The Prince's Ward by-election Hustings took
place on Thursday 30 April in St Anselm's Church, Kennington Cross. Prince's Ward
is in the north of Lambeth borough, comprising mainly Vauxhall and
Kennington. The most interesting thing about council by-elections and their
hustings is seeing capitalism in a microcosm and its effects on people at the
local level in Lambeth with regards to housing, libraries and schools. There
was a small demo outside the hustings before it began – local community activists
carrying a 'Hands Off Durning Library'
banner.
Around 50 people turned out for the hustings
and all 6 candidates were there: Danny Lambert, the Socialist Party candidate,
Kingsley Abrams (Left Unity-TUSC), Labour, Lib-Dems, Green and Tory. Danny
stood (all the other candidates sat down for their speeches/answers as they had
nothing to be excited about to stand up) and gave his 2 minutes opening which
was a concise exposition of the Socialist case.
The Green Party had some support at the
hustings but their candidate was weak. The point of the Greens seems to be what
Caroline Lucas said on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, as a group that puts
political pressure on Labour from the left. There was no support for the
Lib-Dems and I can't recall a single thing he said. The Tory candidate was
personable and probably right when he said
'I'm the only candidate here who can beat Labour' but he had no support
there.
The Labour candidate is a shoe-in to win
Prince's Ward, she had lots of support there. But what a candidate!
Mealy-mouthed, charmless, professional Blairite career politician in the
making, a product of the Vauxhall Labour
Party Machine. I thought of Danny's observation 'anyone who wants to be a
politician is the last person you'd want'. The Vauxhall Labour MP Kate Hoey was
in the audience.
Local Lambeth issues dominated the hustings
- 'estate regeneration' or really the
housing crisis in particular Knights Walk, threatened closure of Durning
Library, the need for expansion of the Archbishop Sumner School. Lambeth Labour
Council got in the neck from 4 of the candidates, the Labour could not stick
the boot too much! Even Danny had to agree that Lambeth Council data is not to
be trusted. Another local issue that has recently developed is the future of
the Royal Vauxhall Tavern future which
has been bought by a property developer. The LGBT community and
continuing existence of the RVT supported by all candidates, although Danny
pointed out the inevitability of things like this happening when we live in an
economic system where profit comes before people's needs.
If I was one of the community activists at
the hustings then my vote would go to Kingsley Abrams of Left Unity-TUSC. He had some support at the
hustings, and was a very capable speaker. He should be, as he is a professional
local politician, many years experience as a Merton Labour councillor and
Lambeth Labour councillor. His refrain was
'I will never vote for cuts' but
he sometimes spoke of himself in the third person using his forename! 'Kingsley
will never vote for cuts!' He never once mentioned the word 'socialism'
although even Steve Nally, Trotskyite TUSC candidate at other hustings doesn't
either. Abrams is also LU– TUSC parliamentary candidate in Southwark against
Lib Dem Simon Hughes. Abrams is unusual in that he is not a Trotskyite and is
standing for TUSC. He is Labour left. He praised the so-called 'independence' of Vauxhall Labour MP Kate
Hoey who was in attendance for part of the hustings. I spoke with Simon Hardy
(Vauxhall Left Unity candidate) in Brixton last Saturday, and he said LU were
there to push Labour to the 'left'. So that is the point of Left Unity.
Abrams 'pledges' were music to the ears of
the local activists involved in the Knights Walk, Durning Library, Archbishop
Sumner School campaigns. He got passionate (although he did not stand up!)
talking about 'regeneration' means
'social cleansing', it is a a disgrace, he proposed rent caps, scrapping the right to buy, scrapping the bedroom tax
(the only time it was mentioned – probably because of its unpopularity even a
Labour government will scrap it if elected on 7 May)
Our socialist Iranian comrade pointed out to
the hustings there were 1 million empty homes, and that 'housing should be held
in common'. On a question of working with local faith communities, Danny had the
best answer when he spoke about the 'human community', although I feared he was
going to do Marx on religion but really that was me wanting to do a socialist
exposition on 'religion' along the lines of Feuerbach and Marx !
The hustings switched then to a
quasi-Anglican caring capitalism feel when the Vicar's curate made a statement
on the plight of Carers in the borough who are paid below minimum wage, are on
zero hours contracts, and not paid travel expenses for travelling between
clients. Abrams again gave his support as a trade unionist for UNITE, and
representing TUSC and Left Unity,
proposing £10 minimum wage, and the scrapping of zero hours contracts. I gasped
inwardly when the Labour candidate said the minimum wage of £9.15 was a
'reasonable wage' ! although nobody at
the hustings felt that the Labour candidate had just revealed her contempt for
working people.
Danny pointed out that the Curate had nicely
put into words an indictment of capitalism.
Five of the candidates want a more 'caring',
'compassionate capitalism', believe capitalism can be reformed to be better
although Danny pointed out several times that capitalism cannot be made to work
in the interests of working people.
To round off a peculiar hustings the Tory
candidate had the best line right at the end of the hustings when he said
'Finally, what is the use of words. Let us be
seen together in Action' which clinched the finale, and was taken from
Ovid's Metamorphoses.
ALL THINGS ARE HELD IN COMMON |
SPC
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