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Sheridan & Byrne Attack Pensioner Poverty |
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Solidarity Co-Convenor Tommy Sheridan has called for the national disgrace of pensioner poverty to be ended. Speaking at a national event for the Pensioners Forum he said: "It is a national disgrace that pensioners in this country struggle to heat their homes, with more elderly people dying of cold in Glasgow than in Moscow or Helsinki. Solidarity want to end pensioner poverty by increasing the state pension to £160 per week and making pensioners exempt from council tax and water charges." Sheridan's Co-Convenor Rosemary Byrne called on Scotland to recognise the contribution made by Scotland's older population: "Our pensioners are the people who built our country and have paid taxes all of their lives. Many of them are full time carers for their partners and for their grandchildren. This contribution MUST be recognised. Solidarity will introduce a non means tested extra allowance for carers of £100 per week and will allow grandparents who end up looking after their grandchildren to be fully compensated." |
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Solidarity Reject New Labour's "Vigilante Culture" |
Solidarity, Scotland's Socialist Movement, have rejected the knee-jerk reaction to youth crime and young people in general. New Labour have today said that education is top of their agenda while calling for what they call "neds" to be named and shamed. They have also failed to address the crisis that exists with school leavers where thousands of young people are excluded from training, education and work.
Solidarity Co-Convenor Rosemary Byrne said:
"Labour like to talk about focussing on education, but we have heard it all before and nothing has changed or improved in the eight years that they have been in power in Scotland. Solidarity demand a reduction in class sizes and Free healthy school meals for all children. We want to see the end of expensive PFI schemes that skim money from education into the hands of financiers. Full benefits should be restored for 16-18 y-olds and full grants should replace loans for university and college students. These moves would make a real difference, soundbites are not enough."
Her Co-Convenor in Scotland's fastest growing political party, Tommy Sheridan said that Labout had got it wrong an youth crime and anti-social behaviour. He also called for practical measures rather than soundbites.
"Air guns are used in 79% of cases of vandalism, three quarters of serious assaults and more than half of all minor assaults. Taking these weapons from our streets would be a good start to reducing crime. A report from Princes Trust today has highlighted once again, the waste that is a generation of young people excluded for education, training and work. Scotland needs practical solutions to these problems, not knee jerk vigilante culture. I would like to see all sports and leisure facilities avaiable free for all young people. Solidarity will campaign for more effective drugs rehabilitation and support for the many thousands of our young people who care for other in their family homes." |
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Galloway Backs Solidarity |
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Respect MP, George Galloway, will be in Scotland on April 25th to endorse Solidarity and Tommy Sheridan's campaign for re-election in advance of the Scottish elections on May 3rd. He will appear at a public meeting in Edinburgh for a lunchtime meeting and press conference, before travelling on to Glasgow for an evening meeting there. Galloway said:
"I'm looking forward to coming up to Scotland and lending my support to Tommy and to Solidarity as they bid to make an impact in their first election. Scotland needs an antiwar and anti-poverty party in the Scottish Parliament and that party is Solidarity."
Tommy Sheridan and George Galloway are two of Britain's most recognisable and popular anti-establishment figures. Both have a reputation for a firebrand style of public speaking, and these meetings have already attracted a lot of interest from the public.
Sheridan said:
"The aim of Solidarity, since we were formed, has been to raise the banner of an antiwar, anti-privatisation and anti-nuclear vision for Scotland. Our impact in just a few short months has far exceeded expectations. There is no doubt that ordinary working class people the length and breadth of the country are looking for a radical alternative. We believe that Solidarity offers that alternative." |
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Sheridan Calls for "Referendum" on Trident |
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Solidarity MSP Tommy Sheridan has called on the Scottish public to make Labour pay for introducing a replacement to Trident. He called on all scots who oppose the renewal of the missile system to vote only for parties who will vow to scrap them:
"On May 3rd the people of Scotland can show Labour, and their friends the tories, that we do not want £76 billion spent on weapons of mass destruction."
The Co-Convenor of Scotland's fastest growing political party added that Scots want to see the vulnerable, the young and the old looked after before spending money on weapons to kill others.
"This money could be spent on providing decent pensions, student grants, affordable housing for rent or a fair minimum wage of £8.50 per hour. It is morally and politically wrong to waste £76 billion on this." |
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Vote Solidarity on May 3rd |
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Solidarity, Scotland's Socialist Movement will be standing across Scotland in May for all regional parliamentary seats as well as council wards. Our candidates, led by Rosemary Byrne and Tommy Sheridan represent the credible, principled and respected broad left in Scotland. A vote for Solidarity on May 3rd will be a vote for a nuclear free, independent socialist republic, a Scotland that will bring key industries and assets back into public ownership and control and stand against the tide of privatisation. A vote for Solidarity is a vote against the wars and occupation in Iraq and Afganistan and vote against racism and discrimination Wherever you live in Scotland, you can elect a Solidarity MSP by looking to the left page on your voting booklet you can vote for a real left alternative. All of our list candidates live in the regions where they are standing for election. The candidates who top the Solidarity lists in your region are: Highlands & Islands - Anne McLeod, Central Scotland - Lynn Sheridan, North East Scotland - Jim Malone, West of Scotland - Jim Halfpenny, Mid-Scotland & Fife - Kate Stewart, Lothians - Pat Smith, Glasgow - Tommy Sheridan, South Scotland - Rosemary Byrne |
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Solidarity Statement on Iran |
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The ongoing diplomatic stand-off between the Iranian and British governments over the capture of 15 British marines and sailors, operating either in or close to Iranian waters, has served to reveal the extent of the imperial arrogance that runs right through the British establishment. The assumption, implied in the raft of bellicose statement issued from Downing Street and the Foreign Office, that Britain possesses an intrinsic right to send its military forces to any far flung corner of the globe it so decides, regardless of international law, is one that all right-thinking people, interested in a world set up under the principle of universal human rights, must reject outright. Whether or not these British servicemen and women were operating in Iraqi or Iranian waters, what we know with certainty is that they weren't operating in British waters, and that if they were in Iraqi waters their presence there was no less illegal than if they were in Iranian waters when they were captured. Sharing a border with Iraq, the Iranian people have witnessed the carnage in Iraq these past four years, have felt the instability that has resulted in the region, and are no less exercised than the rest of the Muslim world over the deep hypocrisy that exists with regard to Israel's treatment of the Palestinians. Further, conveniently lost in this diplomatic furore has been any kind of an historical context. The resentment of the British state that exists at all levels of Iranian society - referred to in Iran as 'Little Satan' for its role as a willing Hessian force in support of US foreign policy in the Middle East - should not be underestimated. The Iranians have not forgotten the part that a previous British government played in ousting the democractically-elected prime minister, Mohammed Mossadegh, in a joint operation with the CIA back in 1953. This operation, known as Operation Ajax, was carried out in response to Mossadegh's decision to nationalise Iran's oil for the benefit of the Iranian people. Up to then they had seen hardly a penny of the obscene profits siphoned out of the country by the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (now British Petroleum), formed specifically for the task of plundering their oil. The subversion of Iran's democracy which removed Mossadegh from power ushered in 25 years of one of the most repressive and savage regimes of the 20th century under the Shah. Tens of thousands of Iranian men and women were imprisoned and tortured by the Shah's notorious secret police, and his regime has left scars in that country that have yet to heal. The Iranians are a highly educated and deeply politicised people, and the militancy of Iran's universities and colleges has traditionally been at the root of the country's militancy vis-a-vis the West. Iranian students were the motor force behind the 1979 revolution which finally toppled the Shah, a revolution that contained within it a strong social component which might well have brought to power a progressive secular regime in place of the Islamic Republic that was formed under the Ayatollah. Backed and encouraged by Britain and the US, Saddam launched an invasion of Iran in 1980 that embroiled both countries in a war lasting eight years at a cost of 2 million lives. Again, Britain's role in this war, in helping to arm Saddam's regime in an attempt to derail a popular revolution, has not been forgotten by the Iranians. In a society in which tension between secularists and supporters of Political Islam has existed ever since, the antipathy felt towards Britain and the US is the one thing which unites the Iranian people, uniting them against what they view as the common enemy of human progress - US imperialism. At time of writing events in the Middle East have never been at such a critical stage. Make no mistake: Iran is not Iraq. It is a country of 70 million people with a highly motivated and well equipped military, an infrastructure that is intact, a nation in which the well of resentment for Britain and the United States runs as deep as the Earth's core. The world is now poised at the brink of a cataclysm that has the potential to go nuclear. Imperialism - the drive to feed an economic system that operates like a cancer on the body of the world - has brought us to this point. As such the admonition of Rosa Luxembourg, one of history's finest socialists, made back in 1915 at the height of the First World War, has never been more accurate. The choice facing humanity is one of socialism or barbarism.
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Solidarity Against Civil Service Pay Cuts |
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Solidarity members across the country have joined PCS members on the picket lines in a national day of action against Gordon Brown's plans to impose a pay deal below the rate of inflation. Staff at Passport Offices, Ministry of Defence and other sites have come out on strike in Glasgow and Edinburgh, Rosyth and Faslane with Solidarity members at the forefront of the campaign. In Edinburgh, pickets succesfully stopped contractors from crossing the line. MOD worker and Solidarity member Iain Fitzpatrick said: "Today has been a strong demonstration to Brown and the Government that we will not lie down and accept what amounts to a pay cut" Four of the PCS UK National Executive are Solidarity members including National President Janice Godrich who addressed a strike rally in London today and Alan Brown who led the rally in Glasgow. Solidarity's Co-Convenor Rosemary Byrne added her support: "PCS members are fighting to maintain an already poor income, with a quarter of them earning less than £15K and most at around the average wage. This pay cut will strengthen their resolve to fight back and today's strike should send a clear message to Gordon Brown. Solidarity gives full support to the PCS in their struggle, New Labour have abandoned the workers and Solidarity has become the new home for fighting trades unionists." |
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Vote Solidarity on May 3rd |
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Solidarity, Scotland's Socialist Movement will be standing across Scotland in May for all regional parliamentary seats as well as council wards. Our candidates, led by Rosemary Byrne MSP and Tommy Sheridan MSP represent the credible, principled and respected broad left in Scotland. A vote for Solidarity on May 3rd will be a vote for a nuclear free, independent socialist republic, a Scotland that will bring key industries and assets back into public ownership and control and stand against the tide of privatisation. A vote for Solidarity is a vote against the wars and occupation in Iraq and Afganistan and vote against racism and discrimination Wherever you live in Scotland, you can elect a Solidarity MSP by looking to the left page on your voting booklet you can vote for a real left alternative. All of our list candidates live in the regions where they are standing for election. The candidates who top the Solidarity lists in your region are: Highlands & Islands - Anne McLeod, Central Scotland - Lynn Sheridan, North East Scotland - Jim Malone, West of Scotland - Jim Halfpenny, Mid-Scotland & Fife - Kate Stewart, Lothians - Pat Smith, Glasgow - Tommy Sheridan, South Scotland - Rosemary Byrne Vote Solidarity on May 3rd |
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Councils Back Airguns Ban |
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COSLA, who represent all 32 local authorities in Scotland, have joined Tommy Sheridan's campaign to take air guns off Scotland's streets. In a response to consultation documents, COSLA wrote: "Airguns are potentially lethal weapons and their availability should be restricted. We would be supportive of a ban on the use of airguns, except for use in gun clubs or for legitimate pest control purposes." Solidarity's Co-Convenor welcomed the news that adds to the widespread support for his Bill: "We now have all of Scotland's councils, 82% of the Scottish public, the FBU, the SSPCA and 11,000 signatures on a petition, sending a clear message to the Scottish Executive - we dont want these deadly weapons on our streets. We need to act now before anyone else is killed." COSLA spokesperson Allison Hay said: "We share the concern of our local communities about the misuse of air guns following a number of tragic incidents in the past two years. We would be supportive of restrictions on the sale and use of airguns that could potentially further enhance the measures of the Violent Crime Reduction Act 2006." |
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Sheridan calls for "quicker" referendum |
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Solidarity MSP Tommy Sheridan has called for an referendum timetable that takes place quicker than that planned by the SNP. The SNP announced yesterday that they would take three years to introduce the ballot to give voters enough time to see the SNP deliver as a working government. Sheridan slammed this approach: "Independence is for the people of Scoland and not for the SNP. It's a bit much that the SNP are making assumptions that people will decide on this issue based on whether the SNP perform in government or not. There are other parties in Scotland. Solidarity will support bills for a referendum on independence from any party, but we feel that this doesn't act quickly enough. Solidarity will try to speed up the process by introducing our own bill as soon as possible after the election." |
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