Tomás Ó Flatharta

Looking at Things from the Left

Abortion Legislation Proposed in Ireland – Historic Days

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Clare Daly, Joan Collins, Mick Wallace, Action on X, CONGRATULATIONS.

Labour Party pro choice campaigners, many of whom campaigned with courage on this issue since the infamous 1992 X Case, need to reflect on the price they are paying for coalition with Fine Gael.

WorldbyStorm's avatarThe Cedar Lounge Revolution

Here’s a thought on foot of today and tomorrow’s events. The list of those voting will be most interesting, as will the names of those who don’t turn up in the Chamber. It will also be useful to match that against votes subsequent to any attempt to introduce legislation on foot of the report released later this year.

Of course the Labour Party has headed off some of the implications of the above by not allowing a free vote, though will any members of the LP break ranks. As interesting will be others from other parties.

RTÉ reports the following:

Speaking after a silent pro-life protest at the Dáil, Caroline Simons of the Pro-life movement said tonight’s private members bill is not about medical treatment for women but about providing for abortion throughout pregnancy.
She said doctors have practiced with no diffculty for the last 20 years since the ‘X-case’…

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Written by tomasoflatharta

Apr 19, 2012 at 11:18 am

Bradford and Respect: The space to the left of Labour just got huge

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The space to the left of Labour just got huge

April 15th 2012

This, from the website of the same name,  is the editorial from the upcoming issue of the British magazine Socialist Resistance. With the achievement of the ULA the left in Ireland is a step ahead of the call made here, but still subject to many of the difficulties and weaknesses also discussed.
–ooOoo–

George Galloway’s Bradford West victory, like the student revolt in December 2010, the inner city riots of August 2011, the Occupy movement in October was an event that no one predicted. Yet, as Galloway said in his acceptance speech, his election was the most sensational result in by-election history involving a left candidate. He polled 18,341 votes (55.9%) with a 10,140 majority. His Labour opponent Imran Hussain won a humiliating 8,201 votes (25%) although this was a triumph compared to the Lib Dems’ 1,505 votes (4.6%). Read the rest of this entry »

ULA Public Meeting : NO To Austerity, Build a Radical Alternative – Tuesday April 24 @8.00pm, Teachers Club, 36 Parnell Square

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United Left Alliance

Dublin Central Branch

Public Meeting

NO To Austerity, Build a Radical Alternative

Tuesday April 24 @8.00pm, Teachers Club, 36 Parnell Square

Speakers : Joe Higgins TD, Joan Collins TD,

Sheila Judge (DEIS campaigner)

Boycott the Household Tax

The Campaign to boycott payment of the Household Tax has won magnificent support. The anger expressed at meetings and protest shows people are prepared to face the government down.

The United Left Alliance (ULA) fully supports the Campaign. Our members, councillors and TDs support the boycott of the tax and stand with those resisting the charge.

Labour & Fine Gael Bail Out Bankers

Labour and Fine Gael promised to stand up to the EU-IMF. Labour even threatened to ‘burn the bondholders’. Now they have made a conscious decision to bailout bankers and speculators and every dirty trick in the book will be used to threaten people to force them to pay this unjust tax.

VOTE NO to Austerity Treaty on May 31

Austerity is being imposed to pay off the gambling debts of the banks. The government wants to enshrine these policies in the Constitution by signing up to a European Treaty that will restrict the ability of states to fund public investment to create jobs. The passing of this treaty will lead to ever more cuts in health and education and more misery for the majority of people. It must be opposed.

Wealth Tax Will Fund New Jobs

The ULA is opposed to all forms of austerity:

making ordinary people pay for a crisis that was not of their making. Ireland is not broke and austerity is not inevitable. The richest 5% have a combined wealth of €219 billion. A wealth tax on these resources and a refusal to pay bank debts could generate billions for a programme of job creation.

Build A Radical Political Alternative

The growing opposition to austerity must be linked. The ULA believes it is time to build a radical political alternative. The ULA stands for the creation of a new party for working people that stands for democratic public ownership of the resources of the economy that can guarantee a decent standard of living for all. It does not believe that there is a just or sustainable solution to the current crises based on the capitalist market and bowing to the power of speculators.

We believe there needs to be a wide debate, involving all those groups and individuals opposed to austerity, about the best way to build a new organisation to represent working people, the unemployed and the marginalised.

Come to the Public Meeting, join the debate and get involved in the fightback.

The ULA, formed in November 2010, is an Alliance of People Before Profit , the Socialist Party and the Tipperary Workers and Unemployed Action Group. It has five TDs, an MEP, and councillors throughout the country. It is now building branches in all areas to provide active opposition to the austerity policies of the government.

For more information contact Donal at 087 7552559 or Colm at 087 2947100

United Left Alliance at http://www.unitedleftalliance.org/

Will this be the ICTU position on the Austerity Treaty?

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The paper below on the Fiscal Compact (Austerity) Treaty, dated 12th April, was prepared for the Irish Congress of Trade Unions executive by General Secretary David Begg following the ICTU executive committee meeting of 9th March.

It seems that the blackmail clause is necessary for David Begg too. In a paper which is 80% a useful demolition of the Treaty from a social democratic point of view, an excuse that the wording does not really copper fasten austerity and, especially, the projected inaccessibility of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) for a second bail out following a rejection, leads to the conclusion, encapsulated in the final sentence:

“While the treaty is wrong from our economic and social perspective it becomes hard to oppose it unless a satisfactory alternative to the ESM can be advanced.”

It appears that his will be the leading proposal to go before the relevant ICTU executive meeting for deciding a Congress position on the Treaty.

The email that brought in the paper had the subject heading, “Is this travesty just going to go unchallenged?”

 –ooOoo–

Read the rest of this entry »

Written by tomasoflatharta

Apr 15, 2012 at 12:07 am

ULA members: aligned or nonaligned…?

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The identification of the nonaligned, in the run up to the election of two nonaligned representatives to the Steering Committee of the United Left Alliance on 28th April, has led to some discussion at ULA Branch level.

The category of nonaligned is a little complicated. And may be even more complicated again if, for instance, somebody joined the Socialist Workers Party and then the ULA since the ULA was set up without ever joining the People Before Profit Alliance; indeed it would be difficult for someone recently joining the SWP in the Dublin Central area to join the PBPA before joining the ULA as the PBPA in Dublin Central has not been meeting or operating since the the establishment of the Dublin Central ULA.

The nonaligned category is a field trip for the political anorak already. Members of the PBPA who are not members of the SWP are not nonaligned because it is the PBPA, the Socialist Party and the South Tipperary Workers and Unemployed Action Group that are represented on the Steering Committee and to which you would or would not be aligned. So there are members in the ULA of long established political groups such as Socialist Democracy and the Irish Socialist Network who are nonaligned. ISN members have been welcomed into forums of the nonaligned. A looser but veteran political grouping such as Declan Bree’s group in Sligo (the Sligo/Leitrim Independent Socialist Organisation?*) are not represented on the Steering Committee and therefore are numbered among the nonaligned (if they are ULA members), as are a single supporter (or associate) each of two organised tendencies not otherwise represented in the country. One of the latter is running for one of the nonaligned positions.

The ULA Steering Committee, as I understand it, recognises all these as nonaligned because they do not belong to any of the three founding groups who make up the ULA Steering Committee. There is a great deal of political agreement among the nonaligned but it is a technical category and includes some who differ sharply with the general vision for the ULA of most nonaligned people.

A case could be made, if someone had the nerve to make it, that SWP members who are not PBPA members are nonaligned. The case against that would be that as SWP members they are represented on the ULA Steering Committee by the PBPA delegates, the SWP being represented on the PBPA Steering Committee. The nonaligned are being offered representation now because they have not been represented so far.

And how it fits into all this I’m not sure, but I believe that, until recently anyway, the South Tipperary Workers and Unemployed Action Group had no members in the ULA. There may have been a view that the whole of the STWUAG had joined the ULA en bloc and were represented on and participated through its membership of the ULA Steering Committee. And there is a certain logic to this as long as the ULA continues to be considered as an alliance or federation of three blocs. How new recruits directly to the ULA slot into this is being partly addressed through the nonaligned election of two reps to the Steering Committee.

To round off your enjoyment of this Friday pipeful I draw your attention to the obvious absence of some members of some, and maybe of all three, of the founding organisations from any meetings or activities of the ULA. It is reasonable to assume, and may be a good pluralist thing, that some members of some of the founding organisations are not, and do not see themselves as, members of the ULA.

But we’ll all be marching together tomorrow in Galway.

Won’t we?

Des Derwin

* Declan’s lively website (http://www.declanbree.com/news-currentissues/) mentions many affiliations but not the ULA.

Written by tomasoflatharta

Apr 14, 2012 at 12:17 am

ULA Galway: Counter Conference 13th -14th April

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Invitation

______________________________________________________

Challenging the Sell-out of Labour

Building a real political and economic alternative

Counter-Conference

NUI Galway 13th – 14th April

___________________________________________________

2012 marks the 100th anniversary of the foundation of the Irish Labour Party. To mark the occasion and to challenge them on their absolute betrayal of the working class, the Galway branch of the ULA is hosting a Counter-Conference to coincide with the National Conference of the Labour Conference. The Counter-Conference will be held in NUI Galway on Friday 13th and Saturday 14th April. Speakers will include opposition TDs, trade union leaders, campaigners, academics and former Labour members.  ULA members and supporters, and indeed the general public, are invited to attend and to participate.

It is fitting for working people to commemorate the anniversary of the founding of the Labour Party. The organisation that Larkin and Connolly established in 1912 has been corrupted beyond recognition. The leadership of the Labour Party has turned its back on working people, on women, on the elderly and on the unemployed.

The Counter-Conference will provide a space for political activists, former Labour members and supporters, trade unionists, working people, campaigners and all those affected by unemployment and austerity to gather together to build a new movement for ordinary people.

Further details available from:

www.ulagalway.org/counterconference

ULA.Galway@gmail.com

085 8461013

Written by tomasoflatharta

Apr 4, 2012 at 2:21 pm

Ireland Moving Closer to Banana Republic Status?

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We are governed by forelock-tuggers – running a failing state to the west of Great Britain – is all changing, changing utterly?

namawinelake's avatarNAMA Wine Lake

Ireland has a mature parliamentary democracy, it has an independent media, we don’t depend on a single commodity like bananas for our wealth, we are judged internationally to be a relatively honest and corruption-free country. Events last week have undermined these perceptions, namely the publication of the Mahon report on political corruption in zoning and planning, but the past 24 hours has been even more damning with a major financial transaction involving billions of euro in a country with a GDP of €160bn getting a few minutes in the national parliament, confined to a statement which brooked no subsequent questioning and where phone-calls to the Department of Finance apparently went unanswered. And politicians have now gone on holidays for three weeks. Never mind, we can fall back on our “independent media” to analyse what happened yesterday and here are the headlines from our main national media outlets today:

Deal…

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Written by tomasoflatharta

Mar 30, 2012 at 10:09 am

ULA: Nuts and bolts of Nonaligned democracy – Brian Stafford

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Nonaligned members of the United Left Alliance are – gradually – making their way to the formation of a nonaligned group in the organisation. Recently Brian Stafford, a nonaligned ULA activist,  sent the following discussion piece, on nonaligned representation and organisation, to nonaligned members who are linking up through a newly created emailing group. We reprint it here as a guest post with Brian’s permission.

Another forum for the ULA nonaligned is the Left Unity Blogging facebook page at:

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Left-Unity-Blogging-Network/230558593642145

Comrades,

What follows below are only suggestions to get the discussion going in light of the fact that it looks like it will be difficult to meet before the ULA conference.  I will probably be proposing tidied up versions of them after discussions here.  Because of the lack of political basis to the non aligned group I believe it is most important to have effective democratic checks in place for our own representatives on the steering committee.  I think it is fair to say that all non aligned ULA members want to see the ULA evolve as a democratic functioning party of the working class.  I think we all agree that the founding parties are to be praised for taking the potential first steps towards a mass workers party but that the project has stalled somewhat.  I believe that how we act as a non aligned grouping, with the building of the ULA as our primary goal, can go a long way to getting over the current stasis.  One thing that strikes me is that other left unity projects have been very slow processes I am now very much of the opinion that barring massive social upheaval, which I don’t rule out, we are in for a long journey.  So what do we need, technically to put in place, to make the non aligned grouping a dynamic force within the ULA.

1) The right to recall. I would envision that a non aligned vote on recall would come in one of two ways.  A majority of the SC members decide to put it to a vote of the non aligned members and lay out their reasons for doing so, of course the right to respond should be extended through the same channels for the proposed non aligned member up for recall if they disagree with the recall, it may be necessitated by health or other commitments so no disagreement may arise.  Secondly a percentage of non aligned members petition for a vote to recall.  I think it would need to be around 30% of members at least considering recall should be confined to exceptional circumstances only and should not be open to one non aligned tendency or grouping to air a grievance and disrupt the functioning of the ULA.

2)  Term limits.  Fairly straight forward, I would propose one year terms up to a maximum of three years in a row followed by a break of a year for every year served when it is decided to not stand again or when the three year maximum term is up. So if somebody does two years on the SC and then decides not to run again then they are affectively barred for two more years from running for election to the steering group.

3) Substitute list. Whilst running for election to the SC it would be preferable but not a necessity to announce a substitute in case of failure to be able to make a SC meeting. This substitute can not be someone already running or barred from running through term limits and must be a member of the non aligned ULA group.  I would see the role of the sub to fill in for a maximum of ten steering group meetings barring exceptional circumstances in that case no limit should apply up to the next yearly election.  The substitute would have the same rights as the others members of the SC whilst filling in. If no substitute is announced at the time of election then no substitute can take the place of the elected member.  This is why I believe it preferable to announce a sub at election time who can be on the ballot, however especially at this early stage it may not be practical for all interested in running to actually announce a sub.

4) Open tendencies. As the ULA progresses to a full party it will probably go through a stage were the original founding parties become open tendencies or platforms in an overall minority position (numerically) within the overall membership.  At that stage we will need a framework for dealing with tendencies.  This again is an area were the non aligned grouping can lead the way and be a testing ground for future progress of the ULA.  I’m aware of one tendency within the non aligned group who are very open that they belong to an existing grouping. We need to formalise the registration of such groups to affiliate to the ULA. Depending on the membership size of the affiliating group it should seek its own rep or reps on the SC or if the group is small in number say less than 15% of the non aligned members it should seek representation through the non aligned structures.

5) Gender equality.  It is not enough for us to state that we are for equality we have to show it in our actions.  I would argue for a gender quota of 50% in the non aligned SC reps as I believe it is a fact that female representation on the current SC is zero even though we have excellent female public reps and members.  I would also argue for a policy on gender balance on platforms, family friendly times for meetings and where possible crèche facilities at larger ULA meetings and conferences.  It is still a fact that the vast bulk of unpaid work in the home and caring work is carried out by women and we need to be aware of this fact and organise accordingly.

6) Communication and political discussion.  It has become noticeable that communications have become better since the two full timers were hired and it is worth noting.  It is of the upmost importance that the members start to receive minutes of SC meetings. I think we all recognise that some issues discussed may be sensitive and should not be open to potential leaks to the media or other political forces.  Finalised minutes should be agreed amongst the SC.  I am ok with certain information being withheld for time periods but as far as possible the minutes should be detailed so we are all kept informed as to what our reps are doing.  Finally political discussion. I think we again can lead the way as far as the original discussions on the ULA political program was designed.  We should regularly (maybe quarterly) have discussions on a number of topics, seeking areas we agree on and then having that position mandated to our SC reps to bring to the rest of the SC.  I’m under no illusion that this could be a slow torturous process.  If we accept that we all agree on a lot more than we disagree on and that we can have comradely discussions were the decision is there is no decision then that alone is progress from what has happened in the past on the left.

This is by no means an exhaustive or totally detailed list of everything I am currently thinking about as it relates to the democratic structures of the non aligned group of the ULA but they are important areas beyond the obvious nomination and election process to the SC from the non aligned members.  I think they are important because they have the potential to provide a template for the future of the ULA. I am open to discussion, correction or improvement on any part of this and look forward to any constructive feedback or downright poo pooing of my unworkable ideas.  Finally we should take heart from the rise in support for avowedly anti capitalist parties in Greece but we have to recognise that those parties have been built over long periods of time and had the social force and structures that come with that.  That is I believe the current goal of the left here.  To lay the foundations for the potential to grow rapidly should social conditions change but to definitely grow steadily in the face of further onslaughts on our class.

In solidarity,

Brian Stafford.

22 March 2012

Written by tomasoflatharta

Mar 28, 2012 at 3:49 pm

Several Trade Unions Opposing Household Tax

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THE SECOND-LARGEST trade union in the State has urged its members not to pay the household charge.

Unite yesterday called on its 60,000 members not to register for the charge ahead of the March 31st deadline.

Unite was among several trade union groups which yesterday voiced their opposition to the €100 household charge.

“We are urging people not to register and will stand beside those who are willing to show courage and resist the charge,” spokesman Rob Hartnett said at a press conference.

 

The Dublin Council of Trade Unions welcomed the campaign against the charge and supported “efforts of the organisers to encourage people not to register and not to pay”, Des Derwin of the umbrella body noted yesterday.

The executive of the council took up the position at its February meeting, he said. The body represented most trade unions in Dublin but not all unions have taken up this position, he added.

 

 

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2012/0321/1224313641895.html

 

 

Written by tomasoflatharta

Mar 20, 2012 at 5:32 pm

Austerity in Europe: Susan George on the rise of neoliberal and undemocratic Europe

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Susan George interviewed for the Transnational Institute (TNI). Posted at Links International Journal of Socialist Renewal.

March 1, 2012. Text printed below video. Video posted here from YouTube.

What is the continuity you see between the Maastricht Treaty, through the Lisbon Agenda and the Lisbon Treaty, to the “six pack” and now this new fiscal treaty?

The Maastricht Treaty was a treaty that presented two completely arbitrary figures: 3 per cent budget deficit with regard to the GNP and 60 per cent for the debt.  Why not 4 per cent or 2 per cent? Why not 55 or 65 per cent? Nobody knows. They came out of the sky, those numbers, doubtless from the Bundesbank. But they have become sort of religious symbols, the holy numbers of Maastricht. That was the first effort to get government policy under control, but countries did not respect that, including Germany

When the time of Lisbon came, we’d rather stopped talking about that. Lisbon was about different issues. When people read that treaty (which they did in France, it was the biggest debate we’ve had since May ‘68) — and realised what was actually in the European treaties, they were horrified.

There were innumerable issues in that treaty which people were opposed to: that we were going to be forever under the command of NATO with the US president as commander-in-chief; all the economic detail and other issues in France which made people frightened of laïcité — secularism. But above all, people understood often for the first time that the entire economic program of the EU was, and always had been, completely neoliberal and put “free and undistorted competition” and the free market way above social protection.

In France, we had a huge campaign based on about 1000 collectives that sprung up all over the country, but nobody in the establishment expected us to win. We started off with 70 per cent for the yes, 30 per cent for the no. That is probably why they let us have a referendum. And we voted 55 per cent no. The establishment was furious. All of the major media, most of the politicians, they were stunned and they were furious. And they said in private, never again.

So what happened after that? After the French and the Dutch had voted against this treaty in no uncertain terms (the Dutch vote was 60 per cent against), they got into a very secret group. They had a small committee writing a new treaty, making it even more complicated. They drafted the Lisbon Treaty with the help of the top judicial experts of the commission. It was completely opaque as a process. There were no elected representatives in the group that wrote it. And they simply took the constitution that we had defeated threw out the anthem and the flag and a couple of other little trimmings. But as Valéry Giscard d’Estaing said — and he was the chief architect of the constitution — they have made cosmetic changes to make it easier to swallow. And every other official, including Germany’s Angela Merkel, said this is exactly the same thing as the constitutional treaty. Nothing has changed. And many, many other officials said that including Baroso, the president of the commission.

So here we have the Lisbon Treaty, we’re not allowed to vote on it because obviously we’re going to vote the wrong way. It was made clear that no one will have a referendum — except for Ireland. Gallant little Ireland, has in its constitution that it must have a referendum every time there is a change in the European constitution. And we should all have that provision. The European Constitution and the European legislation provides 80-85 per cent of our national legislation, it just gets transferred into national law. Therefore, when you are under the control of a non-democratic Europe, this is very serious because that is going to be transposed into your own national law.

Fortunately, I had the good luck to be asked by the Irish to help them in fighting against the Lisbon Treaty. Again, we won. It was fantastic! Starting from a very low level, and then for one reason or another, people understood what it was about.  They said no, even though it was extraordinarily complicated to read.

And so, they didn’t vote correctly either. They had to be disciplined; they had to be told to vote again.  By that time the crisis had broken, and the Irish were more or less told that if you don’t vote right this time and say yes, then you are going to be in very deep trouble, you are not going to get any loans and you are not going to get any help coming out of the crisis. So they dutifully went back to the polls and voted yes.

Why do we have to have, in addition to all of this, what is called the “six pack“, and now a new treaty that we should just call the “austerity treaty” (it has a much longer name but forget that, it’s the austerity treaty).  Why do we need this? We need it because Germany, principally, and a few other countries, want this engraved in stone. They want those Maastricht numbers, that people were not paying attention to, engraved in marble: 3 per cent budget deficit allowable maximum, 60 per cent debt allowable maximum. This means that member states are going to lose one of their principal powers in national sovereignty — the power over their own finances. They are not going to be able to control that because it is all going to be controlled by Brussels.

We have a serious problem with this because Brussels wants austerity. What does that mean? Austerity simply means that there is going to be an attack on every measure that has been passed before and since World War II to give ordinary people, workers, ill people, children, old people the benefits that they fought for and won over the last 50 to 100 years. It is that serious!

We do have higher debts, and we do have budget deficits, but the European Commission and the governments are pretending that these deficits exist because we have been “living beyond our means”. That is not the case. It is not because old people have been getting their cheques for retirement or the unemployed have been receiving compensation. It has nothing to do with social spending.

We have deficits because when the crisis came, our governments had to spend huge amounts to bail out the banks. They had to confront a drop in GNP of about 5 per cent — which is a lot of money. They had to try to compensate for that which also costs a lot of money. And since there was more unemployment, they were not receiving the tax income that they were used to receiving. That was a drop in the income with an increase in the expenditures. And since they won’t tax the rich either, there was no money in the till.

What do they do? They say, ah, it is up to the people to pay. So what has happened is that the banks have contributed zero, they are not being asked to make sacrifices at all. We are punishing the innocent, the people who are supposed to pay through austerity, and we are rewarding the guilty because the banks are continuing to receive huge privileges and subsidies from our governments.

That is why we must defeat this fiscal compact, this austerity treaty, and all the measures that come with it unless we want Europe to be retrograded to, shall we say, the 19th century. That’s what it is about.

[Susan George is a TNI fellow, president of the board of TNI and honorary president of ATTAC-France (Association for Taxation of Financial Transaction to Aid Citizens).]

Written by tomasoflatharta

Mar 16, 2012 at 9:58 pm