GUEST BLOG: Ben Peterson – Frontline at the fight for the heart and soul of the British Labour Party

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It is a small world in Politics. Often political events will not limited to their initial time and place. While some development might be born in a specific context, ideas will spread and reverberate around the world.

Leftists often spend a lot of time vicariously living through the class struggle abroad. But this often takes the form of sport, cheering on “our team” and celebrating a victory that doesn’t seem possible at home. Much less time is put into in understanding into the dynamics at play, or thinking about how the example in one place, will effect the politic of another.

I’m now in England to meet with socialists and unionists here. I want to see and try to get a better understanding of both the movement around Jeremy Corbyn’s election to the Labour Party leadership, and attempts to rebuild unionism in the fast food industry here.

The trip started in a small seaside town called Scarborough. I had been told to meet the secretary of the local branch of the bakers and food workers union, Steve. Steve was easy to spot on the platform in a coat that was covered in badges, each promoting a different political cause.

I soon to learned that while Steve had many badges, his union membership was more modest. The local branch has about 25 members at fast food outlets and pubs across the town. That night almost two dozen union members and supporters came together in a small hall by the sea for a BBQ and to launch the local union drive- for £10 an hour and union recognition.

This may all seem very modest, but to dismiss the small size of this single event would be to not see the context of our times. In New Zealand we turned back years of casualisation to ban zero hour contracts. In the UK, Jeremy Corbyn has come from nowhere to win the leadership of the Labour Party, dramatically shattering the neoliberal consensus. Even is the small seaside towns, in the hardest of industries, workers are willing to organise. Things that are meant to be impossible are coming to pass, and for the left this is an exciting challenge to take up.

With this backdrop it doesn’t feel like bluster when the bakers union president Ian Hodson, told this small crowd in Scarborough “I believes that our campaign to organise fast food workers can be the civil rights movement of our times”.

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This weekend the Labour Party is holding it’s national conference. Corbyn is expected to be reflected leader, but this will not be the end of the political fight. Bringing forth the movement which makes radical change possible will take more than voting for Jeremy, but rebuilding the organisations of the working class. Parallel to the labour conference, the Momentum- the group set up by Corbyn supporters in the Labour Party-will be holding a parallel conference called “the world transformed” to plot out what this might look like. These conversations will be important, and not just in the UK, the ripples of the events will be felt everywhere.

 

Ben Peterson is a Unite Union Organiser and is TDBs correspondent in Britain covering the fight and fallout of the British Labour Party Leadership contest.

3 COMMENTS

  1. Nice piece thanks Ben,

    I am supremely confident that the union movement will regenerate again as the hard realities of Neoliberal ideology crushes each workers rights even slowly as the spirit of humanity lives in all of us always searching for a satisfying workplace environment.

    I begun my life as an apprentice Electrician in 1869 and after a short term in the army afterwards begun a job on the Tongariro Power scheme in 1966 and under the Ministry of Works learned the comforts of the strong union environment so well that 55yrs later I still feel that warmth today.

    It is something that cannot be removed from our soul after experiencing it.

    Long live unions and the labour movement.

  2. Corbyn’s next major task, win the hearts of the many disaffected voters and so far non voters in the UK.

    Trying to simply gain votes in the centre, where all others crowd in to gain the votes of so far relatively well off, that cannot be the solution. A wider reach is necessary, interesting times may lie ahead.

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