In the party list / proportional representation ballot for the London
Assembly (one of two votes that each voter had - the other being for their
local assembly member specific to that district), 30% of votes went to
Labour, 29% Conservative, 15% Liberal Democrat, 11% Green, 1.6% London
Socialist Alliance (including the Socialist Workers Party), 2% UK
Independence (anti-EU), 0.8% Socialist Labour Party (Scargillites), 0.5%
Natural Law, 2.8% British National Party (fascist), 3.3% Campaign Against
Tube Privatization, 1.4% Peter Tatchell (describing himself as independent
green left).
------------------------------

Date: Sat, 6 May 2000 11:17:39 -0400
From: "Nathan Newman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: UK Far Left Blows Its Chance in London

See attached article

Given the proportional election system of the new London Assembly, this
should have been a chance for left socialists to elect a few assembly
members as a beachhead against the centrism of New Labour.  The Greens
managed to elect three out of the twenty-five assembly members, but vicious
infighting and sectarian proliferation of candidates assurred that none of
the far left socialist parties got anywhere.  It looks like Scargill, the
SWP (IS), Communist Parties and other groups have strongly established their
absolute electoral irrelevance in Britain.  If they could not win in an
election where Ken Livingstone was romping to victory with two thumbs firmly
in the eyes of the Tories and Blair's Labour, is there any reason why anyone
will take them seriously after this?  Any UK folks with other thoughts?

Nathan Newman
- -----------------------------
Factions blow their chance
By Ben Leapman

Extraordinary infighting among five competing socialist factions looks set
to ensure that none achieves success in the London elections.

Far Left groups have squandered a unique chance of electoral success on the
coat-tails of Ken Livingstone. With the rebel MP streets ahead of Frank
Dobson in the polls, there is a huge appetite among Labour-leaning Londoners
to cast "safe" anti-Government protest votes.

The 25-member Assembly, to be elected alongside the Mayor on Thursday,
appears ripe for fringe candidates to shine. It has few real powers for
extremists to abuse. The list voting system means parties need only five per
cent support across London to win a seat.

Yet extraordinary infighting among five competing socialist factions looks
set to ensure that none reaches that threshold. The combined votes of the
far-Left parties may well reach five per cent, but individually it is almost
certain that none of them will. The row could come straight from Monty
Python's Life of Brian, in which the People's Front of Judea accuse the
Judean People's Front of being "splitters".

London's Left-wing factions are proving to be just that. Not one looks
likely to have a member of the Assembly come Friday morning.

Four groups support Mr Livingstone for Mayor. The exception is veteran
miners' leader Arthur Scargill.

Mr Livingstone, on the other hand, is shunning his former allies and telling
supporters to vote Green - perhaps adding to their already realistic chance
of winning seats. Front runner on the Left is the London Socialist Alliance,
a rare example of co-operation by fringe parties. Their joint slate is
headed by Paul Foot, a journalist and leading light in the Socialist Workers
Party, the most visible of Britain's Trotskyist parties, with an effective
flyposting operation.

Also standing for the London Socialist Alliance is Greg Tucker, South West
Trains driver and a former Lambeth Labour councillor, who last year narrowly
missed being elected deputy leader of his Rail Maritime and Transport union.

His ally at the RMT was Pat Sikorski, a Northern line driver who
unsuccessfully challenged Jimmy Knapp for the leadership. However, Mr Tucker
and Mr Sikorski, members of competing Trotskyist factions, have fallen out.
Mr Sikorski is standing against the London Socialist Alliance at the head of
a rival slate composed entirely of Tube workers, under the banner of
Campaign Against Tube Privatisation. Insults have been traded, and the vote
inevitably will be split.

It gets more complicated. Mr Sikorski is a former president of the Socialist
Labour Party, the breakaway group Mr Scargill founded to oppose New Labour,
and which is now putting up its own Assembly candidates.

In perhaps the most baffling split of the campaign, the Communist Party of
Great Britain has signed up to the London Socialist Alliance but another
faction, the Communist Party of Britain, is standing separately, with Anita
Halpin, Stalinist former president of the National Union of Journalists, as
its number one candidate.

As if there was not enough choice, gay rights activist Peter Tatchell -
whose recent stunts have included following Michael Portillo around and
conducting a citizen's arrest on Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe - has
quit Labour to stand as an independent Assembly candidate.

It all adds up to a recipe for electoral disaster. The five per cent
threshold, introduced to block the British National Party, should see off
all of these challengers - as well as Damian Hockney of the UK Independence
Party and Ram Gidoomal of the Christian People's Alliance, both staging dual
campaigns for Mayor and Assembly.

Last week's Evening Standard/ICM poll found the Greens polling seven per
cent and winning two seats, with a further seven per cent going to the rest
of the fringe parties combined. These include not only the various socialist
groups but the UK Independence Party and the Christian People's Alliance.
That total may grow. It is quite possible that 10 per cent of the final list
vote may go in total to parties that, individually, all fall short of the
five per cent hurdle.

That does not mean their votes will have no effect. The more people who
desert Labour for the small Left-wing parties, the fewer seats Labour can
hope to win. But the beneficiaries of this process will not be candidates
flying the varied socialist banners. More "wasted" votes mean fewer
effective votes; and under London's system of proportional representation,
this will reduce the number of votes needed to elect each Assembly member
from each of the larger parties. For any given number of votes they can thus
hope to win more seats.

The real winners from the infighting of the far Left will be those whom
traditional socialists regard as their sworn class enemies - the Tories and
Liberal Democrats.

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