Listen here to a recording of the SocialistParty Election Rally address held at our Head Office on 26th April featuring a speech by our Vauxhall candidate, Danny Lambert.
The other candidates have
been active answering the many requests for further information.
These are the questions
Oxford Friends of the Earth have sent to the local candidates there:
1. Parts of
Oxfordshire have been earmarked for fracking (exploitation of shale gas by
hydraulic fracturing). Do you support fracking in Oxfordshire?
2. Thanks to the great
work of the Low Carbon Hub, a number of schools in the constituency have
installed solar panels, or are planning to do so. Do you commit to setting a
target for almost entirely carbon free electricity generation by 2030,
delivered by at least 75% renewables, and by making it possible for every
school to be powered by solar energy by 2016?
3. Do you think that
the proposed Flood Relief Channel, at a cost of £125M is the right solution to
Oxford’s flooding problems?
4. Do you commit to
tackle cold homes by insulating, on average, 1 million homes per year up to
2020, of which half are low-income homes?
5. Currently there is
an EU-wide moratorium on the use of neonicotinoid presticides due to the harms
these do to our bees. Do you commit to strengthening the National Pollinator
Strategy and extending the ban on neonicotinoid pesticides?
6. Do you commit to
protect the freedom to campaign by immediately repealing the 2014 Lobbying Act?
Kevin Parkin,
Oxford East, Socialist Party of Great Britain:
Thanks, but I should first explain that I am contesting this
election solely on the basis of seeking the votes of those who want to replace
the existing, capitalist system of minority ownership and production for profit
by a a new world society based on the common ownership and democratic control
of the Earth's resources, natural and industrial, and their use to turn out
what people need while at the same time respecting ecological balances. In our
view, this is the only framework within which the problem of global overwarming
and climate change can be rationally tackled. This point of view is developed
more fully in this article from our monthly magazine, the Socialist Standard:
http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb/socialist-standard/2000s/2008/no-1247-july-2008/too-little-too-late
I am sure that the measures you propose would contribute
marginally to this global problem and would be part of the solution in a
socialist society but I don't want people to vote for me on the basis that I
might agree with them.
Mike Foster, Oxford
West and Abingdon, Socialist Party of Great Britain
1. Parts of Oxfordshire have been earmarked for fracking
(exploitation of shale gas by hydraulic fracturing). Do you support fracking in
Oxfordshire?
2. Thanks to the great work of the Low Carbon Hub, a number
of schools in the constituency have installed solar panels, or are planning to
do so. Do you commit to setting a target for almost entirely carbon free
electricity generation by 2030, delivered by at least 75% renewables, and by
making it possible for every school to be powered by solar energy by 2016?
3. Do you think that the proposed Flood Relief Channel, at a
cost of £125M is the right solution to Oxford’s flooding problems?
4. Do you commit to tackle cold homes by insulating, on
average, 1 million homes per year up to 2020, of which half are low-income
homes?
5. Currently there is an EU-wide moratorium on the use of
neonicotinoid pesticides due to the harms these do to our bees. Do you commit
to strengthening the National Pollinator Strategy and extending the ban on
neonicotinoid pesticides?
6. Do you commit to protect the freedom to campaign by
immediately repealing the 2014 Lobbying Act?
Our candidate, Mike Foster for Oxford West and
Abingdon, is very assiduous at answering questions from electors, this time
from a local group in Abingdon, offering even the socialist position of
vegetable stalls in Abingdon!
1. Do you anticipate
making election promises in the campaign that you will be unable to keep if
elected?
I’m not making any promises at all! The Socialist Party
argues that our current economic and political system can’t be made to work in
the interests of the majority, so we don’t advocate reforming it. Candidates promising
to make changes when they are elected risk those promises being scuppered by
dictates from their party’s leaders and the cumbersome bureaucracy of the
system. And, any reforms have to fit in with what’s financially viable,
regardless of what individual MPs want. I’m standing in the election to
advocate a different kind of society; I’m not standing to make promises which
can’t be kept.
2. The only
independent fresh fruit and vegetable seller in Abingdon is a stall at the
market on Monday mornings whilst the vast majority are at work. How will you
help smaller businesses?
Smaller business struggle to compete against larger
companies which can plough more money into advertising, can absorb losses
better and can afford the most cost-effective methods. The Socialist Party aims
for a world where organisations of different sizes can co-exist without
economic competition getting in the way. This would involve the abolition of
the economic system itself, and its replacement by a society where resources,
industries and services are owned by everyone in common. This would mean that
all organisations would be working directly for people’s benefit, rather than
competing to survive in a cut-throat economy.
3. Which public
sector service sectors do you see as having been worst affected by austerity
measures and how would you seek to redistribute spending?
I work in homeless services, so I have seen how cuts have
prevented some of the most vulnerable people from having access to even basic
necessities. Funding shortages have led organisations to reduce the amount of
supported accommodation available, and tighten the criteria for those who can
receive a service. For example, ‘local connection’ policies have been brought
in across many areas, meaning that homeless people won’t receive much
housing-related support unless they have been in the area for at least six
months.
Any measures to redistribute public spending won’t work in
the long-term. Wealth tends to go where it can be re-invested to make more
money, and public services aren’t attractive investments. The Socialist Party
aims for a world of free access, meaning that all services (including
healthcare, education, transport etc.) would be provided without money being
needed. Such a society could only exist if its resources and infrastructure
were owned and managed by the community as a whole.
4. What steps would
you take to ensure the transparency of commercial interests in policy making?
The Socialist Party aims for a world where there are no
commercial interests at all in policy making. Commercial interests arise
because those who own the most wealth aim to add to their wealth. Having
economic power translates as having influence in decision-making. We advocate
the abolition of private ownership of resources, industries and services. If
society’s resources were to be owned and run by the community as a whole, then
the community could work together for the benefit of everyone. There would
still be differences of opinion about where to build houses, or how to organise
services, but decisions would be made democratically, without leaders. The form
this democracy takes would depend on the circumstances. Some decisions would be
made by elected representatives; others could be made by the whole community
being able to vote directly on an outcome. In a socialist society, democracy
would extend throughout society, and not just be limited to voting in some of
our leaders every five years or so. This framework would allow the most
transparency, inclusivity and accountability in decision making.
5. What controls
would you put in place in the housing sector to protect renters from
exploitative landlords?
Landlords rent property in order to make money for
themselves, not because people need housing. This is how the rental housing market
is structured, and legislation or revised guidelines can’t change it. Many
landlords want to provide decent housing, but some aim to exploit people who
have lower incomes and therefore less choice. All landlords aim to maximising
their income by spending as little as possible on repairs, decorating,
furniture etc. So, their interests pull in the opposite direction to those of
tenants.
The Socialist Party aims for a world where houses are built
directly because people need and want them. This would remove the distinction
between ‘owner’ and ‘tenant’, meaning that people would be able to have much
more control over where they live. A socialist society would also be able to
plan how many new houses are built based on what’s needed and wanted, rather
than what the financial market allows.
6. Why aren't more
tax evaders facing prison sentences?
I suspect that this is partly because tax evaders can afford
to hire accountants, solicitors and advisors to help them manage their finances
to their best advantage, in a way which draws least attention.
7. How will you
ensure that future housing developments in Abingdon are bought by residents
rather than landlords as "buy to let" properties?
See my reply to 5.
8. What are the
percentages of social housing that you will support?
See my reply to 5.
9. What are you doing
to stop the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership agreement?
The Socialist Party’s view on TTIP:
For years the World Trade Organisation has been trying to
change the rules of global trade in the interests of global investors. The US
in particular wants to ease the out-sourcing and off-shoring of jobs,
permitting employers to seek the lowest wages and weakest government oversight
protections around the world; and to incorporate patent and intellectual
ownership rules that will further restrict access to medicines for millions and
could be expanded to include even surgical procedures and not just drug
treatments. Overall, it is a bid to implement a globalisation policy of trade
harmony at the lowest common denominator that will further the interests of
global investors by relaxing various standards to weaker levels of consumer and
public protection. It would represent a further reduction in the ‘sovereignty’
of national governments and their already weak power to resist the dictates of
the world market. But these negotiations have not yet reached a conclusion
because some countries do not want to open their doors too much to
multinational corporations.
At the same time the EU and the US are negotiating a
‘Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership’. One of the points under
discussion is a mechanism known as ‘Investor-State Dispute Settlement’ (ISDS),
which would give corporations the right to challenge a country’s laws. Clearly,
this is something more than a mere ‘free-trade’ deal. Even if a new reform or
policy applies equally to domestic and foreign investors, ISDS proposes to
allow corporations to receive compensation for the absence of a ‘predictable
regulatory environment.’ Another proposal in TTIP is for ‘regulatory
cooperation’ which would give big business lobby groups wide opportunities to
influence decision-making, outside the normal democratic decision-making
processes on both sides of the Atlantic. The clear intention is to allow business
to in effect co-write international regulations, as already happens at national
level.
The socialist attitude is that, at the end of it all, the
arguments within the WTO which have so far prevented agreement are a dispute
between vying capitalist factions, free-trader versus protectionist, foreign
versus native capitalist competitors, fighting to defend or create conditions
that offer them the best return. Even so, among the casualties are working
people the world over, who will end up as collateral damage, more powerless and
more vulnerable than ever in the face of global capitalism. In short, this is a
problem of capitalism from which the working people of the world can never
emerge as winners. The way-out for them is not the restoration of 'national sovereignty'
but the establishment of a world society, without frontiers, where the
industrial and natural resources of the Earth will have become the common
heritage of all humanity and used to produce what people need instead of for
the profit of those who own the world. In short, global socialism. Then, they
will no longer be the casualties of trade agreements or disputes between
different capitalist states.
10. What will you do
to restore the balance between state surveillance and civil liberties?
The Socialist Party advocates the abolition of the state.
This is because the state is there to try and manage an economic and political
system which works in favour of the rich, and not the vast majority. State
surveillance is one technique used to try and run this system. One of the
reasons used to justify state surveillance is that it detects and prevents
crime. However, crime itself is created by the system: in a world where
deprivation and frustration are commonplace, some people will turn to criminal
behaviour. So, again, the system itself is at fault.
11. Would you support
compulsory sex and relationships advice for primary school pupils, including
information on LGBTQ relationships?
The Socialist Party doesn’t have policies on particular
issues like this. In a socialist society, such decisions would be made
democratically by parents, schools and anyone else with an interest, and not by
political parties. Personally, I think that age appropriate information about
sex and relationships (including LGBTQ issues) should be part of education for
primary school pupils.
12. If given a free
vote in parliament would you vote with your personal conscience or in line with
the wishes of your constituents?
The parliamentary system is inherently undemocratic. It is
part of the state, which is there to defend a system which is biased in favour
of the minority with most wealth. Also, I’m not sure how an MP – one person –
can represent the needs and wishes of tens of thousands of people with
different views and in different circumstances.
If socialist MPs were elected, it would be with the mandate
to dismantle the state, retaining any of its useful aspects, such as the
infrastructure of the NHS, for example. This would only be practical and
realistic when a majority of people were in favour of it. Regarding smaller
issues, a socialist MP should represent the wishes of the majority of their
constituents, although they would struggle to do this within the current
framework.
Meanwhile in Islington
North Bill Martin received this inquiry:
As a Manchester United fan and a voter in the
Islington North constituency, before I vote on May 7th I would like to know
whether you will support legislation to reform football governance? We believe
legislative changes are necessary as outlined here. Your response to the question below may
impact decisively on my voting intentions: Will you personally, and your party
generally, support new legislation as outlined in the above link? Bill
(personally, very much more a rugby football fan) answered:
The Socialist Party is campaigning for the creation of a
society based on common ownership of the wealth of the world, so that it can be
directly administered in all our interests, rather than in the interest of the
minority who currently own it. this
would mean an end to buying and selling, and production for needs, not for sale
and profit.
The issue your campaign highlights, of the obligation of
directors to shareholders over fans, neatly illustrates the problem of class
ownership of wealth. The pleasure of
football becomes a simple means to capitalist ends so long as the market
remains.
As the vast sums of television money show, football fans are
part of the product, as capitalist firms make extra profits through showing the
sport and advertising to football fans.
With common ownership
of the wealth of the world, we would see an end to money dominating sport, and
simple organisation for pleasure of the game as an end in itself. If our
delegates find themselves serving as a minority in a parliament dominated by
pro-capitalist parties, our membership will instruct them to vote (after a
democratic debate) in the best interests of the working class.
Regards,
Bill Martin
In Brighton the activity of the "roller derby" was more of an interest.
Jacqueline Shodeke, Brighton
Kemptown, Socialist Party of Great Britain replied:
“Hi. I’m just
standing for socialism and not making promises on any subject because we’re not
running the sort of campaign where parties say “Vote for us and we’ll do this
or that for you”. So all I can say is that amateur sport is good, and that in a
socialist society all sports will be amateur, since it will be a society
without money and its corrupting influence on everything including sport.”