The People’s Assembly Against Austerity, the
first major rally against the ConDems’ austerity programme since last autumn’s
TUC demonstration, showed that many rank-and-file activists are looking for a
way forward that is beyond protest.
Endorsed by a range of well-known
personalities and financially backed by the trade unions, the Assembly drew
some 4,000 people. At a time when anger against austerity has reached boiling
part, it was no great surprise that it would be well supported.
There was also a sense that calling it as a
People’s Assembly might provide an opportunity to go beyond the usual top-down
speechifying and empty left rhetoric, of which there was quite a lot. In fact,
there was too much altogether!
Len McCluskey, general secretary of Unite,
whose union provided support for the event, spoke about the possibility of mass
industrial action and demanding of the corporations: “Pay your tax, you greedy
bastards”. If they didn’t, he even called on people to make Britain
“ungovernable”.
TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said:
“We are all in this together . . . you
can count on us. The TUC will back strike action all the way, whenever people
vote for it.” The semi-religious theme of hope was on everyone’s lips,
including everyone’s favourite, Owen Jones.
But behind the speechifying, there was
precious little in terms of perspective. The two elephants in the room –
capitalism and the Labour Party – received no mention from any of the main
speakers. As for the global economic crisis, that might as well have been
taking place elsewhere in the solar system.
While McCluskey’s call is welcome, where Unite
and other union leaders have been in the three years of ConDem onslaught. There
have been local, independently staged anti-cuts protests, but at a national
level, the trade union leaders have sat on their hands.
There was a half-hearted fight on pensions
which ended in capitulation and nothing in defence of the NHS. A pledge made at
last September’s TUC conference to fight the public sector pay freeze, was, for
example, abandoned.
The main speakers never once mentioned that
on the very same day, the two Labour Party Eds – Miliband and Balls - were
pledging to continue the government’s austerity programme if and when they were
elected in 2015.
People’s Assembly chief organiser John Rees,
writing for the Morning Star, kept
schtum about the democratic deficit and the subservience of parliamentary
politics to the corporate agenda. By directing his fire only against the Tory
Party’s conference in Manchester ,
the unstated suggestion is that Labour could be the alternative when clearly it
is no such thing
Rees called for “a culture of resistance, a
supportive protest environment where strike action can become widespread and
co-ordinated”. That’s how he sees the role of People’s Assemblies. It’s a
narrow, limiting view.
One of the few contributions that got to
heart of the matter came from the eloquent disability activist and comedian
Francesca Martinez. She emphasised that “most of us are unrepresented” under
the present coalition “between politicians and big business” and that this
leaves us in new terrain. We live under “neo-capitalism”, she said in a daring
reference to what is.
The calls from O’Grady and McCluskey should
not be ignored, however. They reflect the huge anger within the working class
which the trade union leaders are trying to corral. At the same time we must be acutely conscious
that limited strike action will not turn this government nor any other.
The creation of People’s Assemblies around
the country would be an important step. Campaigning to make them more than a
way of letting off steam and turning anger into protest actions is the way
forward.
In an overflow venue down the road from
Central Halls, thanks to the work of campaigners from the Occupy movement, there
was a well-attended session on democracy. A range of views revealed a real
desire for a way forward other than waiting for a Miliband government.
In a workshop held by the Agreement of the People
campaigners, there was support for Assemblies to become nationally networked,
permanent, standing bodies and for a consensus to break the power of the
current political system. There was backing for the idea that Assemblies could
become a different way of doing politics and could discuss and draft a new
constitution.
Instead of an “ungovernable” Britain , as McCluskey wants, we actually need a Britain
governed democratically by the people. That can be achieved through a network
of assemblies to create a new democratic economic and political system that
replaces the power of capital and finance once and for all.
Corinna Lotz
AWTW secretary
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