Please see my campaign priorities and the reasons below, this isn't in any particular order.
Housing
Five million
are trapped on social housing waiting lists, one in four young Londoners grows
up in an overcrowded home, and people are increasingly driven into the
expensive private rented sector. Campaigns like Focus E15 and the New Era estate won victories, drove the
crisis on to the agenda, and set an example for others to follow.
Feminism
The statistics
are chastening if you think equality has been achieved. Over a million British
women face domestic violence a year; 85,000 are raped. Only around one in five
MPs are women, and women are underrepresented in journalism, are paid less and
are concentrated in the lowest paid jobs.
But there is a
thriving new wave of feminism. Groups like Sisters Uncut are taking to the streets
to demand equality. The White Ribbon Campaign tackles male
violence against women. And groups like Calm are
trying to change the damage done to men and women through the policing of
gender roles, including sexism and homophobia.
Workers’
rights
Zero-hours
contracts, agency contracts; there is no shortage of attempts to strip workers
of hard-won basic rights.
Tony Blair once
infamously boasted that Britain had the most restrictive anti-trade union laws
in the western world. We need to preserve trade unions so they can win their
members a proper slice of the wealth they’re creating. Join a union – and
encourage colleagues to do so too.
Environmental
justice
The global
crash seemed to drive the environment down the political agenda, but climate
change activists are now making it a bread-and-butter issue about jobs. The
anti-fracking movement has taken the fight to fossil fuels and are demanding
real investment in the renewable industries of the future.
Naomi Klein’s
recent book This Changes Everything underlined the
existential threat posed by climate change, while the Campaign Against
Climate Changestaged a large show of force in London this month.
The Guardian
has also launched its own campaign, Keep it in the Ground, calling on the world’s
biggest charitable foundations to divest their endowments from fossil fuels.
Sign up and get on board at theguardian.com.
Living Wage
Working people
are Britain’s wealth creators, and yet most Britons in poverty are in work.
Billions are spent on in-work benefits that subsidise low pay, ranging from
working tax credits to housing benefit. Yet there are success stories. Workers
at Brixton’s Ritzy cinema staged a series of strikes and through social media
encouraged customers to boycott the cinema, winning themselves a pay hike.
When workers
fight for decent pay, back them: publicly boycott their employers, and even
join workers on the picket line if you can.
Anti-Racism
Racism haunts
British society, whether it’s the targeting of black people through police
stop-and- search, higher poverty rates for minorities, or the negative media
portrayal of Muslims. Media Diversified is fighting to have
proper representation of black and minority ethnic (BME) voices, and needs
support; Unite
Against Fascism and Hope Not Hate take
the fight against racism to the streets, and StopWatch campaigns
against disproportionate stop-and-search.
Tax Justice
Around £25bn is
lost each year through tax avoidance in Britain, even as the wealth of the
richest 1,000 Britons has doubled and services are slashed. But while tax
avoidance once languished on the fringes of political debate, it is now one of
the great causes of our time. Above all, that’s because protest group UKUncut occupied
tax-dodging businesses, using social media to organise demonstrations and
bypass an unsympathetic mainstream media. It proved that peaceful civil
disobedience can pay off, forcing otherwise ignored issues onto the political
agenda.
- Pro-Credit Unions
- Against Workfare
- Against Blacklisting of Trade Unionists
- Apprentices - Fair Wage
- Improve Ballot Box Democracy
- Against NHS Privatisation
- Against Trident
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