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NUS demo report

AnnoyedStudent | 20.02.2002 16:42

NUS demo pretty much as expected.


Today's NUS demonstration for grants not fees passed off without any great incident. 10,000 students, well down on last year did a circuit of Central London. In Trafalgar Square, at the end of the march, we were treated to the thoughts of some careerist NUS bureaucrats and the entirely meritless Ken Livingstone. Someone must have told the principle-free Mayor that there were votes to be had.

The atmosphere on the march was reasonably good. The drum bands kept things lively and many of the students had never been on a demo before. Some had just come for a day out, all were angry about fees and some even displayed a more radical outlook.

Halfway through the march a particularly embarrassing attempt at a sit down protest took place. A hundred or so people parked themselves in the middle of the street for a few minutes, got bored and moved on.

The left were there in some numbers. The SWP were the biggest contingent but there weren't all that many of them and in fact it looked like the Socialist Party had almost as many people. There was a fairly visible anarchist bloc, which was small but lively. The AWL was there, with its CFE front, while the Sparts and Workers Power also put in an appearance, predictably.

Not a bad march, but not one that's likely to achieve much.

As a last point, could somebody please tell me why so many of the SWP paper sellers were wearing faux-Palestinian scarves? Why don't they go in blackface next year? It wouldn't be much more patronising.

AnnoyedStudent

Comments

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Funny banner boys

20.02.2002 17:08

What I found funny was the way these two swp? with their big bloody banner kept walking right in front of the drummers of the band so that there was no room for people to dance. They refused to move after many requests, so the band stopped and people stopped dancing till they went away. It beggars belief sometimes!

skint


i agree with your assesment

20.02.2002 17:35

see my own sarcastic report above...
i remember a few years ago there were two demos scheduled in trafalgar sq one afternoon. one was against the USA death penalty and the other was for some nondescript matter. the two passed each other, one on the way in, the other out.
as you might imagine, both had large numbers of SWP present. however, some of the death penalty protesters felt the other march to be less important, and said so as they passed. this meant that the SWP members on the one demo were berating their colleagues who had decided to attend the other. what an existential muddle. it put me in mind of the story related by orwell in 1984, about the demo that changed its slogans half-way through without anyone noticing.

hoo nose hoo


Oh sit down, oh sit down

20.02.2002 18:29

The sit down outside the houses of parliament lasted about 10-15 minutes. Meanwhile many on the march just walked past as stewards shouted at those sitting down to move (given that the streets had been half blocked off for the whole length of the march this was hardly something for the stewards to get worried about).

The other sit down was outside Downing street - for about 7 minutes.

The sit downs themselves weren't embarrassing, but the reaction of the others to this were. There were of course the standard police photographers taking pics of those sitting and others, as well as the police team who always go on demonstrations - can't remember their name though.

Still 5 minutes later and everyone was in Trafalgar square and able to listen to MPs and Mayor Livingstone make their speaches.

:-)


Oh Yes they Were...

20.02.2002 18:59


The sit down protests were embarassing. They were poorly planned and worse executed. A tiny part of the mach sitting down for a few minutes is worse than useless. Every fucking year a few SWPers with megaphones try to pull off sit downs. Every year it doesn't work because there isn't any aim in mind beyond giving the appearance of being a little more "militant" than the rest of the march.

AnnoyedStudent


some action!

21.02.2002 09:58

yeah i blindly sat down with them and then everyone moved on

i was left thinking about the security - pretty well nothing at Portcullis House and then maybe 30 cops at Downing Street - if one union organised a few lock-ons to run at the gate and fix on (or lie down close enough) with about 20 people, hopefully enough would follow.

well over a hundred sat down and they could have easily got into Downing Street - fine they might not have achieved much more once there, but you'd get more coverage and demand entrance of number 10

ben


Palestinian scarves

21.02.2002 13:26

Since you ask.. Ever since the first intifada, various folk (not just us) have worn Palestinian-style scarves on protests, as a sign of solidarity. You may find it silly; are you willing to accept that some people see it as valid?

internationalist
- Homepage: http://www.palestinecampaign.org


Drssing up in blackface...

21.02.2002 15:11


I accept that it is probably done with reasonable motives, Internationalist, but I don't accept that it is in any way a good idea. It comes across as something like rubbing boot polish on your face to show solidarity with Africans. Not to mention the fact that it carries with it a huge element of the kids playing dress up school of revolutionary activism. Take them off, and stick them in a drawer somewhere.

AngryStudent


Fake Palestinians

21.02.2002 18:48

The WRO used to wear those scarves in the 1970's. Twenty years on, they are no more! Please don't stop the SWP from wearing them. The results on trot parties so far have been brilliant.

Ivor the Engine.