[SCDG] Things are looking up in York

York Solidarity york.soly at googlemail.com
Wed Nov 10 10:52:41 GMT 2010


Hi all - I thought I would try out this new communication system, with some
more encouraging news about the way things are shaping up locally.


Yesterday evening I finally tracked down York Stop the Cuts to their
fortnightly organising meeting in a city centre pub. I discovered they
existed after seeing a demonstration featured in the local TV news - demos
in York being distinctly rare since February 2003. A bit of internet
searching and I found they had quite a neat website. I decided to check them
out, in case it was the usual suspects, the minority of radical voices in
York in yet another formation. My cynicism was at least partially misplaced.

The group is still very much in its infancy and making things up as it goes
along, focussed on practical activities rather than deep political debates,
and keen to reach out to the widest variety of interest groups affected by
the cuts. One of the best discussion points, though unresolved, was how to
reach out to individuals rather than institutions, to broaden the base of
the movement rather than have it dominated by the agenda of those already
organised. Another was how to build on the momentum of the successful
targetting of Vodafone shops, as it was felt that shifting the focus onto
banks and tax-avoiding businesses represented opportunities to make the case
for an alternative to cuts, rather than just being 'opposed'.

There were about a dozen people at the meeting. I was able to recognize one
from the Green Party, one from the SWP and two from the Socialist Party,
though most of these were there in their capacity as union branch
representatives, and party lines played no part in any of the discussions. A
growing interest among trade unionists was very apparent, with indications
that local branches of the PCS may be emerging as a focal point around which
trade union activity in the area will coalesce. Further initiatives were
discussed around how to widen union participation, noting the surprising
absence of anyone from the CWU. Inevitably, in a small city with two
universities, there was a handful of students, who were equally anxious that
the group should bring together the widest range of interests. They reported
that they were taking eight bus loads from the University down to the demo
in London, some 400 people in all, and that they had been oversubscribed.

There are the usual problems that beset small organising groups such as
this, especially in their early stages. The main difficulty is avoiding the
situation where a small number do all the work, running Saturday stalls in
the town centre, keeping up the website, researching and designing leaflets,
carrying out liaison work, and so on. This will be something that will
evolve in time - at least the pressure now is to find a bigger venue for the
meetings.

The strong points of the group I think are its openness, the complete lack
of sectarian sniping, the down to earth enthusiasm of those who have built
the organisation so far, and the apparent willingness to build for the long
term and to reach out to a wide constituency. Nothing useful is ruled out,
everyone who can contribute something is welcomed in. The weak point may be
the lack of political debate. At this early stage that is not necessarily a
bad thing, but it might help strengthen discussion with outsiders, whom, it
was recognised from activity around the weekly stalls, still too often
accepted the argument in favour of cuts. For now the consensus is around
building up of a network of solidarity is the main task, and what has been
achieved so far is both encouraging and a credit to those involved. Things
can only develop from here.

Martin Bashforth
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://www.email-lists.org/pipermail/scdg/attachments/20101110/7252b6ec/attachment.html>


More information about the SCDG mailing list