensuring the future of Whipps Cross Hospital’s. What we really now need is a democratic revolution and genuine democratic governance of this hospital co-operating with the community it serves. And, the strangulating PFI debt must be annulled and should be the responsibility of those who initiated it in the first place. Required: a Public Inquiry to properly investigate the present parlous state of the NHS post haste after the General Election on May 7th. Action is Required! Not mere Words! BOOK REVIEW - Tribal Peoples for Tomorrow's World “Tribal Peoples for Tomorrow’s World” by Stephen Corry Freeman Press 2011 ISBN: 9781447424130 Review by Laurel Marks This book is a guide to tribal people aimed at a general readership. The author is director of Survival International -an independent, not-forprofit organization that fights for the rights of tribal people across the world. The book explores what is meant by the terms “tribal”, “indigenous” ,“race” and the very complex and controversial ways these terms are used. It asks “who are tribal people?”, “how are they different from us?”, “what has culture got to do with it?”. “Tribal Peoples for Tomorrow’s World” is of especial importance, I believe, not only because it informs us about tribal people today but because Corry also challenges our typical Western prejudices about tribal people being “backward”, “primitive” and “living in the stone age”. He stresses that the way tribal peoples live is a matter of choice -they choose to remain selfsufficient , having minimal material goods and dependent on the land for food, clothing and housing. What makes tribal people poor is the loss of their land and its resources to “powerful, profit driven markets“ ie oil, mining and logging companies , palm oil plantations, tourist “safari parks” and so on. The author points out that “Of all the various lifestyles on the planet today, the majority are different to the dominant industrialized society….The many different lifestyles ...should be a clear challenge to those who think that it is not only desirable for everyone to live like industrialized Westerners, but that everyone wants to. The truth is simply that not all do.” This really challenges Western peoples’ assumptions about being the default society . Corry’s book is quietly and, for me refreshingly, iconoclastic, not only in challenging cherished notions of Western society as the pinnacle of human “progress” but also in upturning some of our foundational beliefs, our origin stories. One such is the idea that once upon a time all peoples were hunters and gatherers until agriculture was developed in the Middle East and that this led directly to “civilisation”. Corry comments “Such a simplistic rendition of human experience is integral to the notion that tribal hunters are “backward”. In reality, it is the idea itself which is out of date: it is simply wrong and in need of urgent demolition.” He explains that early communities varied widely from primarily hunting to settled crop-growing and that many had a mixed economy of hunting , gathering, herding and plant cultivation with the emphasis sometimes varying with the seasons. This flexibility is realistic and pragmatic and applies to tribal people today. The book gives brief intro’s to tribal peoples in different areas of the world. It explores tribal/ national government relations, development, missionaries, law and order, family, religion, racist caricaturing and other contemporary problems that tribal people face today. I particularly found interesting the description of different tribal political models from kingship to true leaderless egalitarianism . “Tribal Peoples for Tomorrow’s World” is a very accessible, carefully considered, thoughtprovoking and enlightening read that, to some degree, holds a mirror up to ourselves in Western society. Last words from David Courchene, a Manitoba leader from Canada; “Our culture is creative. We are developing a twenty-first century culture. And it is and will be an Indian culture.” Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 5 Nozhan Etesadosaltaneh interviews Mike Davies for Shargh Newspaper of Iran 1-What is your prediction about the result of Britain’s election ? Conservative Labour SNP LibDem DUP Sinn Fein UKIP Plaid Cymru SDLP Green Party Others Alliance Respect 280 280 40 18 8 5 5 4 1 3 5 0 0 (302) (256) (6) (56) (8) (5) (2) (3) (3) (1) (6) (1) (1) 7-Do you think a repeat of Syriza’s success in Greece will be possible in Britain ? No. Britain is very different from Greece. 2-Observers talk about the possibility of the end of the two–party system in Britain after this election. What do you think about this issue ? The two main parties will remain dominant but may need coalition partners. Actually, of course, Britain does not have a two-party system anyway. It has a one party (capitalist) system, although that one party traditionally runs under different names: Conservative, Labour and LibDem. 3-What is the main problem of Britain today ? Capitalism - and its consequent exploitation, inequality and failure to address the environmental crisis. 4-What do you think about the performance of Cameron and liberal and conservative acts in recent years ? Acts. Exactly. Theatre. 5-In past months, we have seen the rise of an “independence” party in Britain with increased popularity, and the rise of “national front” in France, too. What is the main reason, and what do you think about this? Do you think the threat of the re-rise of fascist movements in Europe in serious ? In Britain and elsewhere, the main reason is the complete failure of the Conservative-Labour-LibDem (or equivalent) establishment to offer any alternative to capitalism. The threat of fascism may be real; but primarily it is just a tool of the capitalist establishment. 6-Left parties in Britain always defend multiculturalism. However, we see the increase of travel of jihadists from London to Syria and Iraq. Don’t you think multiculturalism is a failed project and the non-integration of migrants in mainstream society is the consequence of that ? I assume that by "multiculturalism" you mean the development of societies with people from a number of different ethnic, geographical, cultural and religious backgrounds. In that case, no, I don’t think this is a failed project. Anyway, it has been happening for thousands of years so we may as well get used to it. Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 If by "multiculturalism" you mean the deliberate separation of more recent citizens into "communities" which are supposedly monolithic and typically get funds via "community elders", then I agree that is the wrong approach. In any case, the rise of religious extremism and the flow of jihadists is a consequence of many decades of western imperialism ruining many of the countries of the Middle East. People have turned to religion (eg Hamas) as other forms of resistance to imperialism and neo-imperialism (eg the PLO) have failed them. page 6 8-The New Left believes that the working class has become integrated in the capitalism system and that left forces should concentrate on women and students movements. What do you think about this argument ? I disagree. Socialists must address all of these (overlapping) interest groups. 9-Britain has many left parties but the parties are not revolutionary ? Don’t you think the left movement in Britain is affected by the conservative c culture of Britain ? Yes. The left in Britain is both short-sighted and ineffective. I personally know members of the "Socialist Workers Party" (regarded as extreme left) who intend to vote Labour "to keep the Tories out" - an unbelievable lack of political understanding. 10-What do you think about the welfare model of Scandinavian countries ? We see the best status in human indices belongs to Sweden and Norway. Don’t you think the main reason for the current problem in Europe is disregard of social democracy ? It is true that social democracy is now very weak in Europe, because the social democratic parties (Labour, Socialists) have become simply capitalist. However, social democracy is an inherently weak and unstable policy with no ideological base. It is essentially “nice” capitalism and inevitably degrades into “not so nice” capitalism. 11A-You are the main critics of liberal democracy but you can have your party in Britain and participate freely. Don’t you think this a positive aspect of liberal democracy ? Liberal Democracy allows parties like the Alliance for Green Socialism to exist only as long as they are not successful. The state is continually increasing its powers of repression. Of course, it does not yet need to use those powers. The difference is not that Britain is “free” compared to, say, Panama, but that British capitalism is more subtle than Panamanian capitalism and controls, for the moment, without much violence. 11B-Don’t you think the capitalism has positive aspects too, for example progress in technology and medicine ? Of course capitalism has positive aspects, but these decrease by the day. Capitalism does not develop the technology needed by society but technology from which it can make profits. This includes a lot of things that are harmful to their consumers and harmful to the world. In medicine this is especially clear. Development of an Ebola vaccine did not go ahead because the drug companies could not make enough money from it - mostly only poor people catch Ebola. On the other hand vast amounts are spent on research into male baldness! And into obesity, caused by capitalism. 12-Critics of radical left arguments say the left don’t have an efficient alternative to capitalism; and that leftists are utopian and don’t pay regard to realities. What is your opinion about this ? 600,000 people using food banks is real enough. People evicted from their houses for having an extra room is real enough. Zero hours contract are real enough. Food riots in Cairo are real enough. The Alliance for Green Socialism tries to put forward policies that will help now, but also to provide a coherent way forward to a better society. Is trying to achieve a better society utopian? 17-Your parties and far-left parties always talk about the negative aspects of the US. Do you want Britain to be a partner of Russia ? Don’t you think US, in many aspects including democracy and human rights, is much better than North Korea, Cuba and China ? Again, the countries you quote are very selective. If I had to live in Latin America, I would far sooner live in Cuba than anywhere else. Cuba is far from perfect, but far better than the capitalist countries of Latin America! For example, its life-expectancy matches the USA and Britain. I know the USA very well. My daughter lives there. It is deeply corrupt, racist (yet another black man shot dead by police last week), vicious to its poor, and its health "system" is terrible. It is on the wrong path. 18-Your party is against the nuclear establishment. We see the success of left parties about this issue in Germany. What about Britain ? We oppose both nuclear power and nuclear weapons. The government wants to give money to its friends, keep central control of energy supply, and help the US politically by keeping nuclear weapons. 13-You oppose the EU. The far right parties oppose it, too. What is your difference with the far-right’s approach ? Don’t you think your approach would isolate Britain ? It is not accurate to say that the Alliance for Green Socialism "opposes the EU". Our assessment is that the EU, as it is now, is undemocratic and pro-capitalist. Our policy is that no further powers should be given to the EU unless it becomes genuinely democratic. 14-You are against the constitutional monarchy system but you can freely express your ideas and establish a political party. However, in Cuba or the USSR liberals could not expression their views and were arrested and killed. Don’t you think the European constitutional monarchy is better than the middle east or former east block republics ? You quote countries very selectively. People are killed for their political views in many right wing countries. Latin America, dominated for years by the USA, has been a classic example. Constitutional monarchy is not the worst system in the world. It is a useful system for capitalism, while capitalism is able to control without violence. As I said above, capitalism will not hesitate to use extreme violence if that becomes necessary for it to maintain control. 15-Why not join the Labour Party ? What is your party’s difference with Labour ? They can have an effect on the power structure but you can not. The Labour Party is deeply capitalist. Your last point above is irrelevant: Labour could (if it wanted) change the power structure. But it does not want to do so. As well ask why we do not join the Conservatives. 16-Why doesn’t your party get the chance to have seats in EU and Britain parliaments ? Two reasons: (a) The capitalist hegemony over our society is very strong. (b) The "first past the post" voting system in Britain makes it difficult for a small party. 19-What is your opinion on privatization in Britain ? In the middle east countries some economic experts say privatization is necessary for economic developments. What is your opinion ? Privatisation always puts taxpayers money into shareholders pockets. It always exploits workers to increase its profits. It always provides a worse service. 20-Most left parties in Britain, for example the socialist worker party, have good relations with Muslim communities because of their “antiimperialistic” rhetoric. However, the left have differences with Muslims about social issues, for example women issues ? What do you think about this and what is your approach about Muslim migrants ? The SWP (and some other left parties) do whatever their Muslim adherents or allies tell them. Our approach to Muslim immigrants is the same as our approach to everyone else. We oppose discrimination. We also oppose any cultural, religious or traditional practice that harms people's human rights. 21-We confront increased air pollution and global warming, but why can the left and greens parties not get many votes in European countries? Surely they should participate in coalitions ? The Alliance for Green Socialism has been working over a decade to form coalitions with other left and green groups. However, it is not easy. Most left groups do not care about the environmental crisis and ignore it in their material. On the other hand, the sectarian Green Party will not even talk to other groups. Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 7 Sham democracy - near the end? Mike Davies The last meeting in 2014 of Leeds Alliance for Green Socialism discussed the apparent fragmentation of the British political party system. We were puzzled. TWO-PARTY THEATRE The British “two and a bit” party system has served the ruling class well. For decades it has provided the appearance of democracy, the appearance of choice, while actually offering no choice at all. Tory governments explicitly serve the ruling class – those with wealth and power. Labour governments actually do just the same, while offering the pretence of difference. Labour provides an essential safety valve for ordinary people opposed to Tory attacks. The classic example was the election that ended the Thatcher era and brought in Blair. People thought they were voting against Tory policies, but just got the continuation of those policies by Labour. As for the Lib Dems? Well, what can you say? Westminster provides the theatre to distract people from the real political process of the exercise of ruling class power. The civil service – Whitehall – traditionally provides a second, precautionary layer of right wing control. Even were a “political leader” to run amok and actually attempt to make policy independently of the ruling class, Whitehall would simply prevent the implementation of any such policy. Yet what seems to happening at the moment, on the stage of this pretend electoral politics, is a significant change to this established theatrical arrangement. One indication is the rise of UKIP that looks to destabilise the Tory party. It may lead to coalition government becoming the norm. A second is the sudden lurch towards a rag-bag of inconsistent “devolution” initiatives, ranging from giving Scotland half-control over income tax to the half-baked, undefined transfer of some powers to Greater Manchester and other arbitrarily defined and arbitrarily chosen areas. Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 8 MEDIA BACKING FOR UKIP UKIP’s meteoric rise is clearly endorsed by the ruling class. UKIP has had a stunning degree of media coverage and support, and we all know who controls the media. Why would the ruling class want to change radically a two-party arrangement that has served them so well and seems set to continue to do so? One hypothesis is division within the ruling class over Europe. This is, of course, in line with the supposed basis of UKIP. This hypothesis has two big weaknesses. Firstly, the ruling class normally sorts out such issues within its own circle, not in the theatre of pretend politics. Secondly, although it is true that there do exist capitalists and big companies who want to leave Europe, the overwhelmingly majority of British capitalists favour – or even rely on – remaining in the EU. There is certainly not a consensus view among the ruling class in favour of leaving the EU. A second hypothesis is that pushing UKIP is a response to the general disillusionment with politics – that is, with the pretend politics of the Westminster theatre. This is a little more credible. Certainly most people are deeply suspicious of “politicians”. Of course, such disillusionment is an inevitable consequence of the division between real politics (principally the taking of decisions by the ruling class) and the pretend politics of Westminster (presented by the media as though it were real). As people find that, no matter how they vote, nothing changes, they are bound to question the theatre with which they are presented. Perhaps the UKIP phenomenon is an attempt by the ruling class to defuse anger at this con-trick,; or at least an attempt at least to divert it into right wing populism rather than genuine left wing opposition. But why should the ruling class suddenly become worried by a disillusionment they have positively fostered for decades? Surely, the more people who write off politics as a waste of time, the better for the ruling class. DEVOLUTION MESS Turning to the “devolution” question, the ruling class seems set to throw the whole British constitutional settlement up in the air. This applies not merely to Scotland after the referendum. It applies not merely to the four nations of Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and England itself, with proposals like preventing Scottish MPs voting on “English” matters. Suddenly, there are also proposals – or even facts on the ground before any proposals have even been discussed – for arbitrary “devolution” of arbitrary powers to undefined chunks of England. England has had a bizarrely inconsistent set of local government arrangements ever since the last Tory reorganisation, but these latest moves are of huge significance. Again, the question is why would the ruling class want to change radically, at so many levels, in such complicated ways, a constitutional arrangement that has served them so well? Why create such a ghastly constitutional mess? The harder it is to hold anyone to account, the easier it is to have them do the will of those wielding real power with no questions asked. We can probably disregard the suggestion that it is for Tory political advantage. Why should the ruling class care whether we have a Tory government or a Labour government, given that both will do its bidding with equal readiness? The ruling class has shown that it is not willing to take the steps necessary to avert this catastrophe. Indeed, a capitalist ruling class is unable to do so because such action would undermine the whole basis of capitalism. But the ruling class is not so stupid as to fail to see what is coming. They will not act to stop the environmental disaster, but they do want to arrange things so that they, as far as possible, are insulated from the consequences. A more likely hypothesis is that the ruling class sees an advantage in blurring as much as possible any remaining political accountability. It is already true that most people have little idea what level of government is responsible for what services and decisions, let alone who determines the funding for such. Discussions on the doorstep show that, even now, most people do not know who is responsible for roads, hospitals, business rates, social services, police or the fire service. You name it, accountability for it is blurred. If the British parliament becomes some kind of hybrid between English and British, and some (but not other) local English areas have significant devolution (including some tax powers), no-one will have the faintest idea who is responsible for what. Politicians in the electoral theatre are already largely unaccountable. After the changes envisaged, you will need a PhD to work out who controls whatever you are concerned about, let alone to try to hold them to account. Of course, this is not to condemn devolution as such. Clearly defined, rational devolution of power to a more local level is a good idea. But ill-defined schemes to devolve here but not there, this but not that, simply create a cloak to hide behind, instead of the transparency and accountability we deserve. That, of course, suits the ruling class just fine. A SEA CHANGE? A possible hypothesis is that both the promotion of UKIP to destabilise the existing pretend parties and the creation of a constitutional mish-mash are motivated by a ruling class assessment that the comparatively stable political and economic conditions of the past are coming to an end. The AGS is based on the idea that ecological and social issues are inextricably linked. Clearly climate change has the capacity to destroy our society. The consequences even of “success” in limiting temperature rises to 2 degrees centigrade will be floods, droughts, mass species extinction, wars for water and for agricultural land, and the creation of tens of millions of refugees. And we are certainly not looking at “success”, but at global temperature rises of at least four or five degrees. Perhaps these quite dramatic political changes are aimed at removing the remaining safeguards against arbitrary government and creating a state much more directly controlled by the ruling class. Coalition governments are entirely unaccountable, even concerning their own manifesto pledges. Incomprehensible arrangements for local/regional/ national government mean unaccountable local/ regional/national government. Effectively both changes move us much closer to an unqualified ruling class dictatorship. Such a strategy would be a big departure from that of the last few decades. Indeed, it would arguably be a departure from the strategy of accommodation with democracy pursued since the 1848 “year of revolution”. It would suggest that the ruling class recognises the dire consequences of climate change and economic collapse and is hugely concerned to ensure that ordinary people have to bear these consequences, not them. It may be that the ruling class no longer believes the current arrangement of sham two-party democracy and a more-or-less comprehensible structure will suffice to achieve this in the future. Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 9 Being a Parliamentary Candidate by Juliet Boddington The editorial in this issue urges members to stand in elections to provide a genuine alternative to the major capitalist parties. How hard is this to do? How much work is it? Does it destroy your life? CALIBRE Do you think you’re not “good enough”, not “eloquent enough”, not “media-friendly” enough, not “bright enough” or not “handsome enough” to stand? I bet you are: Better than David Cameron at everything More eloquent than Ed Miliband More media friendly than George Osborne Brighter than Ed Balls Better looking than John Prescott Get Celia Foote to authorise you as AGS Get 10 electors in your constituency to sign that they are happy for you to stand Submit these papers plus deposit on time to your local elections office If you are worried about the ten signatures, don’t be. Maybe you know ten people locally. But even if you don’t, it’s a doddle. Knock on twenty doors and ten people will sign - they don’t have to vote for you, just sign. That has never taken more than two hours, and usually less than an hour. MONEY CAMPAIGNING It costs a £500 deposit to become a candidate. You probably don’t have £500. But the AGS can probably raise it for you. To run an effective campaign also needs at least £500 to print election addresses. Ditto. The money is not your problem. The basic parliamentary campaign is a free delivery of your election address to every residence. Apart from handing it over to Royal Mail, you don’t have to do anything. Good if you can, but you don’t have to. Keep track of any big donations for AGS Treasurer Malcolm Christie. STANDING AFTERWARDS To stand, all you need to do is: Fill in a few forms Fill in and submit the expenses form. (No, you don’t get the money back!) To: Alliance for Green Socialism Freepost RRLC-YBLL-CCXA WHITBY YO21 3HF The world needs more Green Socialists and Green Socialism needs more advocates. Why not subscribe to this journal, or better still, why not join us (and get the journal free)? I would like to subscribe to Green Socialist I would like to join the AGS Name .....................................................………………………….........................................................……................................. Address …….....................................………………........................................................…………………...........…................... …….……………………………………………………………………….…............................................................................... …….……………………………………………………………………….…............................................................................... Telephone ..................................................... E-mail .................................................……………................................................ Subscription to Green Socialist alone costs £7 for 4 issues. AGS membership is: £30 a year or £2.50 a month (full income), £18 a year of £1.50 a month (low income), £7 a year or 58p a month (negligible income) or £7 a year or 58p a month (students). Cheques payable to: Alliance for Green Socialism. You can join online at www.greensocialist.org.uk/ You can donate online at www.greensocialist.org.uk/ Any non-member donating £7 (or more) will be sent the next four issues of Green Socialist. The discount for low-waged, unwaged and student members is subsidised by those who pay the full-rate so please feel free to make a donation according to your pocket. If you really want to assist the AGS then a Standing Order (even for a small monthly amount) would be Immensely helpful. Tick the box if you want us to send you a Standing Order form Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 10 QUESTIONS FROM VOTERS: AGS ANSWERS A selection of answers from AGS candidates to questions from voters. DEBT I'm just one of three million people in Great Britain currently in problem debt. Many millions more are at risk of falling into difficulty. If you're elected as an MP in May you will represent me in Parliament. So I wanted to know what action you will take to help people like me avoid problem debt in the future. In my view, debt is one of the scourges of modern capitalism. It is not enough that many of us are impoverished. We live in a society which pressures us to spend - indeed, it suggests that spending is the way to happiness! Utterly unscrupulous companies make a fortune out of this situation by offering credit at unbelievably exorbitant rates. The first thing I would try to do if elected is outlaw the ridiculously high interest rates currently charged. This would be with retrospective effect. No-one who charges thousands of percent in interest has any right to payment. I support the six aims of the debt campaign: 1. Ensure that every family has £1,000 in savings to cover a sudden cost or income shock. 2. Ensure all low income households can access low cost credit products. 3. Scale up free debt advice so that it reaches the 1.4 million people who urgently need advice but aren’t getting it. 4. Ensure everyone dealing with problem debt gets the protection against interest, charges, enforcement and collections they need. 5. Protect children and families from the harm of aggressive debt collection practices. 6. Ensure debt solutions are fit for purpose, and do not have a disproportionate impact on people’s life chances. However, I must be honest and doubt the feasibility of the first. It is not clear to me how government can “ensure” this. Certainly, though, it should be a target. I attach the manifesto of the Alliance for Green Socialism. Comments welcomed. signed this promise. Please sign the Frack Free Promise and publicly commit to opposing fracking. The Alliance for Green Socialism and I as an AGS candidate are deeply opposed to fracking and other forms of extreme energy extraction. I had already signed the Greenpeace pledge. In fact I visited the Barton Moss fracking protest several times last year. I even launched a private prosecution against Igas, the fracking company, for obstruction of the highway. They had blocked a public footpath with an eight foot metal fence topped with razor wire. Unfortunately the Director of Pubic Prosecutions took over the prosecution and discontinued it. Apparently the DPP does not regard an eight foot metal fence topped with razor wire as an obstruction. I attach a text copy of the Manifesto of the Alliance for Green Socialism. Criticisms and improvements invited. If I or the AGS can help in any way with your university campaign, do let us know. ——————————————————————— GENDER th Whoever is elected on 7 May as my MP will have crucial opportunities while in parliament to tackle sexism. Inequality between women and men remains deeply embedded in our society. It’s something I care strongly about. I want my MP to be someone who is committed to taking effective action to promote women’s equality. • Since the 2010 general election women have become poorer. Will you ensure all economic policies are fully and properly assessed for their potential impact on gender inequality? • Women make up less than a quarter of MPs. Will you take action to increase the number of women in politics, including positive action measures where necessary? • Over 1 in 3 women have experienced domestic violence in the UK. Will you repeal cuts to legal aid that trap women in abusive relationships? • 85,000 women are raped in England and Wales every year. Will you secure dedicated national funding for specialist domestic and sexual violence support services? ----------------------------------------------------------------FRACKING I am more than concerned about fracking and I would like you to oppose it. Myself and a collection of students have made it our aim to get other university students only to vote for candidates that have Gender inequality is a hang-over from the days when women were regarded as naturally inferior, indeed as mere chattels. Some steps have been taken to improve matters, but such inequality remains, as you say, deeply embedded. Currently Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 11 women are (largely) legally equal but also (largely) significantly disadvantaged. I will seek to ensure all economic policies are fully assessed for their impact on gender inequality I will act to increase the number of women MPs, including by positive discrimination. I do, however, realise that this will be difficult within our current FPTP single member constituency system. I do not support further entrenching the power of political parties, but it is difficult to see how a better gender balance could be achieved other than by imposing quotas or proportions on these parties. Perhaps you could let me know of any ideas you have for achieving our shared aim of more women MPs. I will seek the immediate repeal of the cuts to legal aid that trap women in abusive relationships. Our legal system is largely inaccessible to most people. Without legal aid it is totally inaccessible to many. The removal of legal aid from many abuse cases is probably the worst cut of all. It speaks volumes about the nature of those who imposed it. I strongly support better, specialised, properly funded support services addressing domestic and sexual violence. Although there have, over the last few years, been some examples of significant improvement, there have also been examples of the worst kind of dismissive approach. This has even occurred in specialist units. I am not sure whether your question is intended to include police investigatory "services" - which vary hugely - or is more focussed on support for victims, such as support in court or provision of refuges. The effect of recent cuts on women's refuges particularly concerns me. In both cases, I am not entirely sure whether "dedicated funding" would be the most effective approach. Certainly, far more needs to be done. If you could point me at any researched proposals on this, I would be very grateful. I might add that I believe pay gender inequality still to be a significant problem; and that the proportion of women in leadership roles in industry and commerce is far too small. Effective action has been taken on these matters in a few European countries. I have attached a copy of the AGS manifesto. We would be grateful for any improvements you might like to suggest. Keep up the pressure. ———————————————————————MEDIA I am happy to add my signature to the pledge below: Media Ownership & Plurality: Pledge If democracy is to flourish, we will need diverse and independent voices in the media. Yet media Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 12 concentration in Britain remains at worrying levels and, despite what we have learned over the last few years, a handful of media corporations and individuals continue to have considerable power over our news, cultural life and access to information. There is a danger that the increasingly digital media environment could well increase this risk. I therefore pledge to take steps within Parliament and my own party to promote the growth of a more pluralistic media environment by pressing for legislation that will provide new funding for invaluable areas such as local news, investigative journalism, youth media and digital innovation, and that will temper the power of the largest media companies through the introduction of thresholds in specific media markets. I would add a reservation and two extensions. The reservation is that we must be careful, in providing funding, not to move towards state control of any aspect of the media. Of course, that could hardly be worse than the “Murdoch control” we have currently, but it remains a concern. The first extension is that I would push for a legally enforceable rule that UK media can only be owned by UK citizens. That is not an assertion of nationalism. It is merely a pragmatic way to avoid the kind of multinational media empires from which we currently suffer. The second is that I would push for legislation banning common ownership of media in different delivery modes, such as TV and newspapers. ————————————————————— NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE The NHS will be a major factor in how I decide to vote. Please will you tell me where you stand? Would you vote to stop NHS contracts going to private companies? Would you help make sure the NHS is not opened up to the US health industry, by voting against TTIP unless it excludes healthcare? Would you vote to fund the NHS properly? Thanks very much for your email about the NHS. I commit to keeping the NHS free at the point of use. I deplore the current squeeze on NHS funding. This is a classic pre-privatisation process whereby a good public service is deliberately run down in order to create a completely spurious case for privatisation as a solution to its problems. I am committed to proper funding for the NHS so that it remains the best health service in the world, free at the point of use. The NHS has been let down by governments over more than twenty years. The last Labour government, directly contrary to its manifesto commitment, marketised the NHS to prepare it for privatisation. The current coalition of Tories and LibDems, contrary to the agreement establishing the coalition, proceeded to push through the actual privatisation Act. I pledge my support to repeal the Health and Social Care Act 2012 in full and commit that all services that have been privatised will be placed back in public ownership of the NHS. I am also committed to removing the NHS out of TTIP. I copy below recent replies to other constituents on the NHS and TTIP. I also draw to your attention the AGS manifesto, attached. ---------------------------------Thanks for your email about the NHS, a subject close to my heart. If I were to be elected at the next general election, I would strongly support the inclusion of a Bill in the first Queen’s Speech after the election to reverse 25 years of marketisation and privatisation in the National Health Service (under Labour and ConDems), abolish the purchaser-provider split, reestablish appropriate local Health Authorities and other public bodies and fully restore the NHS in England as an accountable public service, publicly owned and delivered, free at the point of use. I attach a copy of the AGS manifesto that addresses this and other issues. I and the AGS believe that the public provision of free health care to all is a hallmark of a civilised society. Moves by the last two governments to privatise the NHS are despicable. Our policy is the complete reversal of the Health & Social Care Act and of the pre-privatisation carried out by Labour when in power. In line with this we would support the NHS Reinstatement Bill. ----------------——————————————-----------TTIP As a candidate in my local constituency, I would like you to oppose the TTIP trade deal. I’m really worried about the effect of TTIP (The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership) on further privatisation of our NHS and public services, as well as the inclusion of an ISDS clause which could allow corporations to sue governments. A document leaked recently showed that the NHS still isn’t exempt from the deal. You can read more about it here: https://secure.38degrees.org.uk/ttip-leaked Please can you tell me what you will do to stop this deal and protect our public services? Thanks very much for your email on TTIP. I was very pleased to receive it. Each year the AGS chooses three top campaigning priorities. For 2015 our number one priority is stopping TTIP. You will see from the attached manifesto of the Alliance for Green Socialism that we oppose TTIP. We also oppose CETA, the similar proposed treaty with Canada that is further down the track towards ratification than TTIP. CETA will probably come up for ratification towards the end of 2015. The reasons for our opposition include those you mention. TTIP threatens all our standards on safety, food, rights at work, etc. It promotes and locks in privatisation of public services. Politically, these “trade” treaties are a means of neutering democracy by giving corporations parity in law with elected governments. Indeed, it is worse than that because any disputes go to an ISDS “arbitration panel” rather than a real court. ——————————————————————NURSING Thanks for your email on nursing policy. I support the Nursing Counts priorities. Nursing is sometimes seen as less important than doctoring. I think it is equally important. Often the quality of nursing care is both a crucial factor in treatment outcome and the main determinant of the patient experience. I attach a text copy of the manifesto of the Alliance for Green Socialism, which addresses our overall policy on the NHS. Suggestions for improvement would be welcomed. In Leeds the AGS is heavily involved in local campaigns in support of the NHS and to have its privatisation reversed. I am currently Vice President of Leeds Trades Council. Please do check that your union is affiliated. ——————————————————————— PALESTINE I was very concerned by the attack on Gaza last summer, and the death of over 2000 Palestinians. As you are a candidate for my constituency in the forthcoming General Election, I am writing to ask your views on Israel and Palestine, before I decide how to vote. You are probably aware that the issue of Palestinian human rights is a central concern to many more British voters than ever before. Hundreds of thousands of letters were sent to MPs asking them to oppose Israel's bombardment of Gaza and to support the recognition of Palestine as a State. With the election of a Government in Israel led by Benjamin Netanyahu, who has pledged to prevent the creation of a Palestinian State and to increase Israel settlement growth on Palestinian territory, the situation has become even more urgent. Could you please email me to indicate if you agree with the following statements: 1. I urge the UK Government to uphold the principles of equality, human rights and international law in all its relations and dealings with Israel. Yes/no 2. I consider the construction of Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land in the West Bank and East Jerusalem to be illegal and unjustifiable. Yes/no In achieving these principles, what are your views on the following steps that a future UK Government could take: 1. Do you agree that one of the first acts of the next UK Government should be the recognition of Palestine? Yes/no/don't Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 13 know 2. Do you agree that the blockade on Gaza should be lifted immediately? Yes/no/don't know 3. Do you agree that we should stop trade with Israel's settlements on Palestinian land, and stop settlement goods being sold in Britain? Yes/no/don't know 4. Do you agree that the EU Israel Association Agreement should be suspended until Israel meets its human rights obligations? Yes/no/don't know 5. Do you agree that the government should stop supplying arms to Israel until it complies with international law? Yes/no/ don't know The short answer is yes to all of your questions. I congratulate you for asking these questions of candidates. An AGS national committee member visited Palestine a few years ago, including Hebron. The Israeli occupation is an obscene, racist affront to civilisation. What is truly remarkable is how the Zionists have "legitimised" their theft of Palestinian land in 1948 and their continued expansion, apparently without limit, stealing more and more Palestinian territory. I attach a copy of the AGS manifesto. If you have suggestions for how this might be improved, with regard to Palestine or otherwise, please let me know. —————————————————————— PUBLIC SERVICES ers, while directing DWP to be unbelievably harsh with claimants. And, as you implicitly point out, the legislative tax framework is currently wide open to abuse. I attach a text copy of the Manifesto of the Alliance for Green Socialism. Criticisms and improvements invited. I am currently Vice-President of Leeds Trades Union Council, so I am very much aware of the trade union issues you raise. ——————————————————————PUBLIC SERVICE USERS BILL I am writing to ask if you will support the introduction of a Public Service Users Bill to put the people who use public services at the heart of your party's election manifesto. Right now, services can be privatised or outsourced and I don't get a say. Since 2010, UK government spending on outsourcing has doubled to £88 billion yet I can't see contracts agreed in my name and paid for with our public money. I can't access data about how private providers perform and when they do a bad job, there's nothing I can do. A Public Service Users Bill would change all that, promoting transparency and accountability, making sure government – local and national – consults the public, looks at public ownership and puts forward in-house bids to check value for money, as well as promoting quality and social value. Freedom of Information would apply, contracts and data would be publicly available and we would have a right to recall poorly performing providers. Polling shows that the policies in the Bill would be highly popular . I readily pledge support on all five issues. Thanks very much for your question. • If elected, I will campaign to end the public sector pay cap as it is unfair, unnecessary and damaging to the economy • If elected, I will campaign for well-funded public services, publicly accountable and delivered by valued public sector staff – and oppose privatisation and offshoring • If elected, I will support a well-resourced publiclydelivered social security service that provides a decent standard of living, and support the removal of the sanctions regime • If elected, I will support investment in HMRC and legislative changes to close the tax gap • If elected, I will encourage the government to engage in meaningful negotiations with all recognised trade unions, and to restore check-off and facility time for reps. You will see from the manifesto of the Alliance for Green Socialism, attached, that we are very strongly opposed to privatisation and in favour of the involvement in decision-making of those who use public services. The AGS manifesto includes support for the proposed Public Service Users Bill. I would add that we should not just stop privatisation but reverse it. I would also add that, while I support the fourth point without reservation, we should not primarily blame HMRC. The fact that they are under-resourced is of a piece with the acquiescence of both ConDem and Labour governments in tax avoidance. In addition, governments direct them to “go easy” on rich avoidGreen Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 14 The current situation, supported in government by Labour, Tories and LibDems, is utterly disgraceful. So-called "commercial confidentiality" is used to hide the whole process from the public and to protect private deliverers from scrutiny of the "service" they provide. Complete transparency on both bid and subsequent performance should be an absolute condition of being allowed to bid to provide any public service. Of course, I am strongly opposed to privatisation anyway. But I am a realist and believe that, if it is not yet possible to stop privatisation, the worst aspects of the current system should be changed. I will ensure that a statement of support, as described above, for a Public Service Users Bill is both placed on the AGS website and sent to the media. Incidentally, in the version of the Bill that I have seen, para 1 (5) is pretty weak. Requiring authorities to “… have regard to …” consultation responses is far from binding. It should be stronger. TAX DODGERS TRIDENT I'm concerned about the recent revelations that HSBC has been helping the super-rich dodge their tax, and that the government has not been acting to stop this. As a prospective parliamentary candidate in my area, can you let me know what you pledge to do to crack down on tax dodging and prevent scandals like HSBC from happening again? I am writing to you to ask your views on the UK's Trident nuclear weapon system. I am particularly concerned because a decision on whether or not to replace Trident - at a cost of £100bn - is due in 2016 and successfully elected Members of Parliament will have to vote on this. I believe that maintaining Trident is irrelevant to modern security threats; runs counter to our Non-Proliferation Treaty commitment to nuclear disarmament; and is not the best use of tax payers' money given the cuts deemed necessary in other areas of public spending. In particular, before deciding how I will vote, I would like to know your views on the following four questions: a) The UK's submarine-based Trident nuclear weapon system is approaching the end of its operational life. Do you think the UK should replace its nuclear weapon system? b) he next government will conduct a Strategic Defence and Security Review. Do you think it should consider the possibilities and implications of scrapping and not replacing Trident? c) The next government will need to attend the nuclear NonProliferation Treaty Review Conference in New York. Do you think it should support a nuclear weapons convention or ban, similar to those for chemical or biological weapons? d) The next government will have to decide whether to carry out the current coalition government's projected austerity programme. Do you think spending £100 billion on Trident replacement can be justified? Yes, quite. You and I are happy to pay our taxes as a necessary contribution to a civilised society. Yet those far richer avoid or evade. They are allowed to get away with it because this is a society structured around the rich and powerful. It is designed to favour them at the expense of ordinary people, and it does so very effectively. When HMRC allows rich tax cheats to get away with tax evasion (and there is really no other way to describe HMRC practice) they are behaving normally in such a society. When Cameron appoints as a minister a man who, as Cameron well knows, has overseen systematic tax avoidance and evasion, he is behaving normally in our system. I attach a copy of the manifesto of the Alliance for Green Socialism which addresses the question of tax, tax avoidance and tax evasion. I pledge to promote vigorously a radical change in the way tax is assessed and the way it is collected. Tax should be assessed on a "common sense" basis. That is, any person or company who makes or generates, processes, or sells goods or services, in this country, or profits from the foregoing, should pay tax in this country on those activities. The nonsense of huge corporations actually trading in Britain but pretending to trade from Luxemburg or Ireland for tax reasons must be stopped dead. Any person residing or economically active in Britain should pay tax in this country on their assets and their income. In collecting tax, the criminal law should be applied to the full. The government is ready enough to pursue people who obtain trivial amounts of benefits to which they are not entitled. It must prosecute tax evasion with equal vigour - or, rather, with far more vigour, since the amounts involved are far, far greater. The practice of allowing criminal tax evaders to get off without prosecution can only encourage more tax evasion. Any person or company that facilitates tax avoidance or tax evasion, such as HSBC and Lord Green, must also be prosecuted. Unfortunately the Tories, LibDems and Labour have all, when in government, been equally complicit in allowing tax avoidance and evasion on a massive scale. This must stop. Thanks for writing to me about Trident. I strongly agree with the views expressed in your email. I attach a copy of the AGS manifesto that makes our position clear. Not only should the UK drop any idea of Trident replacement, it should scrap Trident itself. There is no point in a weapons system that cannot legally or morally be used. Its retention is also contrary to our treaty commitments under the NPT. Of course any security review must include a review of Trident and its replacement. Any such review that did not consider this would be an empty farce. The NPT review meeting should indeed consider a ban on nuclear weapons. Britain entered into the treaty in bad faith and has never attempted to fulfil its terms. We should start now. Whilst I do not believe there are any circumstances in which Britain should retain or upgrade nuclear weapons, the current economic situation also highlights the huge waste of money involved in replacing Trident. There are many far more worthwhile uses for £100m, especially at a time when Tories, LibDems and Labour all justify "austerity" on the grounds of lack of funds. AGS candidates and Green Socialist Editor John Sillett would welcome comments, criticisms and suggested improvements on any of these (rapid) responses. Green Socialist no 71 Spring 2015 page 15 Green Socialist is published by the Alliance for Green Socialism, freepost NEA 5794, Leeds, LS7 3YY and printed by LS1 Print, Goodman St, Leeds, LS10 1NZ