The second conference of the Campaign for a New Workers’ Party (CNWP)
took place on Saturday 12 May. The conference was highly successful and
a central London hall was packed out with over 350 people united in
their desire to develop the campaign further.

The conference
was opened by CNWP Chair Dave Nellist, who pointed out that it was
apposite to be meeting in the same week that Tony Blair announced his
departure from power. But when Blair leaves office on 27 June,
“unfortunately he won’t be taking the entire cabinet with him”.
The world is a less safe place
as a result of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, and in Britain, young
people now face massive debts consisting of loans and payments
equivalent to “three mortgages”: the first for a house, the second for
rising pension contributions and the third for university fees. However,
house prices are so high now, that workers such as fire-fighters,
teachers and health workers are unable to afford a house at all in many
parts of the country.
Voters in elections are not
faced with “three competing parties” because “the Tories, New Labour and
the Liberal Democrats agree on all the essential issues – at least
between elections.” The CNWP needs to build further on the 2,500
signatories it has so far, by sinking deep roots in local communities
and trade unions to help create the conditions as soon as possible for
the existence of a new party.
Chris
Baugh, Assistant general secretary of the civil service trade union PCS
addressed the conference in a personal capacity and expressed his
support for the CNWP. He condemned Gordon Brown’s “arbitrary and
swingeing” 100,000 job cuts plan in the civil service and said such cuts
will inevitably damage vital services. He also condemned Brown as the
chief architect of the NHS funding crisis, the huge privatisation
programme being forced on 20,000 workers in the Ministry of Defence, and
the vicious spending limits across the public sector. “PCS members will
take some convincing that there is any material difference between Blair
and Brown” he concluded. He reminded the conference that three million
public sector workers had threatened strike action in the run-up to the
last general election over the government’s plan to increase the pension
age, and that this forced a significant government climb down. More
recently, on May Day this month, successful PCS strike action shocked
the government and was a warning of further action if cuts continue.
Due
to unforeseen family commitments the actor and Shrewsbury Two campaigner
Ricky Tomlinson was unable to attend the conference, but just 48 hours
before hand recorded a video address. In his ‘virtual’ appearance,
Ricky outlined the campaign still running over the jailing of 24
construction workers for picketing in 1972. He went on to he express his
anger at the way New Labour has made things “worse and worse” for
workers in Britain. He went on to say: “I don’t think there will be a
difference between Blair and Brown because they’ve worked so closely
together.. New Labour doesn’t represent working class people.. I call on
workers to unite to form a left wing socialist party to represent the
working class. There’s no shortcuts, no easy fix.” He closed his
comments by stating: “New Labour, my arse!” This video can be viewed
on the CNWP website here.
Charter debate
The first conference
debate was on the CNWP’s charter. In proposing an updated charter, CNWP
assistant secretary and Socialist Party (SP) member, Hannah Sell,
explained that its wording needed to cover the period up until the next
conference, so it deliberately concentrated on the most enduring issues
and government attacks.
Hannah argued that it is
preferable to keep a clause stating the need for socialism in the
charter. But she argued against resolutions being put to the conference
by Workers’ Power (WP) and the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB)
wanting clauses for the ‘revolutionary overthrow’ of capitalism and how
it could be achieved, because: “It is not our job to sound as left and
radical as possible. We need a programme that is readily taken up by
workers.., one that they can identify with. Most of these workers have
not yet drawn conclusions on how socialism will be achieved”.
In
the debate that followed, four organisations– the Socialist Alliance
(SA), WP, the Campaign for a Marxist Party and the CPGB moved four
resolutions and amendments. The debate also included contributions from
conference delegates, including from Onay Kasab of Greenwich Unison, who
spoke on the battle against pay cuts by employees of Greenwich council
and from Alec Thraves, a Socialist Party candidate in the Wales Assembly
election, who concluded: “In Wales many people voted for the party most
likely to defeat New Labour because there is no mass workers’ party.
They need a voice”.
In the voting at the end of the
debate, the CNWP officers’ proposed updated charter was overwhelmingly
carried, along with the amendment from the SA. The three other
amendments and resolutions were defeated.
Debating the
way forward
The second conference debate was
on the way forward for the CNWP. Secretary of the CNWP and Unison NEC
member, Roger Bannister, moved a
resolution from the CNWP officers, which called for the CNWP to
“vigorously campaign to popularise the idea of a new mass workers’ party
over the coming year” and outlined a number of steps towards doing this.
The debate that followed was opened by the moving of three resolutions,
from Berkshire CNWP (subsequently carried), the SA (defeated) and
Workers’ Power (defeated).
In moving the Berkshire
resolution, Terry Pearce reported on a “spirited” campaign in his area
to defend council housing, and called for a regular CNWP newsletter to
be produced that can report on all campaigns around the country.
Vanessa from the health service
campaign PUSH spoke in this session on the need to build for a protest
against NHS cuts and privatisation in Parliament Square on 5 July. She
expressed her frustration with the union leaders’ delay of a national
demonstration to save the NHS – now called for 13 October – by asking
“will October ever come?”
Burslem
postal worker, Jane, explained why she and other local postal workers
had been forced to take nine days of strike action. During the second
strike, 400 managers had been drafted in to do the work of 100 workers!
Darfur refugee Sadiq Abakar, made a moving appeal for help with his
campaign for asylum, and that of other Darfur refugees whose lives are
in danger.
Pete McClaren, a member of the
SA, said to the conference that his press releases went out without any
unwelcome political edits by other CNWP officers, in this way making it
clear that he was happy with the working relationship that exists within
the campaign. There was however a difference at the conference between
the SP and SA on the present structure of the CNWP, with the SA calling
for individual membership to be introduced now and there to be a right
of representation on the steering committee regardless of the size of
affiliated organisations. These issues should be discussed further in
the coming period to attempt to reach agreement.
Following
commissions and the election of a new steering committee, the conference
was closed with an inspiring speech by Tony Mulhearn, who was president
of the Liverpool District Labour Party (DLP) during the 1980s battles of
Liverpool council against the then Tory government. In summing up what
he described as “a great conference”, he said that the politics of the
mainstream parties today is to “make promises, get elected and then to
break promises”, but that in Liverpool in the 1980s the Marxist and
other leaders of the DLP carried out their promises. By building a firm
basis in local communities, we can again “be absolutely positive that we
can build a mass movement”.
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Pete Smith -
Democratic Labour Party councillor
The
second conference session was addressed by newly elected
Democratic Labour Party (DLP) councillor Pete Smith from Walsall.
He explained that since he and others in the DLP had been “kicked
out of the Labour Party” they had refused to be silent. He said
that during the election campaign he had been “so busy in the cul
de sacs and streets of Walsall that I have not had time to work
out if I am a revisionist, a radical or a revolutionary” and that
in the DLP they “work with local people, starting at the level
they’re at – otherwise we’d be nothing but a talking shop. We have
gained increasing respect in our communities. Since leaving the
Labour Party, we have remained clear to our consciences; no pillow
is more comfortable than a clear conscience. We need a nationwide
party to oppose New Labour. A large tapestry to link in the views
of working class people in our towns. I hope this conference takes
us closer to a new party, a truly democratic party, in the
interests of workers and their families”.
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