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Working Class Rule in Working Class Areas

anarchist | 29.07.2003 22:30

Working Class Rule in Working Class Areas
The press release below is about the launch of the Independent Working Class Association as a national organisation.

Taken from their website which has now gone live.

www.iwca.info/index.htm

On Monday 28th July 2003, the Independent Working Class Association launched itself as a national organisation with its first manifesto, entitled `Working class rule in working class areas'. The launch took place on the Aylesbury estate in the London Borough of Southwark, scene of Prime Minister Blair's keynote `No forgotten people' speech following New Labour's first general election victory in 1997.

The IWCA came about in 1995 following the abolition of Clause 4 from the Labour Party's constitution. In recent years the IWCA has called for `new thinking, new strategies and new tactics' aimed at building an alternative to the mainstream parties in working class communities. This approach has been spear-headed by `pilot schemes' in selected areas of the country which have yielded impressive election results and a number of notable campaign successes that have attracted the attention of the national media.

Speaking at the launch, Neil Stanton, Chair of the IWCA National Coordinating Committee and himself a former Labour Party member, said:


'The IWCA has chosen the Aylesbury estate for this event today because it is, in our opinion, symbolic of the failure of the New Labour project to improve the lives of those once considered the party's core constituency – the millions of working class people who live on neglected estates such as this. Within weeks of being elected in 1997 Blair came here and talked of "empowerment", of giving people the "will to win", yet nothing has really changed. New Labour's "big idea" it turned out, was to demolish people's homes and replace them with private apartments. When this was rightly rejected, Labour turned its back on the people here just as it has done to numerous working class communities across the country. It says everything about New Labour's sincerity that the local Council hasn't even got around to properly fixing the broken windows in the six years since Blair used them as a prop.

So much then for the talk of there being "no forgotten people" in New Labour's Britain. It is precisely because of this type of empty boasting that the IWCA is now in an ideal position to make ground in Labour's former heartlands. Some pundits argue that New Labour must re-engage with ordinary people but it has neither the ability nor the inclination to do so. Just two months ago we contested a council seat against five nationally established parties in Scotland and from a standing start came within 150 votes of a shock victory. Many people who would not otherwise have voted were inspired to do so. So from today the challenge for the IWCA is straightforward: to inspire working class people not just locally, but up and down the length and breath of Britain.'


Also speaking at the event was Oxford city councillor, Stuart Craft, the IWCA's first publicly elected representative. Stuart said:


`When I was elected in May 2002 the shock on the faces of the New Labour councillors was a sight to behold. However, many believed that as a lone representative I would either be easily isolated or sucked into and swallowed up by the responsibilities of local government. Neither has proven to be the case. The core IWCA philosophy has proven itself sufficiently coherent and robust to allow me to intervene, and, all importantly make a difference on a range of issues, most notably in how the council respond to issues such as Class A drug dealing in Blackbird Leys, which hitherto, the politicians, media and police preferred to pretend was not a problem. And as the first IWCA councillor to be elected I am aware that the Blackbird Leys branch will be seen as something of a model for new IWCA branches around the country. So what I have to say to them is simply this: the strategy works. Why it works is because the IWCA brings to the fore "immediate working class interests". Of course it is not necessary to be elected to do this. But as we have proved that even with just one of us elected we can make a difference at council level then it shouldn't be too difficult to imagine how much more we can shake things up when others come on board. Which is why I am confident we will be even better placed to radically alter how things are run on Oxford City Council after the local elections in 2004'


Gary O'Shea a founder member of the IWCA in 1995 said:


`Some people will wonder why it took us so long to get to the stage we are at today. The fact of the matter is that even though two years prior to New Labour being elected we could see a huge gap in the market to Labour's left, the time was not ripe, nor were we in a position to exploit it. This was mainly because after almost twenty years of Thatcherism, many wanted to give New Labour a chance. Perhaps for many people the first sign that all might not be well was when the government grandly announced their former constituency no longer existed, stating famously, "we're all middle class now". Many at the time may have dismissed it as typically glib New Labour spin, but in fact this social cleansing of the landscape has since informed government policies across the board. For if indeed we really are "all middle class now" then there is no need to cater to a working class with specific interests, aspirations, and concerns, since according to them it no longer exists. So by simplifying their world in this way, it allows Blair to talk of his ambition to see 50% of school children go onto higher education without a twinge of conscience or even a passing reference to what the other 50% are meant to do. The Government's apparent indifference to the plight of 57,000 households – the highest figures ever – living in some form of temporary accommodation in London alone is a genuine scandal. A similar scenario is being played-out in the NHS, in the realm of pensions and so on. All of which has contributed to the gap between the wealthy and the rest of us being the biggest ever recorded. So we are all faced with a choice. We can compliantly go down the American route where the poor are effectively politically disenfranchised, or we can offer the working class people of this country a radical change of direction, which is of course what we are determined to do.’

anarchist
- Homepage: http://www.iwca.info/index.htm

Comments

Hide the following 17 comments

er

30.07.2003 09:05

"The fact of the matter is that even though two years prior to New Labour being elected we could see a huge gap in the market to Labour's left"

not that you are trying to explot anyone or anything......

Sonic


Why would they be trying to "explot" anyone?

30.07.2003 09:13

What ARE you talking about now, Son? Your little one-line trollings get more and more obscure.

Still, I can see why you're confused. Addressing the day to day concerns of working class people? Ew. That's the BNP's job as far as you're concerned, ennit?

Ol Mutha Hubbard


Wish The IWCA Well..

30.07.2003 09:35

I for one hope the iwca well...its amazing as old mutha points out that any attempt to deal with immediate working class concerns is rubbished by the likes of sonic (who i indeed think will post back with some trash about how it all smacks of bnp etc..)

I guess for types like sonic any attempt to deal with real workers is seen as a threat to their pretensions of 'radicalism'..

I'll have a good laugh at the first person who claims the iwca are 'fascist' given which organisation some of its leading lights belonged to!

Gerk Francis
mail e-mail: gerkfrancis@hotmail.com


er 2

30.07.2003 11:34

Just quoting the article chaps, it does use the phrase "gap in the market" which is well dodgy.

Great to see I am now getting attacked for things I didn't say though, I dont compare this wee gang to the BNP and never have. I do think their stratagy is a little bit crap, but it's their choice.

Sonic


best of luck (really!)

30.07.2003 11:48

Well speaking for myself, I wish the IWCA the best of luck.

Personally I disagree with the slogan 'working class rule for working class areas'.. because it's under-ambitious! I want a socialist revolution where the organised working class take over state power (in effect become the state), not just certain areas. That's why I'll stick with the Socialist Alliance.

But hey, anyone raising left-wing ideas and challenging racism and fascism deserves support (or at least not sniping). And if the IWCA turn out to be right and do stop the BNP, I for one will happily eat my analysis and join the cheering.

Just one request; it'd be easy and cheap to build a national profile by continually slagging the SA and/or SWP. I hope you'll (continue to) follow a more positive self-defined agenda than that.

kurious


The real IWCA

30.07.2003 12:10

Please be advised that a couple of years ago, three (organisers) of the IWCA were pissed in a Hackney pub and decided to pick on a friend because they didn't like his haircut (not working class enough). They jostled him, were asked to leave, got on their mobiles for reinforcements, and waited until he left the pub alone. They then followed him and proceeded to give him a kicking for his heinous fashion crimes, and when the barman from the pub and one other friend came to his aid, they screamed mammy to the cops. They then got together with the old bill to prosecute the three for defending themselves, and the barman's now doing 7 years. Anarchist?

Mad dog Kennedy
mail e-mail: penkie.penguin@zoom.co.uk


Re: Working class rule in working class areas

30.07.2003 12:23

What I find impressive about the IWCA is they're politics are based soley on the working class and they ignore the trots etc but still work with many different community groups, tenants' associations.

A refreshing change in my view. And one that many people could learn from.

DD


Anarchist?

30.07.2003 12:35

Well, encouraging people to vote for elected representatives as a solution to their problems is certainly not anarchist. Perhaps I'm confusing this lot with some other gang but did a lot of these folk not come from Red Action, one time Leninists, expeelled from the SWP for being a bit rough, street fighting anti-fascist curiosities? Cetainly the behaviour in the pub sounds like em (not the squealing, unless they've gone soft... the weight of dead ideology can lead to premature ageing...) Well I've got a great deal of respect for a lot of people who were in RA but their politics have always been a mystery. Another working class political party, great. It seems that 'cos the BNP have adopted the electoral strategy so should people with very different visions of the future. A political party is a good way to create a fascist state but it is wholly inadequate to create a revolution that wants to be associated with words like 'anarchist'. Deal with working class issues where they occur, where we live and work, not in the corridors of bourgeois power (the cooncil meeting).

Hank Marvin


Community struggle

30.07.2003 12:42

Have a look at the website www.iwca.info

There you'll see that the IWCA focuses on community struggles not elections.

Where they're strong in a community, they have stood in elections to back up their campaigning on the ground.

C&S


Either working class independence or Euro-nationalism?

30.07.2003 18:14

The IWCA is brainchild of Anti-Fascist Action which in the 1990's had a high anarchist content. Pound for pound AFA was arguably the best anti-fascist organisation in terms of 'closing the deal' in Europe. When as a result the BNP abandoned the streets in 1994, the discussions around the formation of a political construct capable of winning the battle for working class hearts and minds began. Initially these discussions also had a high anarchist content, though this later dropped away. This is not try and claim that the IWCA is in anyway anarchist, but fairly plainly it is not Leninist either. Leninism is dead. As is Trotskyism. While the term 'socialism' is utterly devoid of meaning. The IWCA is a clean break with what has gone before and is designed to be so.

In less than twelve months the BNP will be putting up candidates for the local council elections, the Greater London Assembly, and European elections. Though it hasn't articulated the arguments in this way, part of the reason the IWCA is hoping to stand a candidate for London Mayor (they need to raise £20,000) is to offer an progressive alternative to working class people, who want change, and who may otherwise be tempted to vote 'radical' which to say vote BNP out of frustration.

Whether the Trotskyist Left manages to put up a candidate or not is largely irrelevant. For one they lack the 'common touch'. Secondly if everything goes to plan they will in all liklehood by then, be part of the 'Peace and Justice Alliance' which will cater almost exclusivity to minority, that is to say Muslim demands.

Whichever way you look at it the radical vote in London comes down to a choice between the BNP and IWCA.

Now such a rationale might not cut a lot of ice with some people ('voting only encourages them'), but the fact remains that if genuine working class concerns are not on the table by July 10 2004, the BNP will undoubtedly make further gains simply through default.

And if that happens we can all be sure of one thing; the political complexion of the capital will feel a hell of a lot different for the rest of us the day after.


See 'GLA APPEAL' www.iwca.info

Chaney


Re: Working class rule for working class areas

30.07.2003 20:46

Please define what passes for 'working class' these days. Also, if you get in, are you going to keep us all perpetually 'working class', or will you actually finally smash the concept of class altogether? I don't think of myself in terms of class. I'm 'me'. Being proud to be working class is as snobby as being proud to be a toff. We need to focus on the issues instead of dividing stuff up just in terms of class. We need to work on social deprivation, etc, without worrying about which neighbourhood is 'working class' enough for you. Will the IWC only sort things out in the shittiest neighbourhoods? How does a neighbourhood qualify as working class?

Quol


BNP working class?? BOLLIX

31.07.2003 21:23

The BNP were never working class, and don't know the first thing about working class communities. If you look at the top people within the BNP, we find that they are all mainly from the well off shires, from binky old boy, sargent major, stiff upper lipped, ex public school mummies boys, MI5 and prisoner officers, and ex security service personnel. All with connections to the higher echelons of the snooty snobby british establishment.
All of whom hold the ideal of Mr white hunter/bossman/colonial major dear to their hearts.
Nazis who do the brit state/establishment's dirty work, blaming the nations ills on johnny foreigner, distracts from the cause of working class ills, the filthy powerful rich.

Clodagh


FAQ

01.08.2003 14:44

You can find a large selection of your Frequently Asked Questions about the IWCA at  http://www.iwca.info/about/quesans.htm

IWCA


Disillusioned SWPer

01.08.2003 14:52

Good luck to the IWCA. Obviously middle class rah-rah revolutionaries are gonna be pissed off cos there's no opportunity for them wallow in rhetoric and dogma, or quench their own class guilt by leading the proletarian masses.

Fuck paper sales, recruiting, cross-class liberal coalitions and endless demonstrations. The official Left haven't got a clue how to appeal to working class people. Stop the War was never gonna stop the war, the ANL is never gonna stop the Nazis.

The working class is the engine of change! Amongst ourselves must we organise!

Disillusioned SWPer


Naive

02.08.2003 08:39

"The BNP were never working class, and don't know the first thing about working class communities"

Which begs the question: why the hell are they winning council seats in almost exclusively working class neighbourhoods? You trots need to get your heads out of your arses. You have let my class - the working class - down badly.

antifa


yeah but come on

05.08.2003 12:27

You can't be seriously claiming the BNP have done anything for the working class. The councillors they've had elected have done naff all, in most cases not even turning up to meetings or doing the basic stuff like dealing with constituents' complaints. All they do is bang on about how much they hate immigrants and Asians and hope for the votes to keep rolling in.

Frankly I'd rather have a Tory councillor, at least they'd vote for a lower council tax!

cynical (ex-)worker


bnp

06.08.2003 13:55

cynical (ex-)worker

what I am saying is that the BNP are cleverer than orthodox trots care to realise. The idea that they dont know the first thing about working class communities is clearly wrong, when they clearly have a successful strategy for preying on peoples fears and prejudices in predominantly working class communities (which is where they happen to be winning their seats).

If we want to beat the BNP back into the gutter, we have to be realistic about the threat they pose.

antifa


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