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Workers of the World Unite
Stop the Great Fuel Robbery
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Congratulations, you've won

 
Leicester Sign UpLeicester Communists went out on the street on Saturday 11th October 2008. Within minutes, queues of people signed the petition and took publicity.

One particularly notable moment was when an American came up to the stall, and stated “congratulations, you’ve won”. This light hearted moment demonstrated that people have understood that Capitalism has failed. However, as Communists we know that victory has not yet been won, and will not be until such workers unite in our own self interest and take control of the commanding heights of the economy.
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Midlands Communists take to the streets - autumn 08

flagsMidlands Communists take to the streets!

Derby Communists (both CP and YCL) distributed 500 of a locally designed leaflet to new students at Derby University and Derby College. It offered 5 good reasons why you should be a Communist as well as inviting them to a ‘Big Red Welcome” - a discussion on this, on student life, as well as activity in the town.

Download Midland Red 08 PDF

The initiative was met with great interest, and many promises were made to get involved. Derby Communists followed this up the next day with a Saturday street stall in the town centre, selling many CP and YCL pamphlets, Morning Stars, TShirts and even a Communist flag! The stall was continuously surrounded by people noticeably many in their teens and early twenties, all eager, interested to talk and very animated. Derby Communists have also advertised a “tell me more” text service, for people with questions about Communism. Two applications for membership came in on the Monday.

A mass of red Communist Party flags were cheered by the sunny May Day Bank Holiday rally and demonstration in Chesterfield, organised by the local Trades Council.

1,000 trade unionists heard the main speakers, Andrew Murray, National Chair, Stop The War Coalition; Joginder Bains, Executive, Indian Workers Association; Bill Greenshields, President, National Union of Teachers. By sheer coincidence all these happened to be Communists! But, of course, they all were there in their roles as leading figures in the mass movements they represented.

The Communist Party had a substantial turnout, with the Midlands Party calling for a mobilisation evident in comrades from Chesterfield, Birmingham, Derby and Nottinghamshire. Although, the Leeds and even Edinburgh branches came too. A solid delegation of IWA and CPB comrades marched with the Party’s flags, although Leicester’s own May Day event saw a much larger turnout of the IWA and the local Communist Party there.

Andrew, who shortly afterward was elected a member of the Communist Party Executive, reminded the crowd of the ongoing slaughter in Iraq and Afghanistan and restated the coalition's call for an immediate withdrawal of troops.

Bill Greenshields, also an EC member and now also the Midlands Party Chair, spoke about the recent national teachers' strike against below-inflation pay increases, stressing that this was important to every public-sector worker, and to the campaign for good local state schools.

Joginder Bains made a devastating attach on New Labour and its anti working class policies, called for international solidarity and condemned the local ruling Lib Dem council for making the Derbyshire Unemployed Workers' Centre "homeless" for the first time in its history by taking away its premises.

She went on to highlight the campaigns of the IWA, in particular the importance of immigration rights and married women.

There was musical entertainment and many political and market stalls. The Midlands CP/YCL stall did a roaring trade, especially with young people, perhaps only surpassed by the Birmingham Party branch second-hand book stall, which alone took almost £300 in sales over the May Day weekend. Not forgetting the impressively attractive and engaging Morning Star display which provoked lively discussion
on Derbyshire Communists’ stall.

 
The Battle They Said It Was Over

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WHAT IS TO BE DONE?

   WHAT IS TO BE DONE? From 1902 to TODAY

At first sight, the book by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, "What is to be Done?", seems to be very fixed in the time and place it was written. He wrote it in 1902 as an answer to what the next steps that the fragmented trends of progressive opinion in Tsarist Russia had to take. At the time, few realised just how powerful Lenin’s ideas were. 

The kinds of civil liberties we take for granted in modern Britain (weak though they are!) were not open to radical groups in Russia then. Revolutionary forces were weak and had to operate underground. Trade unions were only just getting established and the revolutionary movement was grappling with how to relate to them. Lenin set out some clear principles, along the way sketching out how a successful strategy for achieving power could be developed. Within a couple of years, revolutionaries were in the thick of a revolution, partly brought about by Lenin’s approach. Though it was unsuccessful, there were many who thought that it could not have happened when they were reading what he had written. Only a dozen years later, broad councils of trades unionists and peasants’ leaders were actually able to take power. Lenin’s book was central to that process.

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