Wednesday 4 August 2010

The time to organise resistance is now!

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/aug/04/time-to-organise-resistance-now


I am one of the signatories to this statement of resistance. The fightback starts now! To add your name to the statement send an email to the address at bottom.
 
The time to organise resistance is now
 
We reject these cuts as simply malicious ideological vandalism, hitting the most vulnerable the hardest. Join us in the fight


The government claims the cuts are unavoidable because the welfare state has been too generous. This is nonsense. Ordinary people are being forced to pay for the bankers' profligacy.

The £11bn welfare cuts, rise in VAT to 20%, and 25% reductions across government departments target the most vulnerable – disabled people, single parents, those on housing benefit, black and other ethnic minority communities, students, migrant workers, LGBT people and pensioners.

Women are expected to bear 75% of the burden. The poorest will be hit six times harder than the richest. Internal Treasury documents estimate 1.3 million job losses in public and private sectors.
We reject this malicious vandalism and resolve to campaign for a radical alternative, with the level of determination shown by trade unionists and social movements in Greece and other European countries.

This government of millionaires says "we're all in it together" and "there is no alternative". But, for the wealthy, corporation tax is being cut, the bank levy is a pittance, and top salaries and bonuses have already been restored to pre-crash levels.

An alternative budget would place the banks under democratic control, and raise revenue by increasing tax for the rich, plugging tax loopholes, withdrawing troops from Afghanistan, abolishing the nuclear "deterrent" by cancelling the Trident replacement.

An alternative strategy could use these resources to: support welfare; develop homes, schools, and hospitals; and foster a green approach to public spending – investing in renewable energy and public transport, thereby creating a million jobs.

We commit ourselves to:

• Oppose cuts and privatisation in our workplaces, community and welfare services.

• Fight rising unemployment and support organisations of unemployed people.

• Develop and support an alternative programme for economic and social recovery.

• Oppose all proposals to "solve" the crisis through racism and other forms of scapegoating.

• Liaise closely with similar opposition movements in other countries.

• Organise information, meetings, conferences, marches and demonstrations.

• Support the development of a national co-ordinating coalition of resistance.

We urge those who support this statement to attend the Organising Conference on 27 November 2010 (10am-5pm), at Camden Centre, Town Hall, London, WC1H 9JE.

Signed:


Tony Benn



Caroline Lucas MP



John McDonnell MP



Jeremy Corbyn MP



Mark Serwotka, general secretary PCS



Bob Crow, general secretary RMT



Jeremy Dear, general secretary NUJ



Michelle Stanistreet, deputy general secretary, NUJ



Frank Cooper, president of the National Pensioners Convention



Dot Gibson, general secretary of the National Pensioners Convention



Ken Loach



John Pilger



John Hendy QC



Mark Steel



Kevin Courtney, deputy general secretary NUT



Cllr Salma Yaqoob



Lee Jasper, joint co-ordnator ,Black Activists Rise Against Cuts (Barac)



Zita Holbourne, joint co-ordinator of Barac campaign and PCS national executive



Ashok Kumar, VP education and welfare,LSE student union



Hilary Wainwright, Red Pepper



Francis Beckett, author



David Weaver, chair, 1990 Trust



Viv Ahmun, director Equanomics UK



Paul Mackney, former general secretary NATFHE/UCU



Clare Solomon, president ULU student union



Lindsey German, convenor, Stop the War Coalition (personal capacity)



Andrew Burgin, archivist



John Rees, Counterfire



Romayne Phoenix, Green party



Joseph Healy, secretary Green Left



Fred Leplat, Islington Unison



Jane Shallice



Neil Faulkner, archaeologist and historian



Alf Filer, Socialist Resistance



Chris Nineham



James Meadway, economist



Cherry Sewell, UCU



Alan Thornett, Socialist Resistance



Peter Hallward, professor of modern European philosophy



Matteo Mandarini, Historical Materialism editorial board



John Nicholson, secretary Convention of the Left



Michael Chessum, UCL union education and campaigns officer



Mark Curtis, writer



Nick Broomfield



Sean Rillo Raczka, chair, Birkbeck College student union, and mature students' representative, NUS national executive



Robyn Minogue, UoArts NUS officer



Prince Johnson, NUS president Institute of Education



Roy Bailey, Fuse Records



Doug Nicholls



Granville Williams



Gary Herman (CPBF national council member, in personal capacity)



Louis Hartnoll, president UoArts student union



Sarah Ruiz, former Respect councillor and community activist in Newham



Michael Gavan



Mary Pearson, National Union of Teachers, vice president Birmingham Trades Union Council



Joe Glenholmes, Unison, life member Birmingham Trades Union Council



Baljeet Ghale, NUT past president



Jane Holgate, chair of Hackney Unite and secretary of Hackney TUC



Marshajane Thompson, Labour Representation Committee NC



Richard Kuper



Chris Baugh, PCS assistant general secretary



Trevor Phillips, campaigner



Stathis Kouvelakis, UCU, King's College London



Carole Regan



Bernard Regan



Roger Kline



Hugh Kerr, former MEP



Nina Power, senior lecturer in philosophy Roehampton University



Norman Jemmison, NATFHE past president, NPC



Kitty Fitzgerald, poet and novelist



Iain Banks, author



Arthur Smith, comedian



David Landau



Anne Orwin, actor


coalitionofresistance@mail.com

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