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TUSC say there is an alternative to cuts and rises

Elections / Fri 21st Apr 2023 at 12:28pm

THE May 4TH elections in England will see contests in 229 councils. The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) will be standing candidates in hundreds of seats to “say that there is an alternative to Tory and Labour public service cuts and council tax rises”.

There is one candidate in Harlow. Paul Lenihan is standing in Old Harlow.

Published below is a shortened and edited version of the opening contribution made by the TUSC national chairperson Dave Nellist to the discussion on the core policies platform (the common ground between all those who want to stand as TUSC candidates in the May local elections) at the TUSC conference on 4 February:

“There should be nothing inevitable about the poverty and suffering that has impacted working-class families by the cost-of-living crisis”.

“We know that trade unions are winning victories against individual employers.  But there is another force within society that could be part of the working-class fightback: local government itself.  As someone who spent 14 years as a Socialist Party councillor on Coventry City Council, I took inspiration from several battles of the past”.

Click below for the full report.

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3 Comments for TUSC say there is an alternative to cuts and rises:

David Forman
2023-04-21 13:00:38

This is what I thought was the most important part of the TUSC statement: "There should be nothing inevitable about the poverty and suffering that has impacted working-class families by the cost-of-living crisis”.

Edward Vine
2023-04-22 09:03:28

Interesting, it brings to mind that Harlow Councillors found £21 million to buy the Harvey Centre (that the then expert owners were so anxious to get shot of, that they gave away at a knock down discounted price) but couldn't find the money to repair Council homes. Can the Council explain this, it is puzzling.

David Forman
2023-04-23 13:00:30

Mr Vine should be aware that 'commercialisation' is the strategy employed by our Tory council to try to ameliorate the huge cuts to central government grants given to local authorities. The Institute of Government points out: "Central government grants – including retained business rates – were cut 37% in real-terms between 2009/10 and 2019/20, from £41.0bn to £26.0bn in 2019/20 prices." See IOG report at https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/explainer/local-government-funding-england

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