Forthcoming events

Every Saturday - Noon - 2pm - Bedford Square, Exeter - Socialist Party stall - Campaigning and there for discussion. We also have a range of literature ranging from this weeks 'The Socialist' to this month's 'Socialism Today', as well as books on Marxism, history, science, and international issues.

Every Tuesday - 7.30pm - Exeter branch meeting - email us for venue details - Organisational matters and planning ahead as well as discussion and debate.

Monday 19th January - Friday 13th February - USDAW Presidential election - Socialist Party member Robbie Segal is standing, and campaigning for a campaigning, democratic union. See www.robbiesegal.org for more details.

Tuesday 10th February - 7.00pm - North Devon Socialist Party branch meeting - G2 room, Barnstaple Library - Discussion of organisational issues, and debate on Darwin and evolution, introduced by JL.

Wednesday 11th February - 7.00pm - Fight For Jobs public meeting - Exeter Community Centre, St Davids Hill, Exeter - Called by Devon Socialist Party and Exeter Socialist Students, this meeting will be a chance to discuss the current economic crisis and how workers and youth can organise to protect jobs and living standards.

A more extensive calendar of events over 2009 will follow at the bottom of the page.

Tuesday, 17 June 2008

Save our Post Offices - progress so far

Names are being added to the online petition we have set up (here) as well as to our paper petitions. Petioning had been going on in Exeter, with a special 'Save our Post Offices stall in Exeter High Street on Saturday and around the residential area near to the Post Office threatened in Pinhoe Road. If you want to sign the online petition, but are having problems (many people have been unable to sign it) please email the campaign at sopodevon@gmail.com. Already many have signed it, including former Postmaster General and Labour MP Tony Benn. And we've only really just started!

It is clear that there is a great deal of anger at the plans, and we stick to our central demand that none of the Post Offices close and that the council takes them over and sees them continue as Post Offices. It seems that they will not do this for the majority of the threatened Post Offices. We need therefore to keep up the pressure on them. If you would like to get involved with the campaign, email us either at socialistpartydevon@gmail.com or sopodevon@gmail.com

Why do we need a new workers' party?

No one will deny that Labour has betrayed the workers. Life under New Labour has, amongst many things, taken this country to an unlawful war in Iraq, deepened Thatcheresque attacks on the public services through selling it off into business. This means instead of health prioritising in the NHS, now it is profit. Instead of education above all, it is profit. Instead of welfare, public protection and other services, profit will always come first. Our food prices keep rising every year, raising the average family’s shopping bill by £750 a year. This when Tescos have announced record profits of £2.85 billion this year already! Also, according to Energywatch, British Gas has raised our gas bills by 76.7%, to £653 per year, and our electricity by 74.3%, to £413. This might seem like British Gas has enforced this to keep the business from drowning in inflation. Yet British Gas has been able to increase profits from £95 million in 2006, to £571 million in 2007!

What has the government done? They provide tax cuts for business – from 30p to 28p - and lower public sector wages to below inflation. Inflation increases and yet business is doing better than ever. If this is the case, is it really true that society can no longer afford to give us all a decent pension, liveable wages, affordable food, etc? Personally, I’m sick of hearing the governments’ ‘justifications’ like the abused free trade metaphor, ‘a rising tide lifts all boats’. This is a remarkable form of economical thought, as the reality of this ‘rising tide’ is that in order for corporations to maximise profit, they must minimise expenditure - in other words - our wages! Gordon Brown justified his policies at a TUC conference, when he said they are “to prevent inflation, maintain growth, so we never return to the old boom and bust of the past”. So that is why we are all pushed face first towards an ever-nearing breadline?

The chair of the CNWP, Dave Nellist wrote of Gordon Brown’s comment:

“It is not a message he ever delivers to company boardrooms, where pay (sorry remuneration) can be counted in millions of pounds. For Brown, the rich getting richer is a positive sign of an economy doing well. But what about the millions in insecure, low paid, often temporary jobs, trapped at precisely the ‘minimal wage’? For them it is a sign of a government that despite what it says, just doesn’t care for the majority of ordinary working-class families. Part of that reason is that, when it comes to elections, Labour believes it can take working people’s vote for granted, because they have nowhere else to go.”

None of the ‘big three’ have spoke on behalf of the majority by condemning corporate greed and corporate disdain. Nellist believes that “Britain’s three main parties act more like three wings of the same party – united on privatisation and on working class sacrifices to preserve the economy for the rich”. Maybe then, as all parties on offer are following this line, it is understandable that voter apathy has set in.

However, there is only so much that the public can take. Under New Labour, the gap between the rich and poor has widened significantly in Britain and finally the public is starting to fight back. Workers are, to say the least, angry at their government for their betrayal. A general strike is back on the agenda and New Labour is quickly losing support. Of course, this indeed would be great if we already had an alternative for the workers’ on offer, but we don’t. So instead people are forced to turn towards the Tories, and yet again, our political history will repeat itself.

So now is the time to become active and work harder than ever before. We need to make the CNWP heard all across Britain. In every street, home and workplace people need to be presented with an alternative - an alternative which proposes the rational planning of society’s resources to ensure a decent life for all. It falls to us to encourage the masses that working towards a socialist planned economy is the only way of alleviating poverty and building a prosperous society for all. It falls to us to make sure this happens.

Stand up and stand together: join the Campaign for New Workers’ Party!

Article by ZS, the CNWP coordinator for Devon Socialist Party. The 2008 conference for the CNWP will be held in London on Sunday 29th June. Contact us at socialistpartydevon@gmail.com for more details.

Wednesday, 4 June 2008

Support our GP surgeries!

With the Government's plans for private companies taking over the running of NHS trusts in the limelight, it seems only right to highlight a campaign being run by local GPs and health centres up and down the country with the British Medical Association (BMA).

The campaign is opposing the replacement of local, family GP surgeries with large commercially-run and impersonal 'polyclinics'. The BMA, the Royal College of General Practitioners and GPs fear the new polyclinics could have a detrimental impact on the healthcare of millions, and in rural areas with poor public transport provision like Devon the impact could be even worse than in urban areas.


The campaign has a petition at: www.supportyoursurgery.org.uk

The RCGP has produced a more detailed factsheet analysing the Government's proposals here.

Needless to say, we support the campaign fully, and advocate an NHS run in the interests of patients, not private sector profiteers. This means private sector involvment in the NHS must end, and PFI projects and debts cancelled. Health services should be provided locally, with an expansion in the number of doctors and nurses. Improved NHS provision should be funded by savings provided by the nationalisation of the pharmaceutical and medical supplies industry, whose gigantic profits come at the expense of patients and taxpayers.

Most importantly, we need to replace a system which breeds inequality, poverty, illness and stress and replace it with a system, socialism, which will promote better health through drastically reducing inequality, reducing working hours and pressures at work, and improving people's lives, living conditions and environment.