Housing Emergency meeting Sat 20 Nov 5pm

The Housing Emergency: make Labour act! Saturday 20 November 17:00-18:30

https://www.facebook.com/events/722188715403553

Zoomlink http://bit.ly/lli-h or http://bit.ly/hous-m or https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89987346975

Speakers include:

• Dave Renton, housing lawyer

• Professor Paul Watt, Birkbeck, University of London. Author of recently published book, /Estate Regeneration and its Discontents: Public Housing, Place and Inequality in London https://policy.bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/estate-regeneration-and-its-discontents

• Andrea Gilbert, Labour Homelessness Campaign

• Martin Wicks, Labour Campaign for Council Housing

The latest government figures show only 1,100 council homes started, only 800 completed, in the first two quarters of 2021. Even before the government lifted the pandemic evictions ban, almost 100,000 households were recorded as homeless at the start of 2021. 26% of adult renters in England – or 5.3 million people – already say they cannot keep their homes warm in winter, mainly because of high private-sector rents. Over two-fifths (45%) of England’s private-renting adults have been the victim of illegal behaviour from a landlord or letting agent. Overcrowded housing has been a main reason for high Covid tolls among ethnic minorities and the worse-off.

Next LLI-MI committee meeting

Saturday 20 November 4pm, just before the housing meeting.

Meetings: Global climate justice 8 Nov. Housing Emergency 20 Nov.

Winning global climate justice: migrants’ rights and global redistribution: Monday, 8 November⋅09:30 – 11:30
https://www.facebook.com/events/933107993987677

The Housing Emergency: make Labour act! Saturday 20 November 17:00-18:30

https://www.facebook.com/events/722188715403553

Zoomlink http://bit.ly/lli-h or http://bit.ly/hous-m or https://us02web.zoom.us/j/89987346975

Speakers include:

• Dave Renton, housing lawyer

• Professor Paul Watt, Birkbeck, University of London. Author of recently published book, /Estate Regeneration and its Discontents: Public Housing, Place and Inequality in London https://policy.bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/estate-regeneration-and-its-discontents

• Andrea Gilbert, Labour Homelessness Campaign

• Labour Campaign for Council Housing

The latest government figures show only 1,100 council homes started, only 800 completed, in the first two quarters of 2021. Even before the government lifted the pandemic evictions ban, almost 100,000 households were recorded as homeless at the start of 2021. 26% of adult renters in England – or 5.3 million people – already say they cannot keep their homes warm in winter, mainly because of high private-sector rents. Over two-fifths (45%) of England’s private-renting adults have been the victim of illegal behaviour from a landlord or letting agent. Overcrowded housing has been a main reason for high Covid tolls among ethnic minorities and the worse-off.

Next LLI-MI committee meeting

Saturday 20 November 4pm, just before the housing meeting.

Winning global climate justice: migrants’ right and global redistribution

Monday 8 November 9:30-11am

To win global justice – global climate justice – we need international redistribution to equalise and level up internationally; and migrants’ rights and free movement for everyone, everywhere. What do these mean in practice, and how to we fight for and win them?

Contributors: Abel Harvie-Clarke – Labour Left Internationalists (formerly Momentum Internationalists); Alena Ivanova – Labour Campaign for Free Movement

Register

Refounding? Or lost?

By Stephen Wood

“Refounding Momentum”, described as “a deliberative process that will radically redesign Momentum’s constitution, structures and how we organise with each other”, has stalled. Or so it seems.

On 26 September interim proposals from the “Momentum Assemblies” should have been published, with amendments allowed up until 24 October. Then an all-members ballot is due for December.

The last official communication, 13 September, reported two assemblies on “politics and people and “power and participation”, but since then there have been no social media posts, no emails to members, nothing on the Momentum Slack channel.

The lack of discussion or even acknowledgement of the missed deadlines should be of concern for an organisation that now reports going from a high of 45,000 members to 20,000.

Labour Left Internationalists (formerly Momentum Internationalists), who submitted proposals https://momentuminternationalists.org/2021/07/15/momentums-refounding-process-two-proposals/ back in July, will continue to campaign for a genuinely democratic Momentum, and meanwhile work on regrouping and reactivating the internationalist Labour left. §

Suggested motion on Labour’s rule change

The Campaign for Labour Party Democracy is circulating this suggested wording about the rule change on selections passed at Brighton Labour Party conference, 25-29 Sep 2021.

To: Labour Party NEC

This CLP notes:

1)     Labour’s Annual Conference is the sovereign body of the Labour Party. The Rule Book, Chapter 1.VI.1 clearly states: “The work of the Party shall be under the direction and control of Party conference”;

2)     the composition of shortlisting panels for snap parliamentary elections was agreed by Labour’s 2021 Annual Conference as: 3 CLP reps, plus 1 NEC rep and 1 REC rep;

3)     despite this, the Party assembled a shortlisting panel for the Old Bexley and Sidcup by-election selection comprising of: 3 NEC reps, plus 1 CLP rep and 1 REC rep;

4)     the justification for not following the rule agreed by Annual Conference, according to a report on Labour List, is that the new rule was “inexpertly drafted”;

5)     the Party employs staff to advise on “technical” matters and in the past, if HQ has considered something was ‘poorly drafted’ staff would have advised the CLP before Annual Conference;

6)     whether the drafting was carried out “expertly” or not, the intention of the rule was clear to Conference and remains clear now.

We support the decision of Annual Conference and believe that CLPs should play the key role in selecting their parliamentary candidates.

Accordingly, this CLP calls on the NEC not to overturn party democracy and instead to respect the decision of Conference that the composition of shortlisting panels should be: 3 CLP reps, plus 1 NEC rep and 1 REC rep.

Starmer in clampdown fever

By Martin Thomas

The Labour Party’s National Executive (NEC) has said it will ignore a rule-change passed at this year’s Labour conference (25-29 September) to safeguard a local say in shortlisting in short-notice parliamentary selections.

The NEC has cited unspecified legal problems. For the upcoming Old Bexley and Sidcup selection the shortlisting committee will be three NEC members, one Regional Exec, one local, not three local members, one NEC member, and one Regional as in the rule change.

The rule change had to be submitted in June for consideration at conference (while NEC-drafted changes were, as often before, dropped on delegates at the last minute). No legal problems were flagged up then.

On 23 October, newly-elected National Constitutional Committee (NCC) member Rheian Davies was suspended on thin grounds about old social media posts.

At the conference, the left won two out of four National Constitutional Committee places up for election. The elected NCC has been replaced in disciplinary processes involving “protected characteristics” by a board appointed by a committee appointed by the general secretary, but still has a part in others.

Members in local Labour Parties and in the unions must assert ourselves against Keir Starmer’s feverish drive to make Labour “safe for business”.

Black History Month meeting 26 Oct, housing meeting 20 Nov

Black History Month Zoom meeting: Tue 26 October 6:30pm

For Black History Month in the UK, we will be discussing a 1939 essay by C L R James on black history and class struggle. bit.ly/clrj-39 – Zoomlink bit.ly/clrj-z

Making Labour act on the housing emergency: Saturday 20 November 5pm

Zoomlink bit.ly/lli-h
Speakers include:
• Dave Renton, housing lawyer
• Professor Paul Watt, Birkbeck, University of London. Author of recently published book, /Estate Regeneration and its Discontents: Public Housing, Place and Inequality in London https://policy.bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/estate-regeneration-and-its-discontents
• Labour Homelessness Campaign
• Labour Campaign for Council Housing

The latest government figures show only 1,100 council homes started, only 800 completed, in the first two quarters of 2021. Even before the government lifted the pandemic evictions ban, almost 100,000 households were recorded as homeless at the start of 2021. 26% of adult renters in England – or 5.3 million people – already say they cannot keep their homes warm in winter, mainly because of high private-sector rents. Over two-fifths (45%) of England’s private-renting adults have been the victim of illegal behaviour from a landlord or letting agent. Overcrowded housing has been a main reason for high Covid tolls among ethnic minorities and the worse-off.

Next LLI-MI committee meeting

Saturday 20 November 4pm, just before the housing meeting.

MI is now Labour Left Internationalists

Our planning meeting on 10 October 2021, following the Brighton Labour Party conference, elected a new committee and decided to change our name to Labour Left Internationalists (formerly Momentum Internationalists) to signal a broadening of our activity. More: bit.ly/mi-lli

Our planning meeting on 10 October 2021

By Martin Thomas

Momentum Internationalists met by Zoom on Sunday 10 October to plan activity after the 25-29 September Labour Party conference.

The discussion started with reports on the conference itself and on MI activity around it. Despite our small resources (compare Momentum, which has 20 paid staff), MI was the most active group at conference on left-wing policy issues. Momentum largely limited its comment to rule changes, explicitly eschewed comment on the several moves to refer back parts of the National Policy Forum report (some of which succeeded), and constructed its The World Transformed fringe event largely in abstraction from the conference happening less than ten minutes’ walk away.

Much of the work on policy, of course, has been done and is being done by specialised campaigns. The planning meeting decided to schedule a series of Zoom forums with speakers from left and Labour campaigns.

At the very least that will exchange information and build links. If we’re more successful it will provide a lever to give life to the policies in on-the-streets campaigning by local Labour Parties, rather than letting those local parties lapse into despair at the Starmer leadership’s stonewalling.

The first in the schedule is on housing, on Saturday 20 November, 5pm, with speakers from the Labour Homelessness Campaign and the Labour Campaign for Council Housing, plus writers David Renton and Paul Watt.

The meeting decided that MI will agitate for an alliance of left-wing Labour campaigns, something like the brief Labour Campaigns Together initiative of late 2019 but as an active coalition rather than just a joint website. Getting a formal joint committee looks unlikely for now, but links and cooperation now may open possibilities in years to come.

We will continue to be involved in Momentum activities, and debates within Momentum, but decided to change the name of the group to “Labour Left Internationalists (formerly Momentum Internationalists)” to signal that our activities reach much wider than politicking within Momentum. A big majority voted for the idea of changing the name, and then “Labour Left Internationalists” won out narrowly against “Labour and Momentum Internationalists”.

The meeting also elected a new committee for the group.

More details in the coming days as we update this website.