Why I am standing down as Respect Party candidate

It is with a heavy heart that I have decided to stand down as Respect Party candidate for the Manchester Central by-election. This has been a difficult decision to make because I am in no doubt that the Respect Party has the right policies to meet the challenges facing Britain today, and that its redistributive anti-austerity and pro-investment platform is exactly what is needed to turn around Britain’s failing economy and meet the needs of Britain’s population. Political events across Europe demonstrate that Respect is not alone in working to fill the political space vacated by Labour and its sister social democrat parties as they have moved to the right and embraced neo-liberalism, from Greece to France and now Holland.

However, I cannot in all conscience, stand as candidate for a party whose only MP has made unacceptable and un-retracted statements about the nature of rape. To continue as Respect Party candidate in this situation, no matter how much I object to and oppose his statements personally, would be in effect to condone what he has said. That is something I am not prepared to do.

I stand by the position taken by Respect Party leader Salma Yaqoob, who has stated:

“Let me be clear, as a politician and as a woman. Rape occurs when a woman has not consented to sex. George Galloway’s comments on what constitutes rape are deeply disappointing and wrong.

There are many political issues entwined in the case of Julian Assange. These issues cannot be used to diminish in any way the seriousness of any allegations against him. Any individual accused of a crime, sexual or otherwise, is innocent until proven guilty. By the same token, any individual who believes themselves to be a victim has a right to have their grievances heard in a fair manner and not have their allegations belittled or dismissed. This is the cornerstone of justice.”

Unfortunately George Galloway’s subsequent clarification of his remarks was totally inadequate.

To continue to represent the Respect Party in this context does not accord with my political principles, which include the continuing struggle for justice and respect for women, as well as fighting against austerity, war and racism. I will continue to work within the Respect Party to ensure that our values and principles with regard to women’s rights match up to the Party’s – and George Galloway’s – outstanding record in these other areas.

I would like to thank our members and supporters in Manchester and across the country for the strong support extended to the Manchester Central campaign. The struggle for a left politics based on justice and equality, where society is organised to meet the needs of the many, will continue.

Left Futures and the Manchester Central by-election: an apology

The Left Futures website today published an article by Respect candidate Kate Hudson, which it subsequently removed. Here, Jon Lansman explains why and apologises. Kate accepts his apology and looks forward to further discussion on the left about the issues she raises in the article, in particular the political representation of the working class. Below you can find Kate’s original article.

“Earlier today we published an article by Kate Hudson, Respect candidate in the Manchester Central by-election, entitled The unrepresented working class: a space Respect can fill. Whilst Left Futures firmly believes that “the Left’s future remains inextricably linked with that of the Labour Party” (as set out in our mission statement), this has given rise to the mistaken impression that Left Futures supports a candidate standing against Labour in a by-election. That is emphatically not the case. In order to clarify the position, I have decided as editor to withdraw the article from publication.  

Those of us on the Labour Left who, whilst committed to Labour’s success, also wish to realign Labour in a more radical direction and to draw into Labour many of those who are currently outside it, must tread a careful path. It is right that Left Futures gives space to others on the Left outside Labour to present their views and contribute to our debate about policy and the future of the Left. But we must be careful to get the balance right and on this occasion we did not but, just as we have carried articles by Kate Hudson and members of other parties before, so we will do so again.

Kate Hudson, as I said in my previous report about the Manchester Central by-election, is a formidable campaigner and a comrade in the campaigns for peace and in solidarity with the people of Greece in their opposition to austerity. Nevertheless, in Manchester Central, we want to see Lucy Powell winning the by-election by running a bold and radical campaign which will bring back Labour’s lost voters rather than see them turning towards Respect.

As it happens, today I was supposed to be on holiday and did not see Kate’s article prior to publication though as Editor it is right that I take full responsibility for everything that is published. When I did see it, I saw no alternative to withdrawing it from publication, and I apologise both to Lucy Powell, Labour’s candidate, for any wrong impression we may have caused and to Kate Hudson who wrote the article for us in good faith.”

The text of Kate’s original article

The unrepresented working class: a space Respect can fill

Why have I decided to stand as Respect candidate in Manchester Central? There is no doubt that the Labour Party has a fine past track record in the service of ordinary people, liberating millions – through the foundation of the welfare state – from poverty and from the denial of basic rights and opportunities. But sadly, the emphasis here is on ‘past’ record. Labour has ceased to advance, or even adequately defend, the great achievements it made for working people. For decades now it has bought into the pro-market, neo-liberal framework which has thrown Britainand much of the rest of the world into an economic crisis of mammoth proportions. The fundamental problem with neo-liberal economics is that it is all about rebalancing the economy, away from the modest redistribution of the Keynesian welfare state and back into the hands of the wealthy. That is not an appropriate economic approach for a social democratic party, especially one founded by the trade union movement – the organised working class.

This turn away from defending and advancing the interests of the working class is a source of great sadness and frustration for many on the left and within the Labour Party itself. And as Labour has moved to the right, this has opened up a political space to its left. People have reacted in different ways to this. Some persist within Labour, wanting to reclaim the party for the policies and values it used to represent. Others grudgingly settle for New Labour-lite, especially in the run up to a general election, hoping that perhaps this time, Labour will fulfil our hopes. Still others have concluded that a different political option must be pursued: the articulation of popular pro-working class policies which Labour – to a considerable extent – used to represent. And that many people, who feel their interests no longer have political representation, require – and will choose to support – a party which stands for their interests. The Respect Party can be such a party and it is my intention – as it is of many others – to work to make it so.

This political space – and the emergence of new parties to fill it – is not just a British phenomenon. It is something that is happening across Europe and has even hit the media radar here in Britain, as a result of the recent Greek elections. Labour’s Greek sister party PASOK was decimated in this year’s elections, as it implemented vast cuts programmes, driving millions into poverty and disaster. Syriza, a new pluralistic party of the left, emerging from radical and eurocommunist traditions in Greece from the early 1990s, won massive popular support, narrowly missing victory over the conservative New Democracy. PASOK had failed to represent the interests of its electorate and so was eclipsed. In France too, this new left current has hit the headlines: Front de Gauche and its leader Jean-Luc Melenchon have made waves in French politics, reconsolidating the left beyond the Parti Socialiste.

Of course what is happening in Greece or France is specific to those countries and is not exactly reproducible elsewhere, but the fact is that parties like Syriza and Front de Gauche are eating into the votes of previously ‘socialist’ parties across Europe, and they will continue to do so because an objective political space exists. In fact what George Galloway did in Bradford was comparable to the stunning rise of Syriza and resulted in the eclipse of Labour, because Labour signally failed to work for ordinary people in that city. And Respect, in the same political stable as Syriza, will continue to advance the alternatives which Labour should itself represent.

That is why I am standing for Respect in Manchester Central. It’s a ‘safe’ Labour seat, with 52% of the votes cast for Labour in 2010. But that figure hides a sorry tale. It also has the lowest turn out in the country at 44.5%. Labour, which has run Manchesterfor a long time, has not addressed the deep problems of the city or the constituency. Manchester is the fourth most deprived local authority in the country and its two most deprived wards are in Central constituency. Clearly, Labour is not working for Manchester Central. The people are making their judgment by voting with their feet, by turning away from the electoral process altogether.

It’s time for a political alternative, articulating the interests of working people. Respect stands for that alternative.

‘Is Hudson the new Galloway?’ asks East London News

Is Hudson the new Galloway?

Posted on 13 August 2012 by eln

Kate Hudson

There is a by election in Manchester Central on 15th November. Clearly there is no chance that Respect can tear this rock solid safe Labour seat away from Her Majesty’s Opposition – but there was no chance that Respect would win Bradford West either. Will this be another by-election upset? Let’s look at the factors which helped Galloway in Bradford.

•Name recognition
“George Galloway” wasn’t just a name people recognised. Voters knew the basic political planks he stood on and knew that he had caused an election upset before. Kate Hudson is no new girl on the block. She hasn’t just swanned into CND to get a job: she was part of the women’s protests against Cruise Missiles at Greenham Common in the early 1980s. When she became Chair of CND in 2003, the organisation adopted a more positive campaigning attitude and it kept up with developing protest tactics (non-violent direct action, imaginative protests as well as marches). Although her public role for CND probably held Kate back from speaking out on as many party political issues as she would have liked, she brought CND firmly into the anti-war activist fold and has also associated herself with organisations opposed to government austerity measures. On the other hand, whereas Galloway was a Labour MP, and won some sympathy for being kicked out of the Party, Kate is a former member of the Communist Party, which will make her appear more of a marginal political figure than Galloway. She is also, despite her campaigning credentials, more reserved and rather shorter on charisma thanGalloway, which is disproportionately important in a by-election.

•Demography
Manchester Central has very high unemployment, a large number of single parent households and large numbers of residents living in social housing. This should be fertile ground for Respect: but though the Party has strong arguments against what the Government is doing, it is short on plausibility when it comes to how its criticisms will have an effect.  In the 2001 census, just under one fifth of the population was recorded as being from an ethnic minority. This is much lower than Bradford West, and the ethnic minority population is spread between different ethnic groups. The strong extended family networks which spread support for Galloway, and ensured votes were cast, will not be a factor to the same extent in Manchester Central.

•Labour complacency
The constituency has always returned a Labour MP to Westminster, with Tony Lloyd (whose departure to stand in the election for police commissioner caused the by-election) securing just over half the votes in the 2010 general election (but the 46.7% turnout suggests a certain inner city disenchantment with Labour lies behind his victory).
Two Branch Labour Parties (Crumpsall and Cheetham) were suspended in May 2012 after 30 and 120 membership applications were respectively received from people living in the wards. Neither is in Manchester Central constituency, but as one is represented by Council leader Sir Richard Leese and the other by a former Lord Mayor, Afzal Kahn, the suspensions will have had an unsettling effect throughout the city.
The city’s Labour Party is doing a reasonable job of complaining about central government cuts, but it hasn’t galvanised the population into an anti-cuts campaign which can boost confidence in Labour.  This is the dilemma for Labour nationally: how to fight the Con-Dems’ cuts, given that its own strategy was to make deep cuts in public spending, and how to fight Con-Dem policies, given that many of them build on unpopular measures which Labour introduced (anti-social housing, anti-immigration, anti-union, pro-war). The local Labour Party has promised to keep listening to the people ofManchester, but seems to be short on information about what the people ofManchesterare saying and what it is going to do about what it hears.

•Labour candidate
Labour’s candidate, Lucy Powell, is no stranger to Westminster elections: she came second to the Lib-Dems in the 2010 General Election in the Manchester Withington seat (so though she has experience, she may be seen as an out of touch careerist politician). She is rather a mixed bag politically: having been supported when she stood in the internal Labour Party election for its National Policy Forum by of the shadowy, Blairite, “Progress” group inside the Labour Party, she also organised Ed Miliband’s party leadership election campaign and then served as his Deputy Chief of Staff. Her pronouncements in the by-election campaign so far have been more orthodox Labour criticisms of the Government rather than inspirational.

•Public mood
By the time the voters of Manchester Central go to the polls, it will have been just over seven months since Galloway’s breakthrough inBradford. Since his victory,Galloway has been almost absent from the national scene. Although the media has moved on to other interests, it must be partly from want of trying: that’s a strange way to keep up the momentum of a national political movement. Whereas Bradford was able to galvanise general discontent behind a known “troublemaker” figure, that is far from saying that Respect has established itself as the home of the anti-cuts protest vote – or that voters, who have deserted Labour in their millions, have entirely given up on seeing Labour as the alternative party to the Tories.

Respect has had “Arab springs” before, only to fall back at the next electoral hurdle. To date, no small left of centre party has brought a lasting change to the political scene. It is unlikely that CND will be advertising for a new General Secretary before Christmas.

•Judge for yourself: watch Kate Hudson on the video on our home page. Click this link to view video http://www.eastlondonnews.com/

Respect candidate backs families’ call for justice

Press Release Thursday 9th August 2012

Kate Hudson, Respect candidate for Manchester Central, will join with family members of those killed in police custody, to attend a screening of the award-winning film ‘Injustice’. The screening takes place this Friday August 10th at 6pm at the Phil Martin Centre in Moss Side.

The screening takes place on the anniversary of the riots triggered by the shooting by police of Mark Duggan, and is hosted by BARAC (Black Activists rising against the cuts). The film charts the struggles for justice of the families of people who have died in police custody.

Kate Hudson said: ‘Over 1,000 people died in policy custody in England between 1969 and 1999. But no police officer has ever been convicted of any of the deaths. This remarkable film exposes the reality of this deeply shocking figure and calls us to action for justice. Time does not erase the crimes.’

There will be a discussion after the film, including family members of those who have been killed. Please join us at the Phil Martin Centre, 141-143 Princess Road, Moss Side, Manchester M14 4RE. It’s time for justice.

Kate and the Respect campaign team will be taking their message to Manchester Central again on Saturday, meeting at 12 noon at the party rooms at Hilton House, Hilton Street, Manchester M1 1EL.

Press Release 2: For interview/comment please phone 07739 184 335

Twitter: @kate4manchester
Facebook: Kate4Manchester
Website: www.kate4manchester.org

Out on the campaign trail

At the Velodrome in Bradford ward

Saturday was a good day for the Respect campaign in Manchester Central. We have a fantastic election team now and we exchanged the week’s news – some real highlights for us: not only the publication of my piece in The Guardian’s Northerner blog, setting out Respect’s aims and values. But also the great news that former Halifax Labour MP Alice Mahon is backing my candidacy. I have worked with Alice closely in peace and anti-war campaigning over many years now, and have a high opinon of her commitment, both to the cause of peace and to the working class. We need more people to be open-minded about supporting Respect in the same way as Alice is. My great hope is that people will realise there is too much at stake – not least the assault on ordinary people via the cuts – to allow anything to stand in the way of a really strong campaign that fights for social justice.

Part of the team on Saturday

Meeting up in Hilton House – the Respect Party rooms just a stone’s throw from Piccadilly station – is a perfect location right in the constituency. From there, our teams started to work through Bradford ward. I leafleted the streets by the Velodrome - the home patch of Bradley Wiggins who had just had such great Olympic success. Manchester City Council’s State of the Wards report makes disturbing reading. The Bradford area of Manchester Central is the most deprived ward in the city as a whole, not just in Central constituency. And walking round, it’s clear to see where the Council needs to prioritise spending and resources to improve the lives of the residents. Investement in housing is essential for the people in this area.

This is what the campaign is about. Britain is a wealthy country – there is no shortage of money, for investment, for meeting people’s needs. It’s a question of who chooses the spending priorities and in whose interests. The trend for decades now has been away from the redistribution of society’s wealth to working people - via spending on homes, jobs, education and health – and towards the wealthy in society. They are taking back everything that we have won since 1945 and the foundation of the welfare state. We have to stop this process and reverse it. It will be a struggle, not least because the Labour Party has lost its way and fails to defend its great achievements. But it is a struggle that must be won, because it is about the right for everyone to live decent lives and fulfil their potential.

On Friday I’m speaking at a BARAC meeting in Moss Side, the focus of which is one of the great injustices blighting our society – deaths in police custody.

Labour stalwart backs Respect candidate for Manchester Central

Former Labour MP for Halifax, Alice Mahon, is backing Kate Hudson, Respect candidate for the Manchester Central by-election on 15th November.

Mrs Mahon said: ‘Excellent news that Kate Hudson, General Secretary of CND and well-known political activist, is to stand in the Manchester Central by-election. I have worked with Kate on many campaigns. Highly intelligent and articulate she is totally committed to a fairer more equal society.

If we are to stop the privatisation of health, and education, the introduction of work for no pay, and a continuation of the lousy neo-con economics that have done so much damage to our country, then we have to start electing people like Kate who have the courage to take the fight for a more equal society to the heart of government. The people of Manchester Central deserve nothing less.’

Kate and the Respect campaign team will be taking their message to Manchester Central tomorrow, meeting at 10.30am at the party rooms at Hilton House, Hilton Street, Manchester M1 1EL. They will commence work in Bradford ward – the most deprived ward in Manchester.

Kate Hudson said: ‘Respect’s anti-cuts and pro-investment message is more vital than ever, as reports show thousands of public sector workers in Greater Manchester are earning less than a living wage. This is a disgrace. Respect will fight to end the poverty and deprivation that blights this great city.’

Press Release 1: For interview/comment please phone 07739 184 335

Twitter: @kate4manchester
Facebook: Kate4Manchester
Website: www.kate4manchester.org