| Working
class communities in Dublin City and Dun Laoghaire/Rathdown are still
not paying the bin tax and local campaigns are preparing for the non-collection
battle.
The anti-bin battle late last year which centred on Fingal demonstrated
a tremendous willingness on behalf of working class people to fight and
22 were prepared to go to prison. Unfortunately the campaigns weren't
able to mobilise enough residents to force the councils and the government
to back down.
The courage of the anti-bin tax activists was not matched by the trade
union leaders who in reality betrayed the anti-bin tax campaign and working
class communities. The imposition of non-collection in Fingal and South
Dublin has been a blow to the battle to defeat the bin tax.
In Dublin City and Dun Laoghaire/Rathdown the battle against the tax will
again come to to whether enough local residents can be mobilised to stop
the imposition of non-collection.
A number of leading activists from anti-bin tax campaigns will be standing
in the local elections on 11 June, aiming to provide an alternative to
the right-wing parties who have imposed this hated tax on the communities.
The Socialist Party have argued that credible candidates who have played
a real role in building genuine active campaigns should be endorsed by
the anti-bin tax campaign to stand in the local elections. These election
campaigns can then be used to build pressure against the right wing parties
and the Councils to strengthen the anti-bin tax battle.
At an unrepresentative "activists" meeting of the Dublin City
Campaign on 29 March the Socialist Party proposed that seven candidates
from six local authority wards should be endorsed as an anti-bin tax slate.
Our proposal included one member of the Socialist Worker's Party (SWP),
Brid Smith in Ballyfermot.
The SWP attempted to have all of their election candidates in the Dublin
City Council area included on the slate. These candidates included a majority
who played a minimal role in the campaign. The Socialist Party will work
with all forces that take a genuine and principled stand to defend and
fight for the interests of working class people.
A clear division developed in the city campaign during the battle last
Autumn. This division was between the Socialist Party and other anti-bin
tax activists who correctly saw that the campaign needed to escalate community
based direct action (i.e. the blockades) as the only credible response
to non-collection and the jailings, and a conservative layer led by the
SWP. The SWP and others who opposed the blockades became a barrier to
building the anti-bin tax campaign because in reality they feared that
such actions would lose them votes in the local elections.
Our proposal was rejected by 10 votes to 8. A proposal put forward by
Dermot Connolly to add an additional two members of the SWP to the Socialist
Party's proposed slate was passed by 10 votes to 8. The Socialist Party
will not be participating in or supporting this election slate.
It represents a disgraceful abuse of a working class campaign and a political
issue by those like the SWP who either refused to build the campaign and
or who refused to fight in the battle against non-collection and now try
to claim credit and get votes on a false basis. To endorse the candidates
that the SWP are proposing would legitimise a tokenistic approach to campaigns
that is alien to working class struggle. It is not credible to support
candidates in the election who in all probability will not seriously fight
against non-collection when it is imposed. Such political opportunism
is the opposite of what the working class needs.
For
more on the Socialist Party European and Local election challenge in June
2004, click here (opens in new window)
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