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New look An Phoblacht on sale today… June 24, 2010

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics, The Left.
25 comments

Many thanks to the friend of the CLR who forwarded us this.

New-look An Phoblacht on sale today.

With more pages, more photos and more colour, the 32-page July issue includes…

Ballymurphy Massacre, 1971 – Prelude to Bloody Sunday?
The Parachute Regiment shot dead 11 people over 3 days in west Belfast in the wake of internment in 1971 and just months before being deployed in Derry

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Austerity measures… and an outline alternative. June 24, 2010

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Economy, The Left.
5 comments

It’s gloomy days, and not much to be cheerful about, but if you want to fast forward to at least one attempt to look past the gloom scroll down to the last paragraph. Otherwise…

Paul Krugman had a most interesting piece in the Irish Times this week on the attitude that is driving austerity in Europe. As he notes:

creating jobs is out, inflicting pain is in.

And…

But despite these warnings, the deficit hawks are prevailing in most places – and nowhere more than here, where the government has pledged €80 billion, almost $100 billion, in tax increases and spending cuts even though the economy continues to operate far below capacity.
What’s the economic logic behind the government’s moves? The answer, as far as I can tell, is that there isn’t any. Press German officials to explain why they need to impose austerity on a depressed economy, and you get rationales that don’t add up. Point this out, and they come up with different rationales, which also don’t add up. Arguing with German deficit hawks feels more than a bit like arguing with US Iraq hawks back in 2002: They know what they want to do, and every time you refute one argument, they just come up with another.

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European Week of Protest and Solidarity – Belfast Protest June 24, 2010

Posted by Garibaldy in Campaigns, The Left.
1 comment so far

EUROPEAN-WIDE WEEK OF PROTEST & SOLIDARITY – BELFAST PROTEST
NO CUTS TO PUBLIC SERVICES

Protest: 5-6pm Thursday 24 June
European Commission Office, 74-76 Dublin Rd, Belfast

ENDORSED BY: THE WORKERS’ PARTY -FIRE BRIGADES UNION – I.N.T.O. NORTHERN REGION – SOCIALIST PARTY – ORGANISE – SAVE MID-ULSTER HOSPITAL – WE WONT PAY CAMPAIGN – YOUTH AGAINST RACISM plus many others

NO CUTS TO BAILOUT THE BANKS – DEFEND JOBS, WAGES & SERVICES

UK Budget: Some Responses June 23, 2010

Posted by Garibaldy in Northern Ireland, Trade Unions, UK General Election 2010.
11 comments

Unfortunately I don’t have time to do a proper resonse to the extremely reactionary budget announced yesterday by the Tory/Lib Dem coalition, but here a couple of responses stolen quoted from the ICTU and The WP. Increating VAT, cutting access to public benefits, reducing benefits and pensions. Truly, the Tories and their allies have delivered on their campaign promises to be the voice of progressives. And deflationary policies have arrived. Oh joy. As usual, please add more responses in the comments.

From the ICTU

BUDGET 2010: WOMEN AND CHILDREN HIT FIRST

The Irish Congress of Trade Unions calls on all 18 MPs from Northern Ireland to vote against this budget which will drag the local economy even further from any meaningful recovery.

Speaking after the Chancellor George Osborne made his Budget speech in the House of Commons, Avril Hall-Callaghan, Chair of the Northern Ireland Committee of the ICTU, said:

“This budget is regressive and short sighted and will disproportionately affect women both as workers and as mothers, through welfare cuts and pay freezes in the public sector, whose workforce is mostly female.

“The private sector and the organisations which claim to speak in their interests have little to cheer about, either. While a handful of large businesses will profit from gradual cuts in Corporation Tax, retailers and service providers will be hit by a double whammy of the increase in VAT to 20% and the decrease in consumer spending by public sector workers. Given the importance to Northern Ireland of the public sector, this will mean more shuttered shops on our streets.

“The opportunity to stimulate the economy, especially in the regions and nations of the UK, is being squandered at the behest of the bond markets and the ideology of this Tory-led coalition. The promised firm action on the banks and on Capital Gains Tax is a limp slap across the wrist, compared to the threat of 25% cuts across most departmental budgets during this Parliament.

“We await with trepidation to see what the funding consequences are for the Northern Ireland budget. The 18 MPs we have elected now have a duty to protect the people of Northern Ireland from the regressive intentions of this “progressive alliance working in the national interest”, as George Osborne claimed today. We see little progressive in this budget and less in the interest of Northern Ireland.”
ENDS

From The WP

The Workers’ Party spokesperson Paddy Lynn has reacted with outrage to the provisions of the emergency Budget outlined by multimillionaire George Osborne.

“This has to count among the worst single attack on the working class since the days of Margaret Thatcher. The ConDem coalition has added an extra £40bn of tax increases and spending cuts to the £73bn put in place by Alistair Darling in the dying days of the Labour government”, said Mr Lynn, “and although the ConDems pretend it’s a ‘fair and balanced budget’, it is in fact a massive onslaught on the already poor and disadvantaged”, Mr Lynn continued. “The scale of the public sector cuts ahead is scarcely believable. If the Coalition gets its way in the next four years we will see public sector spending fall by 25 per cent in real terms, with the exceptions of the NHS and the international aid budget. And don’t be fooled by the so-called ‘ring-fencing’ of the NHS because the ConDems are planning £2.6bn in NHS cuts by 2010-11. Make no mistake about it: this government is opening the door to the privatisation of the NHS through outsourcing and the strengthening of bureaucratic internal market mechanisms which already exist. Honest Liberal Democrats –there must be a few- should hang their heads in shame.”

Mr Lynn also noted the Budget’s attack on welfare recipients and the unemployed. “The Tories plan to take £5.84bn a year by 2014-15 from people on benefits through lower annual rises. They will do this through the shift to the consumer prices index (CPI) from the retail price index (RPI) to decide how much benefits rise. Cuts to the housing allowance will force people to move into worse accommodation or private landlords to lower their rates. While those on benefits get ready for worse to come, private landlords all over the country are preparing for the good times”, Mr Lynn continued. “On top of this, workers will bear the brunt of the proposed increase in the rate of the highly regressive Value Added Tax to 20%.”

Mr Lynn then went on to discuss the likely economic outcome of the emergency budget. “While this budget represents a not so stealthy attack on the poor and the welfare state, the ConDems have also justified it as the only course that could be taken to save the economy. In their view cutbacks and tax increases (fiscal tightening) will create profit making opportunities in the private sector, which will put the UK economy back on course As Martin Wolff puts it in the Financial Times, “In current circumstances, the belief that a concerted fiscal tightening across the developed world would prove expansionary is, to put it mildly, optimistic.” The UK economy is going to be depressed because working people will have less to spend. The rich and super-rich will have more to spend it all but they tend not to spend most of their colossal wealth in the real economy. In other words, taking money from the working class and giving it to the rich is in itself a deflationary move. On top of this all major export markets are introducing similar austerity measures. The UK economy cannot hope to substantially improve through exports when no-one is in a position to buy UK goods and services. The Con DemBudget is a recipe for economic depression and social disaster. There is no hope of a private sector led recovery in our economy. What is needed is a massive programme of public works which will expand jobs, expand the amount of money in workers’ pockets and so expand the economy”, Mr Lynn concluded.

James Connolly Memorial Lecture 2010 June 23, 2010

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics, The Left.
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Many thanks to the Communist Party of Ireland for forwarding the following:

We have just published the 2010 James Connolly Memorial Lecture, delivered by Andrew Murray, Chair, Stop the War Coalition, London and a member of the Editorial Advisory Broad of quarterly Communist Review published by the Communist Party of Britain. It is we feel an important contribution to the debate on the left not just here in Ireland but of interest to left activists in these islands.

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It’s on! That realignment of the Irish centre right. June 23, 2010

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics.
6 comments

It’s long been a dream of the left and further left that the centre right would see sense, as it were, and coalesce in some fashion.

Well, it’s taken a massive economic crisis and intriguing poll results, and here we can see the first evidence of what will, no doubt, be a snowball effect. Can it be long now until Taoiseach Enda Kenny and Tanaiste Brian Lenihan sit around the the Cabinet table – although, whether that is an improvement on the present state of affairs… hmmm…

For news today that Brian Lenihan is off to the annual Béal na mBláth commemoration of Michael Collins. Yep, that Brian Lenihan, our Minister of Finance who will we are told ‘…become the first Fianna Fáil politician to deliver the oration’.
A most intriguing paragraph is to be found here…

Fine Gael TD for Cork South West Jim O’Keeffe said: “The committee, after consultation with the Collins family, came to the conclusion it might be a good idea to ask Mr Lenihan. My role was to broach it with him and to find out if he would like to do it.

With no disrespect to the Minister, why him and why now?

Collins was minister for finance in the first government after the Treaty was signed.

Well, perhaps that’s a reason, although the IT notes that…

Delivering the oration in 2007, Fine Gael MEP Seán Kelly said it was time to consign to the scrap heap any semblance of bitterness and poison that might still remain after the Civil War.

Yes. Well, perhaps it was better in order to ‘consign to the scrap heap any semblance of bitterness and poison that might still remain’ after a minor civil war inside FG by choosing someone less contentious than any figure from inside the party.

More seriously… one of our esteemed contributors relayed to me a story of how a Fine Gael acquaintance of his was now, in the wake of the Enda Kenny leadership heave that wasn’t, talking about voting Fianna Fáil to keep Labour out, especially if Lenihan were leader. Why? Because Gilmore would be ‘soft’ on the public sector.

And presumably Lenihan wouldn’t.

IPSC Day School June 23, 2010

Posted by Garibaldy in Palestine.
2 comments

Venue: Teacher’s Club, Parnell square

Time: 11.30-5.30 Sunday, 27 June, 2010

Cost €5 unemployed/student €10 employed (All welcome, especially new
activists and interested people)

Timetable

11.30-12 Registration

12- 1.30 Session 1

Historical introduction to Israel/Palestine

Israel/Palestine today

1.30-2 LUNCH

2-3.45 Session 2

2-3.15 Workshop 1: An introduction to Palestine solidarity advocacy
and activities

2-3.15 Workshop 2: Countering Hasbara (Israeli propaganda) and indifference.

3.15-3.45 Feedback from workshops

BREAK

4-5.15 Session 3

4-5 pm Workshop 3: Media and public advocacy workshop

4-5 pm Workshop 4: Palestinian politics and Palestinian resistance

5-5.15 Feedback from workshops

5.15-6.00 Session 4

The IPSC and our solidarity work

Labour: The trials and tribulations of polling success in the current climate… June 23, 2010

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Irish Politics, The Left.
14 comments

Fintan O’Toole’s piece this week on Fine Gael’s leadership contest and the implications for the Labour party was well-judged. It’s an area that has been glossed over far too easily by many commentators. Given that the destination of the LP appears to be coalition with FG the very nature of the recent convulsions within FG are revealing.
Not least in that much of what happened appeared to operate on a dual premise… firstly that under Bruton Fine Gael would win big and secondly and most importantly that therefore the Labour Party would have a vestigial influence on government and cabinet formation.

As O’Toole notes:

The smugness is insufferable. The spectacle of Leo Varadkar, hardly a wet week in the Dáil, offering Enda Kenny the job of minister for foreign affairs in the next government is cringe-making. But it is also eloquent. Fine Gael is operating entirely on the assumption that it will take power whenever the general election is called. Why? Because it’s Fine Gael’s turn. The junior branch of The Machine inherits power whenever the senior branch screws up. Labour’s job is simply to facilitate this process in return for a modest share of power and patronage.

The important issue articulated above isn’t the latter part of the paragraph. I think the idea of The Machine is overstated… not least because FG has been profoundly unsuccessful in gaining power even in small measure during the past two and a half decades. It is the first part. Any TD taking Bruton’s side believing that one Ministry or another was in their gift without even cosmetic regard to the part Labour might play is a damning indictment of their own understanding of how the situation actually is – given that Labour is riding high in Dublin, and of a wild over-expectation as to how Bruton could materially improve their chances.

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The low tax model vs. the welfare state… June 22, 2010

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Economy, The Left.
24 comments

…I paraphrase, but a report from the ‘cross-party’ 2020 Public Services Trust, a UK based think tank, entitled The Deficit: The Longer Term View has a very stark outline of the choices facing that society – and by extension our own.

You can read the Report, which frankly looks like a very slightly souped up Powerpoint or Keynote presentation here. It’s always a bit depressing to see the Ernst & Young logo attached to anything, but… what can one do?

Main features?

The Coalition has agreed to a “significantly accelerated reduction” of the structural deficit over the course of this parliament. The main burden of deficit reduction will be borne by reduced spending rather than increased taxes.

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Human. All too human. June 22, 2010

Posted by WorldbyStorm in Economy, Irish Politics.
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Fair dues to Mary Minihan in the Irish Times the weekend before last, for if an interview is designed to reveal or expand upon the character of the interviewee she did just fine when engaging with Minister for Justice Dermot Ahern. And let’s note that despite the outcome, or was it none-outcome, of the last poll in terms of reshaping Fine Gael in a manner more to the liking of the Irish Times, that politics goes on outside of that party.

Indeed the position of Fianna Fáil is a topic worth returning to again and soon. But let’s consider an individual in FF who isn’t of minor interest.

Now let me also add that interviews, political interviews that is, often have the unstated subtext of seeking to humanise their subject. That being the case Ahern has certainly walked away with his credentials as a human intact. Whether, though, that’s precisely the outcome he sought is quite a different matter.

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