The workers... battle-cry must be: 'The Permanent Revolution.'” — Marx and Engels, 1850

Convention of the Left: 24 January conference statement

Dear Comrades

The organisers of the Convention of The Left would like to invite you to the free one day conference – "Capitalism isn’t working – what is the alternative?" – to be held at the Friends’ Meeting House, Manchester, from 10am-5pm on Saturday 24 January 2009.

More details (plus downloadable leaflet, advance registration and discussion contributions) can be found on our website www.conventionoftheleft.org and we encourage you to circulate widely and to join in the debates taking place. 

 As was agreed at the Convention's week of debate in September, we know that the wealth exists in the world to pay for our essential needs, conspicuous consumption only leads to escalating warfare and environmental destruction, and we cannot let the recession be used as an excuse to scapegoat refugees and migrants – the poor must not be punished for the crisis of capitalism and we must directly challenge any legitimisation by Labour of the racism and fascism that threatens to emerge as a result. The recent comments of the appalling Immigration Minister Woolas are only too clear.

So we must provide the alternative – in the interests of the planet, peace and people, not profiteers – and we look forward to seeing everyone who supports the Statement of Intent that was agreed in September, at the Recall Convention meeting on 24 January in Manchester.

 The provisional agenda is for a general political discussion (particularly about the development of a socialist economic alternative) followed by three parallel workshops (loosely along the lines of planet, peace, people) and a final plenary for agreeing demands, actions, campaigns, and ways of working that we can all carry out together across the left.

All sessions will follow the style developed by the Convention in September – participation rather than top-down platforms, consensus rather than polarisation – and we encourage background contributions or suggestions for action that will fit with the themes outlined. We would also welcome progress reports from local Convention groups or forums that may have started to develop. (We do request that all contributions are short and, in line with the Statement of Intent agreed in September, we request that contributions are not about the creation of a new left party now.) Please can you email these or submit to the website discussion -– no later than 10 January, so that we can collate and circulate for the day itself.

 The Organising Group has now drafted a Statement of Action which we hope may be useful for setting the context (please see below) – and there are a number of other proposals that have been developed recently on the left, particularly about the economy, and also from organisations supporting future Convention activity – please do let us have these so that we can publicise them on the website and at the Recall Convention itself on 24 January.

Thank you for your support and good luck with developing left unity in practice in your own campaigns and activities.

John Nicholson (on behalf of the Convention of The Left Organising Group)

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Convention of The Left – moving forward – Statement of Action

 The September launch of the Convention of The Left exceeded expectations and was a significant event on the left. We must now work out how to build on this positive beginning.

We re-affirm our intention “to join together with all those seeking a better society, as an anti-capitalist left fighting for an alternative socialist society” (21 September 2008 Statement of Intent).

 
Local Campaigning

To do this effectively we must “go local” – building local Conventions, experimenting with organisational and political models, learning from each other and from experience, building on “what works”, with an emphasis on bottom up campaigning, participation and decision making.

Local Convention of The Left groups or forums should develop a combination of campaigning and political discussion – not duplicating other campaigns or seeking to replace them but drawing the left together in co-operation and struggle. We should go out of our way to overcome the division that exists between the organised left and the direct actionist and libertarian groups.

Campaigns should be developed and supported locally. Already some local groups have taken a lead in actions coming out of the financial crisis, on house repossessions, on fuel poverty and energy costs. Other areas of activity might include anti-academy campaigns, defence of local GP surgeries against poly-clinics, campaigns against privatisations, in support of migrants and opposing deportations, fighting the fascist threat.

 
Local Convention of The Lefts should be encouraged to:

1. produce reports for a local convention section of the website

2. discuss demands and programs of action around their struggles

3. submit these demands and charters to the Convention website and future events for further discussion.

 National Campaigning

We re-affirm that this is not the construction of another political party. Rather, the strength of the Convention lies in attempting to bring local groupings together and to provide a wider forum for discussion and united action – so that we can strengthen the anti capitalist left by uniting ourselves around action and policies where we can.

The Recall Event on 24 January 2009 should elect a steering committee to build on the work of the group that organised Manchester 2008’s Convention. This steering committee should be charged with organising or co-ordinating future activity – such as a further day or weekend Convention in summer 2009 – and with exploring the possibilities of a similar event at TUC and/or Labour Party Conference in Brighton 2009 as was organised in Manchester 2008.

Fri 21, November 2008 @ 11:39

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Mark P said…

Smells like a bit of a pointless talking shop, doesn't it?

Everyone sits around and waffles about how much we all have in common but there are no serious proposals for common action and discussion of one of the main areas of disagreement - work through New Labour or build a new party of the working class - is ruled out of order. The whole thing strikes me as basically harmless but also something of a waste of energy and resources.

Fri 21, November 2008 @ 16:01

susan press said…

The LRC does not work through "New Labour" nor is it in favour of a new political party. I really cannot face trotting through the same old arguments we hear time after time on that one but it is wrong to say the COL is just a "talking shop." It is a real opportunity for left groups to work together on campaigns outside the electoral arena where much can be achieved.

From Northern Rock repossessions to opposition to the third runway at Heathrow ( which is gathering all-party support after intense pressure from the climate change lobby and MPs like John McDonnell) the left can unite.

I'll swap those kinds of achievements any day for "Life Of Brian" wrangling, splits and schisms which is what you get when you go down the new worker's party road. Apart, of course, from very few votes at election time.In my view, that really is an utter waste of time

Sat 22, November 2008 @ 12:38

Mark P said…

You can't face trotting through the same old arguments, but that apparently doesn't stop you from trotting out a particularly dismal brand of the usual rump Labour left guff yourself.

Now getting back to the point, can anyone point towards anything concrete that has come from the Convention of the Left? Anything that indicates that there is more to it than a talking shop?

Sat 22, November 2008 @ 16:56

bill j said…

But "building a new party of the working class" is an empty phrase unless you say or initiate action around what such a "new party" should do.

Until now the practice of the CNWP has been to harp on about disaffiliation - asserting falsely that it is the Labour link which prevents affiliated unions from fighting for their members interests - and then claiming that until people accept the "need" for a "new party", then we cannot go forward.

The CNWP is in that sense purely a talking shop and small and shrinking one at that.

The COTL in contrast wants to develop joint action now, without setting down as a pre condition that people need to agree on the "new party" question. Given that the experience of recent years is that attempts to promote such agreement have been a striking failure, it is an important step forward.

How far it gets, depends on what happens next.

Sat 22, November 2008 @ 17:24

Mark P said…

I'll take that as a no then.

Sat 22, November 2008 @ 20:42

Wladek Flakin said…

Don't you want to unfurl your colours, Mark? A CNWP man?

Sat 22, November 2008 @ 21:49

bill j said…

You'll take what as a no?

Sun 23, November 2008 @ 18:12

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