Picture: The Stilletoes performing at the Youth Fight for Jobs gig
On Sunday the 21st of June the Socialist Party’s first North Wales District meeting was held in Rhyl, a demonstration of the growing support for the party in the area as several people who do not have a local meeting to attend, came to their first party meeting. The meeting was opened by Keith Pattenden discussing the recent gains of the BNP in local and European elections and what could be done in Wales to campaign against their racist poison. He examined the reasons for their rise in votes and members over the last decade particularly looking at New Labour’s abandonment of the working class. We discussed how people without a viable alternative of a progressive party can turn in frustration to the BNP to express their anger. However, an important point was made that in this years Euro Elections the BNP vote actually dropped and they won MEPs only because many working class people didn’t vote! This showed how a new workers party is the only way to win over those people who feel utterly disillusioned with the main three parties and give them a positive place to put their vote.
The second session on building the Socialist Party in North Wales was introduced by Bangor Socialist Party branch secretary Iain Dalton. The branch in North Wales has expanded massively over the last half year with members now in several towns in Gwynedd as well as in Rhyl and Wrexham with mnay contacts even further afield, there has also been an influx of sixth form and college students over the last few months too. We reviewed our activities over the last few months from the protest against the onslaught in Gaza we organised to our recent activity around the Youth Fight For Jobs campaign, particularly emphasising the need to link this campaign with trade unionists locally. The importance of our Students Societies was highlighted too, owing too the NUS’s current unwillingness to campaign for students shown by their acceptance of fees and lack of support for UCU lecturers action against cuts was mentioned, particularly at Bangor University where cuts of 10% across all departments are being discussed.
In the week since the meeting we’ve already begun putting our plans into action with a fantastic Youth Fight for Jobs fundraising gig held near Bangor which raised over £100 as well as excellent stalls in Bangor and Colwyn Bay against the privatisation of Royal Mail where we sold record number of papers at both. We are also holding our first party meeting in Wrexham this week, which will hopefully be the beginning of a new branch building on the activity in the town over the last few months.
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4 comments:
Excellent report and brilliant news. As a party we're moving forward simultaneously across several fronts ... and it's a great feeling isn't it?
Yeah...
although we feel like we're in a bit of a lull as we haven't recruited anyone for a month and we were at around 1 new member a fortnight before that.
We had another contact at the branch meeting tonight, but i'm more excited about the meeting in Wrexham i'm speaking at tomorrow night
I've noticed a rise in support in my area for the BNP. I live on an estate for disabled people and elderly, especially with the elderly I think they believe the country is being taken over and the governments more interested in well put it bluntly Muslim.
Normally I've have said hold on being a Muslim is no different then being a Catholic it's a religion.
But being disabled under labour government, I do not care anymore, if people want to vote Labour Fine if they want to vote Tory fine if they want to vote BNP sadly thats democracy.
Hi Robert, whereabouts do you live?
The thing for me is that public services etc. ain't gonna get better unless we try and do something about it. The Socialist Party has flagged up the lack of council housing for quite a while and when there is a shortage of something one group fo the population will be seen as favoured - in this case it's Muslims and the BNP (helped by the incompetence of the government) are using this to grow in terms of influence
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