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We want
councillors to…
STAND UP
TO THE CON-DEM AXEMEN
This millionaires’ government has
taken a massive axe to our jobs, pay, conditions and local services.
Central government funding to local councils is being slashed by 27%
over four years. Already more than 150,000 job losses have been
announced across 260 councils. Whole services are being destroyed.
Many of the severest cuts are in traditional Labour areas which
already have very high unemployment – 1,500 jobs to go in Leeds, 1,500
in Liverpool, 2,000 in Manchester, 1,000 in Camden, and many more.
These cuts are the worst since the 1920s and will destroy the lives of
millions.
The people who voted for Labour
councils did not do so in order for them to do the ConDem’s dirty
work. Any Labour council that chose instead to defend local
communities would be hugely popular. And they can. There is a choice –
we demand that Labour councils choose to fight to defend public
services:
We say:
-
Make no cuts to council jobs, pay,
conditions and services.
-
Do not introduce above inflation
increases in council tax, rent and service charges to compensate for
government cuts.
-
Say no to privatisation of council
services.
Every Labour council in Britain
keeps telling us that it has 'no choice' but to implement the cuts –
but that just isn't true. If any council was to stop acting as
collaborators with the Tory axe wielders, and instead stand up and
fight, they would discover there were a thousand ways to defy the
cuts:
To name a few,
councils could:
-
Stop homelessness rocketing: by
refusing to evict council tenants who fall into arrears because of
housing benefit cuts. They could also use their legal powers to
threaten compulsory purchase order against big landlords who evict
tenants suffering from housing benefit cuts.
-
Halt the destruction of state
education: by using councils 'schools monitoring powers' to build a
campaign against academies and free schools organising, for example,
parents’ ballots on the issue.
-
Stop 16+17 year olds being thrown
out of education: by continuing to pay EMA to local students, as the
Welsh Assembly has done. Any council which continued to pay it would
win the support of whole generation.
Set a 'needs budget'
All of these measures, and many
more, could be carried out by using council's legal powers. However,
alone, they would not be enough.
In order to stop cuts councils need
to set needs budgets – budgets that do not include any cuts in jobs
and services. We are told that doing this – following the example of
Poplar in the 1920s, or of Liverpool and Lambeth in the 1980s – is
impossible and will inevitably lead to defeat. But the real history is
different.
Poplar council won a campaign
equalise the rates across London and were able to introduce a
programme of financial assistance for the poor, equal pay for women
and a minimum wage for council workers. In the 1980s Liverpool City
Council forced Thatcher – the Iron Lady – to hand over an extra £60
million to Liverpool – which was used to build 5,000 council houses
(more than were built nationally the whole time New Labour was in
office!), plus new leisure centres and nurseries and to create tens of
thousands of jobs.
Liverpool's inspiring struggle was conducted in the teeth of massive
opposition – not only from the Tories, but sadly from the right wing
leadership of Labour. If other Labour councils had followed the
Liverpool and Lambeth road Thatcher would have been finished.
Liverpool's councillors were only able to be removed and surcharged,
following a four year struggle, after the betrayal of Labour leader
Neil Kinnock and co.
Lessons
of Liverpool, Lambeth and Poplar for today
Today
councillors can no longer be surcharged unless they are found guilty
of financial crime for personal gain. But it is still true that any
council that refused to carry out cuts or introduce hikes in council
tax would – at a certain stage – come into conflict with the legal
system. However, such a council would also be enormously popular.
Trade unionists and anti-cuts campaigners would be able to mobilise
tens of thousands in support of such a stand. In these circumstances –
as in Liverpool – it would be very difficult for the law to be used
against such councils.
However,
most councils have time to prepare before taking this road. By using
their reserves and borrowing powers to avoid making cuts, councils can
gain time to build a mass movement in their support. Ed Miliband could
give a lead by promising that an incoming Labour government would
write off all local authority debts incurred from avoiding cuts. Also,
the Labour Party is 90% dependent for its income on affiliated
trade unions. Union members will not tolerate Labour's collaboration
with the ConDems cuts to jobs, terms and conditions, and
local services
The
NSSN anti-cuts campaign is marching to demand that councils stand up
against the onslaught raining down on working class communities. If
any council does so we will do everything in our power to support it.
But if, as Labour councils have up until now, they continue to refuse
to do so, then they will be lining up with the public service slashers.
In the battle that is coming – with millions campaigning against the
ConDem cuts – Labour councils will be on the wrong side.
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March to Labour’s
Local government
conference
5 March 2010
Assemble at 11am,
Geraldine Mary
Harmsworth Park,
Southwark London, SE11
Sign the petition demanding Labour Councils
stand up to the ConDems here!
Download a PDF of the petition here!
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