sheffield labour council targets workers and the vulnerable

16 02 2012

David Huckerby reports on the 550 council jobs to be axed in Sheffield.

Anti-cuts demonstration in Sheffield

Julie Dore and the Labour group who run Sheffield Council will make council workers and some of the most vulnerable people, who depend on council services, pay for the financial crisis. While Julie Dore sneers in public at protesters with placards, she tells Sheffield Star readers and trade union meetings that she has protected the most vulnerable. This is a dishonest attempt to justify choosing to make cuts, rather than organise to fight the government. The image of the dented sheild only makes sense if you have taken part in a battle, not surrendered before the fight has begun.

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november 30th reports: sheffield

2 12 2011

Clifford Biddulph reports on the November 30th strike day in Sheffield, which saw little scabbing but a demo no larger than on June 30th.

On the previous strike day in Sheffield on June 30th, the main council unions were not on strike but joined the strike rally at lunch time. Even then as the march passed the council buildings in the city centre, most council workers were at work. This time from early morning the were small groups of pickets at council buildings with trade union flags prominent.

Most of the pickets were Unison.  But there was also a GMB presence. Very few council staff went into work or crossed the picket line. It was mainly managers.  However, Capita, a private company, is contracted to provide some services and their workers went in.  A Unison steward said they had been given permission not to strike. The customers were on strike as well: they obviously thought there would be no service. Read the rest of this entry »





sheffield anti-cuts: a fairer capitalism?

21 06 2011

Clifford Biddulph found the Sheffield anti-cuts alliance heavier on top-table speakers than real politics or organisation

The second public meeting of the campaign against the cuts in Sheffield was was far smaller and less representative than the first founding meeting last year, despite the recent demos and strike votes. Less than one hundred people sat in a University lecture room with seats for five hundred, to listen to seven speakers. It was a trade union rally, not a meeting for activists to discuss the socialist alternative to the crisis of capitalism and how to organise to make the transition to  a real movement.

The character of the speeches was very defensive. It was all about keeping what we had. Defending our welfare state against the Nasty Tories as if the Labour Party was not making cuts in Manchester and elsewhere. There was no criticism of the Labour Party or those union leaders reluctant to fight the cuts. The political implication of the speeches was the Labour Party could somehow represent the fight back or to register that there was a trade union fightback. There was no analysis of the economic crisis and no speaker including a Permanent Revolution supporter, mentioned the S word. John McDonnell MP came closest with his call for a new society.   Read the rest of this entry »





over a thousand job losses proposed by sheffield lib dem council

5 03 2011

David Huckerby reports on job cuts and resistance in Sheffield.

Nick Clegg and local Lib Dem council leader Paul Scivan have claimed that there will be 250 job Losses for 2011/12 at Sheffield city council. However, this does not include the 600 current job vacancies which will not be filled, and another 320 vacancies caused by voluntary redundancies. Nor does the official figure include job losses from the knock-on effect cuts in services will have council contractors. Local unemployment is rising sharply.

A large proportion of the cuts fall unfairly on services to young people, children and families. This is in complete disregard for equality issues or legislation. They are considered to be an easy target for cuts. Connexions will face £2.4 million cuts in 2011/12. The axe will also fall on leisure and culture services. It is proposed that there will be £2.9 million of staff cuts in this service area. Altogether there will be a 15% reduction in council spending in the first year.

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sheffield anti cuts alliance – steering committee meeting, 14/12/10

18 12 2010

Barry Biddulph was at the first steering committee meeting of the Sheffield anti-cuts group.

Fifty members of the Sheffield anti cuts campaign gathered in the Sheffield Trades and Labour Club to discuss the way forward for the campaign with their steering committee. One member raised the question of whether the anti cuts organisation was called a campaign or an alliance. A question which illustrated two tendencies in the organisation: Those members who want a grass roots socialist/communism from below approach for an independent militant campaign and the platform of temporary officials – Marion Lloyd of PCS and the Socialist Party, Ben Morris of SWP and NUT and chair Martin Mayer of Unite who were for a top down, large trade union-led alliance of delegates accountable to trade union officials. Essentially, despite differences in their individual positions, they all stand for a radical trades council structure. Read the rest of this entry »





sheffield anti-cuts campaign launch meeting report

27 11 2010

Barry Biddulph attended the public launch meeting of the Sheffield anti-cuts campaign.

Another comrade and myself attended the Sheffield anti-cuts campaign public launch meeting on Wednesday 24th November at the Novotel Hotel. The Campaign has the support of PCS, UNISON, GMB. CWU, NUT, and NUJ trade unions. However, only about 250 people and eventually about 300 were present out of the huge public sector workforce in Sheffield, showing the weakness of the trade union left and the lack of mass support, particularly for the SWP, and the Socialist Party. Although the two groups’ members were prominent in the meeting and among the speakers. The speakers were Marion Lloyd, Socialist Party, speaking for the civil service union, Ben Morris speaking for the SWP’s Right To Work and Bill Greenshields of the Communist Party of Britain speaking for peoples charter. Attendance would have been far less had a number of young students, fresh from the demonstrations, not been present. We gave out a Commune bulletin with some basic Commune points from our recent publicity. Any doubts about the basic nature of the leaflet were dispelled after experience of the meeting and the way it was conducted. Here is my view of the meeting and some notes of the main points made by the speakers to give a flavour of the politics of the platform. Read the rest of this entry »





resist cuts to jobs, services and benefits

28 10 2010

A bulletin distributed outside Sheffield Council buildings this morning

Cameron, Osborne and their chum Clegg have declared war on working class people. They are attacking welfare and public sector jobs: 490,000 public jobs will go. The £81 billion cuts are not a neutral economic necessity.   They have been denounced by many leading economists as they risk slowing growth, reducing government income, and therefore making the debt even harder to pay off.  The real agenda?  Thatcher’s old tune: less for the working class, more for the powerful.

the cuts coalition

It is a lie to say that we are standing on the brink of economic ruin or that the money has run out. It is spin to claim that we are ‘all in this together’. Read the rest of this entry »





lib dems to slash council services

30 09 2010

David Huckerby reports on Sheffield council’s planned cuts

Even before Clegg and Cameron give the detail of their savage cuts in their ironically named ‘spending review’, the Lib Dems’ favourite council Sheffield has put itself in the vanguard of austerity by announcing its intention to unilaterally terminate the contracts of over 8,000 council workers.

The gloves are well and truly off. Up to 40% of the council budget will be slashed in the next three years. Spending is to be reduced by £219 million, 15% going in the first year, starting in April. Front line services will disappear or diminish drastically. Read the rest of this entry »





austerity cuts arrive in sheffield

7 02 2010

by David Huckerby

Cuts in public services, jobs and wages have arrived in Sheffield even before the general election where the Tories, New Labour and the Liberals have all promised to take the axe to government spending to help solve the economic crisis at the expense of the working class.

The only significant difference between these parties of big business, representing the rich, are the tactics to adopt towards the timing and scale of the cuts. Don’t appear too gleeful as the Tories did initially, and don’t make the tone too harsh and negative, as the Liberal leader did. On the other hand don’t appear too positive, as Gordon Brown did at first, to the point of lack of credibility. The only certain thing is the cuts will become the deepest for decades irrespective of whether the axe is New Labour or Tory. Read the rest of this entry »





the rise of the far right and anti-fascism: february 16th, sheffield

30 01 2010

The next communist forum in Sheffield will be a discussion on the rise of the far right in Britain today, the character of fascism, and how we should organise against this threat.

The meeting takes place from 7pm on  Tuesday 16th February at The Rutland Arms, 86 Brown Street, Sheffield S1 2BS. Email uncaptiveminds@gmail.com to express your interest or ask for more info – see below for some background reading for the meeting. Read the rest of this entry »





what would our alternative society look like?

18 12 2009

The first of a series of communist discussion meetings in Sheffield. From 7pm on Tuesday 19th January at The Rutland Arms, 86 Brown Street, Sheffield S1 2BS.

Recommended reading for the meeting includes: William Morris - News From Nowhere chapters xii, xv and xvii; Cornelius Castoriadis – On the content of socialism; Karl Marx – Critique of the Gotha Programme parts iii and iv, as well as The Paris Commune from Civil War in France.

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