FIGHT THE CUTS

FIGHT THE CUTS
VOTE SSP ON THURSDAY MAY 5TH

11 Years Working In Your Community

11 Years Working In Your Community
Scottish Socialist Party Website
Showing posts with label General election. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General election. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 May 2010

POLLING DAY IS HERE!!!!

Time To Really Vote For Change.
Vote Scottish Socialist Party!!!  

Today the 6th of May 2010, sees the British public take to the polls to decided on who runs our next government. We at the Scottish Socialist Party have 10 candidates in various seats around Scotland.
Whilst the media talks about the 3 main parties and the 3 main parties all talk of change. But a vote for these parties is not real change it's still the same. If one thing the prime ministerial debates showed us was that there is very little difference or variety of choice by voting for the any of the big 3 or even SNP who will quite happily jump into bed with any of the potential prime ministers.

We at the Scottish Socialist Party represent Real Change.
We represent the real alternative option to the mainstream capitialist parties. We are a party that promotes a real fairer future. We are the only party commited to bringing a Free Scottish Socialist Republic.

11 point plan from the Scottish Socialist Party


  • We want Scotland's wealth shared out equally
  • The rich will pay higher taxes
  • Our public services, including oil, fuel and transport, will be publicly owned
  • Our minimum wage right now would be £8 an hour
  • Wages, benefits and pensions will rise by £50 a week, across the board
  • All school children will receive free school meals
  • Women will get equal pay for equal work
  • Young people will get the same national minimum wage as everyone else.
  • The abolition of nuclear arms in Scotland and the continued campaign for the worldwide abolition of nuclear arms.
  • The council tax will be scrapped in favour of a local tax where the rich pay their fair share
  • Free public transport will be brought in to ease congestion, pollution and global warming
  • Our troops will be brought home from the killing fields of Iraq and Afghanistan.


We are the only party to have constantly campaigned against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. We
 are the party that will NOT only abolish the £100 billion Trident nuclear system but we would continue to campaign against Weapons of Mass Destruction on an international level. We are the only party that opposes all publice sector cuts. We are a party that will support a fairer and cleaner political system based on real proportional representation in which politicians will take a workers salary and we will continue to campaign on these issues. To be the real voice of change in Scotland, on this day the 6th of May we ask you, when it comes time to vote. Vote for a party that will give us a true champion voice for Scotland in Westminster. A party that is on the street listening to the needs of the Scottish people.
This 6th of May vote SSP.  Check Out All SSP candidates here

Thursday, 29 April 2010

Letter from Ally Hendry Printed in West Lothian courier 29/04/2010

As a socialist, I want the current capitalist economic system to be replaced by a socialist system based on equality and social need rather than private greed. This would involve taking control of the banks, insurance companies and the major industries and placing them in the hands of ordinary working men and women. The creation of a socialist society would help bring an end to poverty, injustice and war.
Socialists wish to see everyone being given the opportunity to fulfil their true potential and not having to spend their lives as ‘wage slaves’ in the capitalist system. How many great musicians, skilled doctors, great scientists and engineers etc have there been amongst children of working class families who were never able to realise their goals because economic constraints forced them to take lesser paid jobs to augment the family income?
If elected to Westminster, I would oppose cuts in Government spending which, it has been reported, in West Lothian would result in a minimum of one thousand compulsory Council job losses and drastic reductions in our vital public services.
To encourage small and medium sized companies to locate in West Lothian (and other areas), I would propose a policy of offering a rates moratorium for a period of 1-3 years and a financial contribution to the wages and training costs of long-term unemployed people given jobs by the incoming companies.
Although a devolved issue, another of my priorities would be to highlight the campaign for the full reinstatement of all services to St Johns Hospital. The reduction in services was part of the policy of the previous Labour-led government in its insidious drive to privatise the National Health Service.

Monday, 26 April 2010

Scottish Socialist Party election broadcast

PARTY ELECTION BROADCAST FOR 2010 GENERAL ELECTION

The Scottish Socialist Party's Westminster election party political broadcast was shown on the 23rd of April on BBC1 and BBC2. To watch the video please click on the link

Scottish Socialist Party 2010 general election broadcast

Saturday, 24 April 2010

Ally Hendry on televised leaders debate.

Reflections on the Party Leaders’ Debate on domestic policy



The most striking impression I got from the Party Leaders’ Debate was how similar the so-called ‘major parties’ are when it comes to economic policy. They all agree that there will have to be deep cuts in government spending as a result of the economic recession which will severely affect public services. However, during the debate all three leaders sought to disguise what is in store for families the length and breadth of Britain by putting forward schemes that will supposedly shield the public from hardships.

We in the SSP, unlike the ‘major parties’, maintain that the general public do not have to bear the brunt for an economic recession which was none of their making. There are alternatives to the cuts that would in fact mean an increase in public spending to improve public services and create jobs. These include:

  • Taking control of the UK banks assets and capital, estimated to be in the region of £5 trillion and £560 billion respectively.
  • Taxing the rich by for example imposing a 90% tax rate on income over £100,000.
  • Raising corporation tax which has been cut by successive governments from 45% to 28%. A doubling of corporation tax would yield about £45 billion annually
  • Reducing defence spending by withdrawing troops from Afghanistan and scrapping nuclear weapons would save over £30 billion every year.

Saturday, 17 April 2010

Scottish Socialist Party launches 2010 election manifesto.

from left to right; Ally Hendry, James Nesbitt, Frances Curran, John McAllion and Colin Fox

Last Tuesday the 13th of April saw the launch of the Scottish Socialist Party's 2010 election manifesto. The manifesto focuses on 5 main points
  • Public sector cuts
  • Employment (focusing on youth employment.)
  • The continued occupation of Afghanistan
  • The reform and clean up of the process' of government
  • The formation of an independent Socialist republic in Scotland.

Colin Fox party co-spokesperson and John McAllion

Party co-spokesperson Colin Fox said: "After 13 years of New Labour, the thought of a Tory government still sends a shiver up the spine.
"But it's clear to anyone who's watching this election that politics in Scotland is about to be turned upside down.
"Let's be clear from the outset, that if the Tories do return to power at Westminster, the blame for that lies with New Labour and the failure of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown these last 13 years, who have quite frankly exploited working people, with the poorest and most vulnerable being hit hardest."

To read the 2010 election manifesto please follow the link below
2010 General Election manifesto


Sunday, 11 April 2010

2010 Election campaign begins.


The West Lothian branch of the Scottish Socialist Party have started their 2010 election campaign. We have been out on the streets of West Lothian posting leaflets in various areas of the county, West Calder, Polbeth, Addiewell, East Calder and Stoneyburn and we had a very successful stall at Livingston centre on Friday the 9th of April.
We will be throughtout the county over the next few weeks and will be holding stalls throughtout the Livingston constituency. All our members are willing to answer any questions anyone will have so please feel free to approach us.

Tuesday, 6 April 2010

ELECTION CALLED FOR 6TH OF MAY

Today Gordon Brown asked the Queen to dissolve parliament. This signals the start of the election campaign in which at it's penultimate end the country will go to the polls to decide who will next run the country. This is a short statement from Ally Hendry the candidate for the Scottish Socialist Party in Livingston.

This election presents a massive opportunity for the Scottish Socialist Party to present a viable alternative to the current mainstream parties who will once again attempt to solve the problems of capitalism at the expense of the ordinary working men and women. They will once again churn the same old ingredients of tax rises, cuts in public services, increased privatisation and anti-union polices and present it to the people as the only solution that will get the country out of recession.
This election gives the party publicity both nationally and locally to present a vision of a fairer and just society with peoples at the heart of our policies. We will be campaigning on a number of issues from the illegal wars which has placed our troops and civilians in the firing line and has resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of Afghanis.
Ally Hendry and party Co-spokeperson Colin Fox

The country is currently experiencing the deepest recession in 80 years as a result of the reckless greed of high earning bankers and of neoliberal economic policies designed to benefit the rich pursued by successive Labour and Tory governments.
The response of the mainstream parties to this crisis has been to plan savage cuts in jobs, wages and essential services but the SSP vehemently opposes such action and believes that working people like nurses, postal and council workers did not cause the recession and should not have to suffer the consequences.

Instead, the SSP believes those who have accumulated great wealth as a result of neoliberal policies, including those bankers who bear great personal responsibility, should pay for the economic crisis by means of higher taxes. To cancel the new Trident missile system which has a reported cost of £100million and to collect the lost revenue of tax avoidance and evasion this costs our country a reported £100million annually.


Our vision is for a fair and just society structured to provide for the needs of the many not the greed of the few. This can only be achieved when working people unite and demand change. We would ask you to vote for the Scottish Socialist Party at this election.

Tuesday, 30 March 2010

Conference 2010

The national conference of the Scottish Socialist Party was held on Sunday the 28th of March in Dunblane. The West Lothian branch of the SSP sent delegates to the conference. The conference was a huge success and showed that all the branches in the SSP are on the same wavelength. We understand that the road may be long and hard. We understand that we need to grow. It was discussed that there has been a recent increase in the number of new members and it is obvious that we are a party on the rise. A party that has the working class majority in mind. A party that stands for a Scottish socialist republic. A party opposed to all public sector cuts imperialist wars.

Wednesday, 17 March 2010

Why Cuts and What Cuts?

Why Cuts and What Cuts?
 
 

 
Introduction

 
'Cuts' have become the mainstay of political debate currently. The leaders of both main Opposition parties, David Cameron for the Tories and Nick Clegg for the Liberal Democrats, made the reduction of Britain's national debt the centrepiece of their party conference speeches in the autumn of 2009.

 
Even Gordon Brown, who for most of his time as Chancellor of the Exchequer and Prime Minister made the distinction between 'Labour investment' and 'Conservative cuts' the defining choice in British politics, has conceded that reductions in public expenditure are now required. So much for ‘No more Boom and Bust’.

 
The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, it will attempt to explain by reference to economic theory rather than by recourse to specific details concerning ‘the recession’ why cuts in public spending are currently deemed to be necessary. Then it will try to identify those areas of public spending likely to be cut the most in the aftermath of the recession.

 
The Business Cycle

  
Capitalist economies like ours go through continuous cycles of upturns (i.e. periods of rapid growth of production to meet demand) and downturns (i.e. periods of sharp decrease of production as demand falls). A prolonged period of growth for a country’s economy is called a ‘boom’ but when the opposite occurs (i.e. economic output for a country experiences negative growth for at least two consecutive quarters or six months) it is called a ‘recession’. 

 
Recessions tend to be short lived and if any recession lasts more than two years then it is termed an economic ‘depression’.

In a boom period, some industries, encouraged by the prospect of high profits, supply more than can be profitably sold. A crisis then occurs and if the combined effect is large enough, it is followed by a recession as other dependent industries get sucked into the downward spiral of unsold commodities (due to a combination of over-supply and falling demand), diminishing profits, losses, layoffs, redundancies and business failures.
 
Eventually, however, the equilibrium between supply and demand is re-established and the conditions for profitable production are restored, at least for those firms that have survived the recession. In this way a new business cycle of boom, crisis and recession is created.

Recessions

  
In recessions, government borrowing will tend to increase. This is because:

 
  • Higher unemployment means less people will be paying income tax.
  • Lower consumption levels mean lower VAT and excise duties.
  • Lower company profits mean lower corporation tax.
  • Higher unemployment increases cost of social security payments - unemployment benefit, income support, housing benefit etc.
  • Falling house and asset prices reduce stamp duties.
  • Furthermore, in a recession, governments often try to stimulate the economy using expansionary fiscal policy. This could involve:
  • Cutting taxes so people (hopefully) spend more
  • Increasing public sector spending to stimulate aggregate demand

 
In a recession, not only will national debt increase, but as percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP), national debt will become higher. This is because the government is borrowing more, at a time when GDP is decreasing. For example, during times when economic growth is at 3%, the government can borrow 1% of GDP, and national debt as a percentage of GDP falls.

 
Apart from the most hard-line monetarist economists who have apparently not learned the lessons of History, most economists nowadays would agree that an increase in government borrowing in a recession is essential since to try to maintain a balanced budget would cause a much deeper recession. Past experience has shown that if the government during a recession tries to balance the budget through higher taxes and cuts in public spending it causes a bigger fall in GDP, a deeper recession and leads to even lower tax receipts.

 
For example, the National Government, led by Ramsay MacDonald in 1931, cut unemployment benefits and raised taxes on the advice of 'Treasury economists' in order to achieve a balanced budget thus helping to exacerbate the Great Depression. Also the Tories, under Margaret Thatcher, made the 1981 recession much deeper than it would otherwise have been by keeping to a balanced budget according to monetarist principles.

 
By borrowing more during a recession, the government is trying to increase aggregate demand and promote economic growth. The hope is by preventing a deep recession any budget deficit incurred should prove relatively small and short-lived and that government finances will soon be restored to health once the economy moves out of recession and resumes growth.

 
The Aftermath of a Recession

 

 
If the government has tried to stimulate the economy using expansionary fiscal policy during a recession by cutting taxes and increasing public sector spending, then, all things remaining equal, it needs to restore taxes to previous levels and cutback on public sector spending when the economy recovers and starts to grow again in order to keep national debt in check.

 
However, the government needs to be very careful about cutting spending when the economy moves out of recession. If consumer confidence is still low and if banks are still unwilling to lend then cuts in government spending could push the economy back into recession. This return to negative growth would force the government to increase borrowing again and cause the national debt to be increased further.

 
Cuts in Public Spending

 
The UK national debt has soared as a result of borrowing during the recession and the need to bail out the banks to prevent a collapse of the financial sector. Government forecasts suggest it will rise to an unprecedented level of £1.1 trillion by 2011.

 
To put that in perspective, when the then Labour Government had to go cap in hand to the International Monetary Fund to avoid a financial meltdown in 1976, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Denis Healey, was running a budget deficit of 6% of GDP. Under the present Labour Government the deficit is double that level.

 
There are various measures that can be taken by the Government to reduce its budget deficit. These include overall rises in tax and national insurance, pay freezes for public sector employees, increased deductions from public sector workers’ wages to put into their pensions, a cut in the public sector's overall workforce and most controversially cut backs on welfare benefits and public services.

 
Whatever options the Government decides to take as it tries to get to grips with the national debt it can be safely predicted that the public sector as a whole will have considerably less money in real terms to spend for several years to come. However, this does not necessarily mean that all areas of public spending will suffer uniformly.

 
At the UK level, both Labour and the Conservatives are pledging to safeguard spending on frontline health and education services. The Institute for Fiscal Studies has estimated that Labour’s pledge to protect not only health and education but also early years and overseas aid budgets in 2011/12 and 2012/13 would leave the rest of the public sector facing budget cuts of £25.5bn or in percentage terms real cuts of 6.7% year.

 
Be that as it may, none of the major parties are prepared in the run up to the General Election to be precise about where they believe the axe on public sector spending should fall. To do otherwise could harm their electoral prospects and, therefore, presently mainstream politicians are restricting themselves to vague pronouncements about cutting inefficiencies, cutting unnecessary programmes and cutting lower priority budgets which they maintain can be done without jeopardising vital front line services on which the public depends.

 
The first unequivocally clear sign of the cuts in the public sector will come from the Government in their comprehensive spending review. This sets three-year budgets for government departments but the Chancellor, Alistair Darling has said that will not happen until after the General Election by which time he and his party may not be the ones issuing the comprehensive spending review.

 
Notwithstanding the above, a clearer picture is beginning to emerge in Scotland as to what cuts are going to be made. Local councils have been setting their budgets for the next financial year and it would appear education has been targeted. Proposed education cuts range from 2% to 10% in some areas, with average savings of around 6%.

 
In total, Scottish councils will have to find savings of £270 million in the next financial year as they face their toughest cuts since devolution. A wide range of services will be adversely affected (e.g. sheltered housing wardens and support for drug addicts), while the majority of councils also plan to increase charges. Unions estimate around 3000 jobs, out of a total local council workforce of 275,000, will be cut in 2010/11 through natural turnover and non-replacement of posts.

 

 

 
Conclusion

 
Production of commodities in capitalist economies is subject to a business cycle of upturns and downturns and is never steady. Severe downturns are known as recessions and during a recessionary period, government revenues fall as many workers are laid off and no longer pay income tax. Also lower sales during a recession means less VAT and falling business profits leads to less corporation tax being paid.

 
Faced with a decline in revenues and budget deficits, governments, during a recession, borrow extensively to maintain public services and promote recovery by means of an ‘expansionary fiscal policy’. To do otherwise is to invite the wrath of the voting public and to preside over a worsening economy. The expectation is that public finances can be restored to health and national debt reduced once the economy picks and starts growing again.

 
However, following a recession, the Government has to act cautiously for fear of inducing a double dip recession. Only once the economy is fully into an upturn phase can the Government start taking measures to reduce national debt by cutting back on public sector expenditure and repaying what has been previously borrowed during the recession.

 
Cuts in public sector spending are always unpopular, at least with those members of the public most affected. In the run up to a General Election, political parties, vying for votes, are always going to be reluctant to be divulge where exactly they believe cuts in public expenditure should fall. This explains why currently the mainstream parties are vague about their policies to deal with the national debt.

Eddy Cornock
West Lothian SSP (Chair)

Sunday, 7 March 2010

West Lothian Branch manifesto


West Lothian Branch of the


Why we are Socialists

We are socialists because we want to change the current capitalist system based on exploitation of the people to a socialist system based on equality that satisfies social need rather than private greed. In power we would set about taking control of the banks insurance companies and the major industries and putting them in the hands of the ordinary man and women in the street via the socialist party. We would strive to remove poverty injustice and war. Lofty ideals they maybe but achievable goals they are given the support and mass participation of the working class.

No2nato anti war demo, Edinburgh

As socialists we wish to see everyone being give the opportunity to fulfil there true potential as human beings and not having to spend their lives as wage slaves in the capitalist system. We wonder how many great musicians’ skilled doctors’ great scientists and engineers there may have been amongst children of the working class families who for economic reasons were forced to take low paid jobs to augment family income.

We socialists believe that every human being has the right to fulfil their true potential and we will strive with every breath in our body to create a society that will give them this opportunity.

Your vote for the Socialist party will put us firmly on the long road to achieving this goal and we are reminded of a famous Chinese saying “even the longest journey starts with the first step”.





What we stand for

The current first past the post method of election used in the current Westminster election is not democratic in that hundred of thousands of people cast their vote but have no representation in parliament. We would favour a full proportional representation that gives maximum representation to the votes cast.

The aim of the Socialist party is to achieve full employment of the working population of the country in order to achieve this we would establish an economic system that was tailored to suit the needs of the population and was not subjected to the whims of the market economy.

To achieve major improvements in our health and education system we would divert the massive sums of money currently being spent on wars and weapons of mass destruction this would enable us to increase the numbers of teaching staff improve the quality of the teaching staff build new schools and refurbish existing schools without them being saddled with the current PFI system. We would build more and better hospitals higher more nursing staff, doctors, surgeons, consultants and ancillary staff.

By providing full employment we would ensure that each household has a decent living wage and also benefits from a social wage e.g. free public transport, free school meals. Its establish fact that household poverty leads to domestic violence and in many cases child abuse.

We would remove all American bases from this country and we would begin a policy of removing and destroying our nuclear arsenal,

We believe that Britain has the potential give the proper investment and commitment to satisfy our energy need from renewable resources within a relatively short period of time a short period of time. There would be no further construction of nuclear and fossil fuelled power stations.


We would embark on a well invested sports policy involving school children of all ages that would result in an increase in professional and amateur sportsman and woman which would also directlybenefit our nation’s health. In order to promote our culture and arts at both home and abroad we would invest in opportunity and facilities to cater for our needs.


12 point plan from the Scottish Socialist Party ,We want Scotland's wealth shared out equally


The rich will pay higher taxes

Our public services, including oil, fuel and transport, will be publicly owned

Our minimum wage right now would be £8 an hour

Wages, benefits and pensions will rise by £50 a week, across the board

All school children will receive free school meals

Supermarket prices will be frozen

Women will get equal pay for equal work

Young people will get the same national minimum wage as everyone else

Nuclear weapons will be banned from Scottish territory

The council tax will be scrapped in favour of a local tax where the rich pay their fair share

Free public transport will be brought in to ease congestion, pollution and global warming

Our troops will be brought home from the killing fields of Iraq and Afghanistan 
West Lothian branch members




The West Lothian Branch

The West Lothian branch of the Scottish Socialist Party was formed in 2001. We have been active locally and nationally fighting such campaigns as;

Against the five pounds increase on council rent
The gradual privatisation of our postal service
Current wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
The downgrading of St Johns hospital Livingston

We have fought vigorously in West Lothian supporting the following bills that we put to the Scottish Parliament

Replacing the Council Tax with the Scottish Service Tax
Introducing free school meals for all pupils
Scrapping Prescription charges.

We have championed free public transport during the last Holyrood election as a means of alleviating poverty and reducing Scotland’s carbon emissions.

Over the past nine years the branches local activities have amongst other thing covered the following
Weekly stalls throughout West Lothian campaigning on the above issues and many others.
Having letters printed in the local press
Written to people who have signed our various petitions updating them on the respective issues
We held numerous public meeting throughout West Lothian covering a variety of issues.
Delivered our quarterly newsletter throughout West Lothian which generated interest in the party resulting in an increase of party membership.




This is a short manifesto created by the West Lothian branch of the Scottish Socialist party to provide an insight into what the party stands for.

By voting SSP you will add strength to the current groundswell of opposition to the main capitalist parties. This struggle will only be successful when people like you become involved making change possible. The SSP can only provide guidance and leadership but we require mass support from the Scottish / British working class.

The best way for you to determine whether we are worth supporting is to meet people from the party or come along to a branch meeting to meet party members with similar views and discuss the various issues you have. Alternatively if you would like further information on the party details on how to contact the branch are detailed below.



To find out more about the West Lothian Scottish Socialist Party
E-mail us at:


westlothianssp@hotmail.co.uk