Thursday, April 07, 2016

Meet the Socialist Party

Socialist Street Stalls (subject to change depending on how it goes and, of course, the weather):

*SATURDAY 9 APRIL*

Chiswick:
High Road,
12 noon - 2pm

Hounslow: High Street,
Outside Treaty Centre,
11 - 1pm

*SATURDAY 16 APRIL*

Brentford:
High Street, 12 noon - 2pm

Kingston:
Clarence Street (pedestrianised part) 11 - 1pm

*SATURDAY 23 APRIL*

Chiswick:
High Road, 12 noon - 2pm

Feltham:
High Street, 11 - 1pm

*SATURDAY 30 APRIL*

Brentford:
High Street, 12 noon- 2pm

Kingston:

Clarence Street (pedestrianised part), 11 - 1pm


1 comment:

ajohnstone said...

West London branch's experiment with doing two street stalls in different parts of the constituency with two members each rather than one with four members worked. Successful stalls were held in Hounslow and Chiswick. As it happened, with the same result: leaflets handed out, a few pamphlets sold, a contact made and our presence noticed.

It also gave us a chance to get the feel of the areas which are in fact different. Richmond and Kingston are leafy suburbs with only a couple of Labour councillors between them (the one in Richmond a defector from the LibDems rather than directly elected). Hounslow is Labour-dominated with only a handful of Tories (from wards in Chiswick as it happens), with a large population of people from a South Asian background and migrants from Poland and Rumania.

In Hounslow there were three rival stalls, all religious, two christian and one muslim (who gave us a free copy of the koran), fulfilling the role of being the heart of a heartless world as Marx once put it.In fact we had to discuss religion as much as politics, with a sikh and a christain who were both highly critical of islam and, as they saw it, the preference given to its followers by the government and the likes of the SWP. We said that we were not afraid to criticise islam as a religion, but we were opposed to all religion and all religions. We would have sold another copy of our pamphlet How the Gods Were Made if we'd another one with us.

On the political side, a man from Poland shouted at us that he had come from a "post-communist country". We shouted back that he'd come from a post-state-capitalist one. At least two people defended extending Heathrow airport as this would provide more local jobs, one saying that Boris was mad because he wanted to close down Heathrow. A bit of an exaggeration of his position, though in line with its logic because this would be the only way of stopping the inhabitants of the leafy suburbs being disturbed in their back yards by aircraft noise.

Next Saturday we'll have two stalls again, one in Kingston and the other in Brentford.