Join NCAFC, fight for democratic unity

ncafc-logo-new

Following the decisions of its December conference, the National Campaign Against Fees & Cuts (NCAFC) has created membership and affiliation structures.

All students can now join NCAFC for £1, and school, college and university anti-cuts groups can affiliate. This will give activists a democratic voice in the campaign and greatly strengthen national and local co-ordination.

The student movement, like the wider anti-cuts anti-cuts movement is in desperate need of a united federation that can carry out a common strategy of resistance to Tory austerity.

The fight to defend education is far from over – as the upcoming strikes by the NUT show.

We think all the education campaigns – NCAFC, Education Activists Network, SBL and YFFJE should hold a joint conference to agree a plan of action and fuse into one federation.

This will stop the unnecessary and destructive competition which is holding us back.

We encourage all students and anti-cuts group to join NCAFC and work to build anti-cuts groups on campus and regionally which draw in representatives from as many institutions and campaigns as possible.

Only by building a strong, unified campaign based on the most effective democratic structures like general assemblies can we hope to have a chance of taking on the Tories – and winning.

Students: reorganise our resistance

red square-quebecThis article originally appeared at www.workerspower.com

2012 was a year to forget for the Tories. It was, in the main, a year to forget for student activists as well. The first year of £9,000 fees saw a 10 per cent drop in student numbers. September saw the government try to deport thousands of overseas students from London Met. Aside from local struggles which flared up at a few universities, the winter mobilisations of 2010/11 aren’t exactly casting a long shadow outside vice-chancellors’ windows.

And what of the other 50 per cent of young people who aren’t cooped up in overcrowded lecture theatres and battling slum landlords and rip-off letting agencies? Well, over a million remain locked into the Tories’ unemployment trap. In an economy with more unemployed than vacancies, the only alternatives are the workfare schemes (where there’s no shortage of places, surprisingly) or unpaid internships.

It might seem like resistance to the Tories’ class war is flagging. This is true. The failure of the unions’ strikes to defend pensions means millions of workers are less confident that militant industrial action can deliver success. The rivalries in the anti-cuts movement, with three competing anti-cuts campaigns, make effective resistance is almost impossible. Coming into the fifth year of austerity, the fight back is stagnating.

But we aren’t beaten yet. It’s clear something has to change and students have to look at how we can take the best of our experiences in collective, democratic organisation and apply that to the wider struggles in society.

NUS – leaders who won’t lead

Since the grassroots protests and walkouts of winter 2010, the NUS has firmly reasserted its control, its right to lead – and to mislead.

Many Student Unions have dismantled their democratic structures, replacing democratic accountability with tokenistic and passive participation which is incapable of engaging more than a small minority of students –leaving decisions from grand strategy to publicity in the hands of time-serving bureaucrats who are divorced from the mass of students.

But the fiasco of the NUS’s 2012 demonstration shows that we ignore the bureaucrats at our peril. Equally, joining in the petty squabbling and factionalism of NUS conference in order to win a few positions is no long-term solution.

By drawing in students into genuinely democratic structures we can expose the undemocratic nature of ‘student democracy’ on campus. Working with sab officers where possible and against them where necessary we can start to break the stifling bureaucratic attitude which sees students as a stage army, not as conscious participants.

There is no question of ‘reclaiming’ the NUS for the students. But its peculiar character – funded and managed as a mechanism of state control, yet with leaders reliant on a relationship with students – means we should work with them where they act in our interests, yet be able to openly criticise and self-organise everywhere that they put their own careers before the needs of students.

Self-organisation

The student movement didn’t spring out of thin air. The wave of occupations against the war in Gaza in 2009 fuelled the growth of student committees which took on the task of coordinating action against cuts and the tuition fee increase.

During the student movement, several towns organised general assemblies which represented the highest form of democratic decision-making and representation. At their best, they attracted participation from schools, colleges and organisations of students and education workers.

Many of these structures have withered, but they remain the basic tactic for collective struggle both on campus and in schools.

Our primary task is to rebuild these committees. They should have representatives from every academic department and the trade unions. It’s important that we pressure the Student Unions to submit to the democratic decisions of the general assemblies.

On campuses, the UCU and workers’ unions are fighting to defend education and save jobs. In universities, schools and colleges, students need to launch a determined struggle for democratic rights to oversee education policy, financial decisions and hold management to account.

In the fight to defend education and to increase students’ control over what we learn, committees of action should work for the widest representation, drawing in students, teachers, cleaners and other staff – all who have a common interest in defending a properly funded, accessible education system.

Unite the movement

The infighting and competition that plagues the anti-cuts movement has its echo in the student movement too. But the solution is the same.

We think all the campus and school anti-cuts groups should affiliate to a democratic, national federation. The decision by the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts to allow both group affiliation and individual membership (£1) with full democratic rights is a good step forward.

NCAFC should hold a spring conference, co-sponsored with Education Activist Network, and Youth Fight for Jobs to fuse into one federation, with a common strategy for organising the defence of our education. We encourage all youth to join NCAFC and fight for this to happen – a united campaign around a strategy decided by students is the strongest basis for entering the working class struggle against Tory austerity and capitalist crisis.

#Demo 2012: Stop Tory attacks on education

On 21 November, thousands of students will march in London to say no to cuts, fees and privatisation.

Since the Con-Dem government came to power, education has been under constant attack. Tuition fees were tripled to £9k a year, EMA was scrapped and now schools and universities are being sold off to private companies.

On October 20th, 150, 000 workers marched in London demanding an end to cuts.

#Demo2012 on November 21st is our chance to strike back.

The trashing of Tory party HQ at Millbank, the occupations and education assemblies showed how we become stronger when we unite and fight. The victory of the Quebec students’ strike proves that militant struggle is the best way to defeat government attacks.

The student movement needs to reorganise and create the weapons necessary to win. This means uniting the different campaigns like EAN, NCAFC and YFJ into a single, democratic federation which fights for a general strike to stop the cuts.

A big demonstration on N21 will send Cameron’s toffs the message that students won’t lie down and watch our universities privatised and a generation of young people denied access to real education.

All out to defend education on N21 – Scrap fees & cuts, bring back EMA – Build a general strike to stop the cuts!

N21: Fight cuts, defend education; make it happen!

The National Union of Students (NUS) has called for a national demonstration on 21st November against the funding cuts which aim to transform education into a playground for speculators and profit-hungry capitalists.

The call is supported by National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts, EAN, the UCU and others.

Young people have had our EMA robbed, fees tripled and our schools handed over to religious fanatics and greedy businesses. 1 million are unemployed.

This year 462,507 students will be billed £9,000 – the highest fees ever to go to university in overcrowded courses with few employment prospects.

This demonstration is our chance to strike back.

The wave of strikes, occupations and protests which followed the destruction of Tory HQ at Millbank in 2010 has given us plenty of experience.

Rebuilding anti-cuts groups this Freshers’, drawing national anti-cuts campaigns into organising school students, and preparing a fighting strategy to defend education is needed to make this demo a success.

Above all we need a commitment to unity on a democratic basis from the different education campaigns.

A march by the TUC, strikes by teachers and public sector workers will create a hot autumn. Let’s make sure November 21 keeps the heat up on the Con-Dem government into the winter.

REVOLUTION fights for

• Free education for all, living grants, abolition of student debt for local and international students

• No to all the education cuts

• Kick out the bosses – nationalise all academies, religious and ‘free’ schools

 

NUT strike shows potential for united resistance

After a strong regional strike, around 8000 demonstrators marched through central London today demanding an end to the government’s attacks on public-sector pensions. Though the march and rally were called to support striking workers, it became a site for a number of different groups to express their anger with the government and the austerity agenda.

When I first arrived at the demo start-point, I looked up and could only see in tones of pink and blue. The UCU had doled out thousands of bright pink helium balloons, and the NUT had produced thousands of little blue flags. The NUT also brought along a massive inflatable pound-sign which was being crushed in a vice (credit crunch- dyageddit?), adorned with the demand for ‘decent pensions for all.’ The overall effect was pretty cool, as flags rippled and balloons bobbed about in the (ridiculously) sunny sky. It was also good to see a number of Unison and PCS flags out on the demo, showing solidarity and support between different trade unionists, even if their leaders had held them back from striking on the day. Likewise, there were a number of banners from NUT and UCU branches beyond London, as well as a banner from Unite construction members in London.

There was a truck with a soundsystem heading the demo which served as a portable stage for speakers from the various trade union leaderships (sadly we have not learnt the lesson of our German comrades that these trucks can also be used to play music, lead chants, and make for a more engaging experience). I could barely hear them over the noise of the crowd, as people discussed the strengths and weaknesses of the movement, and where they should go next. Needless to say I was more interested in their conversations than the speeches of the bureaucracy (although it was good to hear Owen Jones talk about how the Tories are trying to play private and public sector workers against each other, in a classic game of divide-and-rule).

One lecturer told me that they felt annoyed that it was only a London-wide strike, and that their union leadership should be playing a more active role to ensure that everyone came out on the same day. This thought was echoed by Katherine and Ella, two teachers from southeast London, who felt that there would be more media attention if everyone struck together.

Likewise, Kester and Issy, two students from Queen Mary’s, told me that they’d hoped to be seeing the PCS coming out on the day, and that we ultimately need “as many strikes as possible” to beat the government. They also felt that the trade unions would only attract more members and gain strength through strong action and a willingness to tackle the Tories head-on. They also complained that the NUS leadership had done nothing to make the March 14th demo as attractive or visible as this one, and went on to say that they were let down by the lack of organisation on behalf of the NUS, but encouraged by grassroots student groups such as NCAFC and EAN.

The mood of the demo was determined, and a good range of people from different backgrounds, trade unions and social groups turned out to show their anger with the Tory cutters. Amy, a teacher from Hammersmith, told me that “it’s not over,” and that “more action is on the way” to stop the pension cuts. Sadly, her union leaders might disagree with her. Despite the militancy, the desire for coordinated strikes, the demands for more demonstrations, and the willingness of many ordinary people to struggle, the heads of the unions have been determined to halt action, or have backed down from calling it for fear of ‘going alone’.

 

Read more

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Pension sellout: don’t get demoralised – get organised!

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Why did PCS leaders pull the plug on M28?

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Tory budget, stealing from the poor to fund the rich

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

NCAFC Conference: Despite the problems, a step forward

Anyone reading the #NCAFC Twitter feed over the weekend will have got the impression that the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts conference in Liverpool descended into an uncontrollable orgy of bickering and sectarianism.

Of course the conference had its moments, and there were some lessons to be learned in terms of both individual behaviour and conference organisation, but on the whole, it was a positive experience and brought over one hundred activists together from across Britain and Ireland to discuss important issues in the fight against fees and cuts.

In fact many comments about the conference were made by those who had not attended, and seemed designed to cause unnecessary tension and antagonisms. It was the Twitterati who were most responsible.

@swiftnotswallow I’d say 60% of the NCAFC conference was mega-good and 40% was mega-bad #banthetrots

Agenda

In reality, most of the conference was very positive. It brought together lots of activists from a wide geographical spread, including a sizable delegation from Scotland, from different campaigns and from different student union and political activist backgrounds. Interesting workshops took place on a range of issues, looking in depth at H/E privatisation, democratising student unions, as well as a range of sessions on LGBTQ, Disabled, and BMS group liberation.

Where the agenda fell short was that there were no workshops, let alone plenary sessions, to discuss and debate how the student movement can go forward and relate to a potential wave of struggle in March, which could see public sector strike action as well as an NUS-backed ‘week of action’ against privatisation.

The conference agenda geared discussion too far away from the all-vital conversation about tactics that is needed to revive and rebuild the student movement in Britain and that can unify it in action.

This meant that the only discussion over what the campaign actually does over an important next few months took place during motions – with a one-for-one-against format with no amendments allowed from the floor that was always going to be messy.

It naturally resulted in more discussion taking place around the disagreements, rather than the huge amount that the conference could agree on – in short it magnified division whilst appearing to shrink levels of agreement.

That said, motions calling for the widest possible working class and anticuts mobilisations on 1st March were very well received, as well as the ‘Action for Education’ resolution from Mark Bergfeld and Sean Rillo Raczka. A call to ‘broaden out’ the slogans of the NCAFC to the growing number of unemployed youth who have been forced out of education also won a majority vote.

Argument

Despite what the social networks are saying, everything was actually fairly pleasant and well-meaning until we discussed some motions that were always going to be controversial.

One of these was a proposal for an NCAFC slate for NUS elections. It was proposed by, and called for a slate made up of activists from the outgoing NCAFC national committee including Workers Liberty, but none from other groupings.

This was clearly taken in bad faith by some groups such as Student Broad Left and the Socialist Workers Party who understandably saw the motion as a manoeuvre, given a breakdown of trust between the two groups and Workers Liberty after the June conference debacle. The motion also upset some outgoing members of the NC who had not been consulted about it beforehand.

Other controversy occurred as the conference needed to make a choice between continuing with a motions discussion on Sunday afternoon, or attending workshops due to an overrunning timetable and forwarding undiscussed motions to the incoming NC.

Interventions by Student Broad Left against the ‘disgraceful’ proposal to have some motions on racism and oppression discussed by the national committee, and a motion against war on Iran proposed by Counterfire that did not criticise the Islamic regime, did not help matters either. NCAFC is strongest when it is a united activist organisation, and weaker when it acts like an NUS faction and takes too many policy decisions on different topics – perhaps the conference would have worked better if it had focussed discussions more upon education issues and public sector cuts.

It was around this very difficult point in the meeting where the chairperson slightly lost control and some activists felt she was ignoring their raised hands and picking the same people to speak too often. Visibly upset and understandably resigning the position following some heckling, other activists were angered by what they considered to be poor conduct and oppressive behaviour towards the chair on the floor of the conference that violated a “safe space” policy.

Prospects for Unity

Losing the conference chair no doubt created a bad atmosphere in the room. But the conference did not erupt into chaos as some suggest.

It is equally not true that any bad feelings that did arise are completely down to the “Trot factions” – as some activists have opportunistically suggested.

In fact up until the June “Reinvigoration conference”, called in a way that alienated many activists in the campaign, particularly from London, the NCAFC had been an organisation and network that facilitated discussions between different organisations and pushed for the broadest possible unity in the form of student assemblies during the winter of 2010.

After that breakdown of trust, this conference was always going to be more difficult – but positively, the incoming NC election elected using an STV system did result in representatives of many different groups and individuals getting elected, which could be an encouraging prospect for re-uniting or at least better coordinating the campaigns around the country.

A Revolution motion calling for a conference to unify the movement in the summer was subject to an unfriendly amendment and summarily voted down, but only by a slim majority – showing that many activists in the movement would still like to see one strong united campaign to bring all students together against the Tories.

All-in-all NCAFC conference was a positive experience, and activists who were present for the whole weekend will likely recognise this, as the Twitter-talk dies down, and those creating antagonisms for their own ends– not just “the trots” – move on to other things. The rest of us will be busy preparing for a spring of struggle to defend our education. All out March 1st!

 

Read more

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

NUS ducks united action – let’s make it happen

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

NCAFC Conference 2012 – generalise resistance!

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Revolution motions to NCAFC Conference

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Revo motions to NCAFC conference

 Below are the motions that Revolution members will be submitting to NCAFC Conference 2012.

All out 1st March

The UCU have called a strike for 1st March, which can act as a beacon for all workers, students, young unemployed, pensioners – everyone suffering from the Tory government’s austerity agenda to fight back. We call for demonstrations in every town and city, with the aim of drawing in not just students and lecturers on the campuses, but the broader working class and anticuts movement. NCAFC is committed to working with all other students, workers and anticuts organisations in open grassroots local forums to build the widest possible support for action on this day. We will approach EAN and Progressive Students with this goal in mind.

John, Manchester Met

[Read more...]

NCAFC Conference 2012 – generalise resistance!

NCAFC Conference 2012 will be a great opportunity for students to come together and discuss how student activists can work together in different areas of struggle.

It is an opportunity to publicise the arguments against the competition and divisions which hamper the anti-cuts movement.

The conference is a chance to turn NCAFC outwards and situate our defence of free education within the general resistance to austerity.

Since the last conference, we have seen the rise of the #Occupy movement, the most widespread riots in a generation, and unprecedented strikes against the government’s pensions robbery.

Students opposed to education cuts have to link up with other groups of people involved in struggles to defend their jobs and pay or otherwise opposed to the cuts –  trade unionists, unemployed youth, disabled activists, and so on.

UCU have named the day for further industrial action against the great pensions rip-off as March 1st. Students have to fill the weeks ahead with consistent efforts to spread support for the strikes amongst young people;  NCAFC can enable students to take the lead in organising solidarity work, demonstrations and actions in the run-up and on the day itself.

We can play an important role in revealing consequences which pension cuts will have for young people. A key question for us will be mobilising against the government’s efforts to bribe older workers – allowing them to keep their pension in return for their silence while younger workers are stripped of any chance of a decent pension after a lifetime of work.

The Tories and their Lib-Dem allies won’t stop cutting unless they are forced out of power. We should recognise the huge potential shown on November 30th by the millions of people who went out on strike.

The anti-cuts movement is now much broader than at the end of 2010, moving beyond students to the wider working-class.

We need to mobilise young people over the issue of pensions, over NHS cuts and ‘reforms’ (which will help the government turn the NHS into a business), and against the government’s entire cuts offensive.

Our aim should be mobilising young people as a distinct group, fighting to represent our interests within this broader anti-cuts movement.

This means fighting against youth unemployment, education cuts, racist scapegoating and related issues, and this will mean NCAFC needs to broaden it’s remit.

If we want to see a mass movement develop which is strong enough to topple the millionaires’ coalition, we will also have to learn from the mistakes of the past years.

The anti-cuts movement remains divided, with NCAFC, Education Activist Network, Youth Fight for Jobs (and Education), Student Broad Left and Progressive Students all trying to be the education-based campaign against cuts, with many of these being the brain-child of a particular left group.

This has led to some ridiculous situations – two national demonstrations being called on the same day in different parts of the country, energy-sapping debates over who will run for NUS conference from which campaign (and accusations of back-room deals and political manoeuvres) and local groups being forced to decide which to affiliate to and which national conferences to send people to.

So much wasted time and energy could have been saved if we had a single, national, youth anti-cuts campaign.

REVOLUTION members will be putting forward 3 motions to the NCAFC conference.

The first calls for NCAFC to support the establishment of democratic committees in towns and cities for March 1st.

The second calls on the group to have a broad focus and campaign around a number of issues which affect youth.

The third calls on the NCAFC National Committee to organise a unity conference alongside other youth and student groups in the summer, to facilitate joint work and investigate the possibility of combining structures.

We hope these motions can provide the basis for a unified and multi-faceted campaign against the government – one which taps into the bitter opposition and proven determination which young people have displayed in every clash with this rotten government.



Come to the NCAFC National Conference: 28-29 January, Liverpool

The National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts is now in a position to announce the date and location of our national conference. It will take place on Saturday 28th and Sunday 29th January in Liverpool.

To let us know you’re coming, or to register a larger delegation, email [email protected] Accommodation will be provided as far as possible.

The event will bring anti-fees and anti-cuts activists from all over the UK to decide “where next” for the student movement.

It will give you an opportunity to get involved in NCAFC and make it your own. There will be votes and discussions on actions and policies, and the election of a new National Committee. Conference will have space and time laid aside for NCAFC’s independent Liberation caucuses: LGBTQ, BME, Women and Disabled.

There will also be a large range of workshops where we can collectively discuss what is happening to education, and our experiences and take useful ideas back to our campuses, as well as generally having a big conversation about politics and the student movement.
Fun and socialising will feature a lot.

The Agenda is below:

A revised agenda with speakers will be out shortly.

The deadline to submit motions to conference is 5pm January 26

The deadline for National Committee nominations is 2:10pm January 28

Saturday
10.15 Registration
11 Introduction
11.20 Workshops
a) Fighting privatisation and private providers in HE
b) Panel discussion how students can fight racism and fascism
c) Workshop on women’s liberation

12.20 Motions

1.50 Lunch

2:10 Women’s Caucus and close of nominations

2.50 Plenary session: NC hustings – ballot papers issued, voting to close by end of 4:50 workshop session – motions if time after hustings

4.00 Disabled Students’ Caucus

4.40 Workshops
a) Take back your campus: Defending the right to organise and protest
b) FE and school students: building a sustainable national movement
c) Disabled students’ liberation

5:50 LGBT students’ caucus

6.30 Closing plenary with reports

Evening social

Sunday
10 Workshops
a) The fight for decent housing for all, on campus and off
b) Take back your campus: making our student unions fit to fight
c) BME liberation workshop

11.30 BME students’ caucus

12.10 Lunch
12.50 Motions
2.20 Workshops
a) Students and workers, students as workers
b) LGBT liberation workshop

3.40 Plenary with report backs and discussion
4.20 Closing speech
4.30 Close

For more info go to the NCAFC website

New year, new headache for Gove

As Education Secretary Michael Gove struggles on with efforts to privatise education under the pretence of improving standards, one North London school is fighting back.

In doing so it is following the example of dozens of other schools who have waged recent struggles against the encroaching dead hand of the market.

The school, Downhills Primary in Haringey, which was put under notice to improve within a year by inspectors last April has taken steps to improve standards and a monitoring visit in September found a “clear trend of improvement.”

However Gove’s scheme has been  frustrated by the masses of parents, teachers and governors at the school and others who have rebelled against academy status being imposed. He claims they are preventing him from tackling failure and putting their beliefs before the students’ education. Yet the inspectors’ report shows the school was raising its standards satisfactorily under Local Authority control.

The school believe they have a strong case against the government, as it is due an Ofsted inspection within the next four months. The Headteacher, Leslie Church, said it was premature of Gove to attempt to force the issue. Due to this the Tory Cabinet Minister has been given two weeks to respond to ‘a statement of claim’ against him or face a judicial review over his conduct.

By becoming an academy the school would be independent of the Local Authority (council) and put under the control of a ‘sponsor’. This is absolutely no guarantee standards will improve. Academies can use their own curriculum, can specify it’s intake, and must pay for local authorities’ services such as support for those with additional needs. As one parent said ‘there is nothing magical about academies.’

Because Education services provided by the Academy must be paid for by the sponsor, it allows the entry of market forces into our education system. Sponsors are unwilling to fork out for the specialist services provided in state schools. Schools under private management provide every incentive to cut corners, reduce costs and reap a maximum profit out our education.

Schools put under notice to improve by Ofsted tend to be located in areas where the intake is largely working class. Problems in schools largely stem from the wider social problems experienced by its intake. By cutting ties with the local authority Academies sever vital links with social services, local hospitals and other services which play a central role in the lives of many young people.

Schools need clear structures linking parents, students, teachers and the governing body together to improve the standards of education. Instead the government is allowing the education industry to cherry-pick the best schools and trying to offload their responsibility for the worst.

It’s clear that this government cannot be trusted to protect and invest in our country’s education. In fact they are doing the total opposite. We should not take an economic crisis as justification for destroying a fundamental right won through massive struggle and sacrifice.

Education is a right, and defending it means we have to organise a united struggle against this government, and their pro-rich austerity cuts.

 

Read more

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Unfinished business: the student movement 1 year on

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Gove: go private or face the pain

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Anti-academy strikes at Prince Henrys School

.………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

 

Floating Social Media Icons Powered by Acurax Blog Designing Company
Visit Us On TwitterVisit Us On FacebookVisit Us On Youtube