Writings on the struggle for workers unity and socialism

Month: February 2024 (Page 2 of 2)

From the Archives: The 2007 Classroom Assistants Strike

First published 12th November 2007 by Socialist Voice, paper of the Socialist Party in Ireland

In an article headlined “Three thousand classroom assistants poised to take more strike action. A militant struggle against ‘power-sharing’ government attacks” the 2007 classroom assistants strike was described and analysed. This historic strike was not over when this article was published and would take some more weeks to run its course. Further articles from the archives will be published in the coming weeks alongside new commentary.

The article is being republished on the day that the power-sharing Executive returns after a two year absence caused by a DUP boycott. The Executive parties have all made noises about settling the current pay disputes, but all thinking workers know that none are friends of the trade unions. The classroom assistants took action when an Executive was in place, and their lived experience tells us all we need to know about the role of political parties which accept the rules of the capitalist system. Workers can and will win disputes. Their chances will be multiplied if they learn the lessons of past disputes and if they elect leaders who are willing to fight.

Three thousand classroom assistants in Northern Ireland are locked in a battle with the Education Boards, the Assembly [local power-sharing government], the Executive [government cabinet] and the Education Minister, Catriona Ruane. They have already taken ten days of strike action since 26 September, and further action, at the time of writing, looks inevitable.

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From the Archives: The Brexit Crisis and the Role of the Workers’ Movement (April 2019)

First published April 1st 2019 by in Socialist Voice, paper of the Socialist Party in Ireland and The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party of England and Wales

Sinn Fein organised protests against hardening of the border after Brexit

The implementation of new trading arrangements after the Brexit vote in 2016 has proven to be a complex and contentious issue and has paralysed power sharing government in Northern Ireland for two years. Throughout the last five years of negotiations socialists have argued for a solution which recognise the concerns of all communities and minimises any sense of border between the north of Ireland and the South, and in the Irish Sea. Now an agreement has been reached, and the Executive has returned, and we will analyse this in detail in the coming days.

The article republished below dates from April 2019 and illustrates the approach which we advocated for the workers movement. A series of articles since then have maintained and developed a similar approach. The issue of post-Brexit arrangements illustrates like no other the need for an independent political stance by the workers movement. Without one the movement risks falling into one sectarian camp or the other, either deliberately, or by default.  

The prolonged countdown to the UK’s withdrawal from the European Union has thrown the Conservative government into a profound crisis. The chaos is such that an anonymous European source has compared the UK to a “failed state” (Financial Times, March 21st 2019) and the EU was able to impose its own terms when May came cap in hand seeking an extension of the original withdrawal date of March 29th.

At the time of writing, British Prime Minister, Teresa May, has tried, three times, to win a parliamentary majority for her draft withdrawal agreement, and has three times failed. The withdrawal agreement has been rejected on each previous occasion by a wide margin. The third defeat plunged the government into a mood of despair, and May even hinted at a general election if no way forward can be found. As things stand the UK will leave the EU without a deal on April 12th unless the draft withdrawal agreement is accepted by Parliament in the coming days, a long extension of months or even years is granted, or Article 50 is revoked and Brexit is “cancelled”. If the withdrawal agreement is passed May 22nd will be the new withdrawal date.

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