Why trade unionists should campaign for John Mc Donnell Print E-mail
By Socialist Appeal   
Tuesday, 09 January 2007

John McDonnell John McDonnell's decision to stand for the leadership of the Labour Party is undoubtedly welcomed by all trade unionists: that is, by those who know he is standing!

The press has done a magnificent job in playing down John's stand so far. New Labour under Tony Blair has been a good friend to big business and the hope is that there will be more of the same after a smooth transition to a Brown government. On the rare occasions they have been obliged to make reference to John's challenge, they have portrayed him as a no-hoper, a joke candidate. The press will really go into overdrive when John's campaign takes off. He will be pilloried, attacked at every turn and vilified.

All this should come as no surprise: the media always back the interests of big business. What is shameful is that the union leaders have either ignored or deliberately sabotaged John's campaign. A straw pole at TUC conference showed over 60% of those members asked said they supported John.  

The trade union movement has been licking its wounds since the defeat of the miners and the print workers. These two powerful organisations were not beaten by the state alone. Union leaders with no backbone to fight, to take "secondary action" as solidarity action became known, were equally to blame. We have a duty to our membership to make sure that the same ilk does not bury John McDonnell's campaign and with it any chance of turning the party around in the near future.

The leaders of Unison have not even mentioned his candidacy in publications to the membership. This is despite the fact that John is a Unison member, a Unison-backed MP, has voted in Parliament and actively campaigned on all the policies democratically passed by the members at national conferences. The Unison leadership clearly wants to quietly back Gordon Brown. The same Gordon Brown who wants a 2% ceiling on public sector wage rises, an effective pay cut; who voted for the murderous war on the Iraqi people; who supports NHS ‘reforms': i.e. privatisation; who is happy to see remain in place the most draconian anti-union laws since the beginning of the 20th century. That is, the Gordon Brown who has acted and voted against all the policies passed by Unison members at their conferences. That Unison's leaders can even countenance support for Brown is an absolute disgrace. Union leaders, on huge salaries and out of touch with the problems their members encounter on a daily basis, seem to think that trying to gain a few paltry crumbs from the New Labour and big business table for the membership is their reason for being, and the reason we pay our dues.

Blair and Brown: no difference Those who declared the Labour party dead and beyond saving, please look now at the opportunity raised by John's campaign and rejoin in time for the vote. The RMT is no longer affiliated to Labour since its expulsion for supporting the Scottish Socialist Party and financing its candidates at elections. Now that the SSP has split and the RMT has withdrawn its support for it, it should aim for re-affiliation to Labour. This would allow it a vote for the leader as a union and give every individual member a vote. Activists inside the RMT should campaign for re-affiliation at every branch and regional council. The RMT supports John McDonnell in his anti-war and anti-privatisation campaigns. Activists should ensure that they put the full might of the union behind his leadership campaign.

That the Blairites cannot be defeated in the Labour Party is a myth. The trade unions have 50% of the vote at Party conference. All affiliated unions have members on the Party's National Executive Committee. If the union leaders choose to flex their muscles, then Blair and his policies can easily be defeated. The trade union movement is a sleeping giant whose power is being held in check by leaders not worthy of the name. Blair and the ruling class are in favour of breaking the link between the unions and the Labour Party. The reason is clear: they recognise and fear the power the unions could wield within the Party.

Below are some of the policies John is campaigning on:

  • Scrapping Trident to spend the cash on schools and hospitals
  • Ending the ‘special relationship' with the US government
  • Scrapping the anti-union laws
  • Forming links with the workers of Venezuela

Read more on www.john4leader.org.uk

These are policies all trade unionists will support.

We have seen an unprecedented attack on working people since the election of the Thatcher government in 1979, and continued under New Labour. The social reforms gained in the post-war period have almost all been taken away. For the first time in generations, young people can now expect a harder life than their parents. The gap between rich and poor has not been wider since Victorian times.  Pensioners are living in poverty after a lifetime of work and producing the wealth of society.  We have more personal debt than any other people in Europe. The poorest fifth of the population pays more in taxes than the richest fifth.

Gate Gourmet workers on strike Public services and nationalised industries have been handed over to big business in an orgy of plunder. To add insult to injury, we continue to subsidise the privatised essential services, such as transport, with our hard-earned taxes. Private corporations' one and only reason for existence is profit, simple as that. They do not formulate a plan of what goods and services are needed by society. They produce and sell products and services they can make a quick buck from. They have no interest in providing decent standards of living, decent public services, education or culture.

The only solution is to take wealth into public hands. The denationalised industries must be renationalised. Contracted-out services must be returned to public ownership. Those corporations who make billions in profits off our backs, such as the banks, must be nationalised so that wealth can be used to provide a decent standard of living for all. A planned economy, under the control of the workers at grass-roots level and their communities, with the profit motive removed, would be able to solve the problems of low pay and long working hours, housing, pensions, education, public services, in a very short period of time. We know what capitalism has to offer working people: a lifetime of struggle to survive, from the cradle to the grave. A socialist, planned economy is the only realistic alternative.

Blair is on his way out and the New Labour project is discredited in the eyes of millions. As trade unionists we should grasp this opportunity with both hands. Let's return the leadership of our Party to someone who stands for Labour!

  • No to Blairism! No to Brownism! For a Labour government with a bold socialist programme!
  • The unions must demand Labour breaks with big business and Tory economic policies.
  • Support the struggle to reclaim the Labour Party for the working class.
    No to state funding of political parties!
  • Keep the union-Labour link!

We demand:

  • A democratic leadership election. No handover to Gordon Brown. Union-supported MPs must give John their backing so his name appears on the ballot paper and we have a chance to exercise our democratic right
  • The unions fully endorse John McDonnell for the leadership of the Labour Party as the candidate who best stands for the interests of working people
  • The unions campaign vigorously among the membership to encourage a vote for John
  • Encourage trade unionists to join or rejoin the Labour Party in order that they have a chance to vote in a leadership contest and have an influence over the future direction of the Party
    This is a leaflet produced by Socialist Appeal, Marxist voice in the Labour and students’ movement. Download it here as a PDF file and distribute it!