Big Society Bail-in in Haringey 19/02
Haringey Solidarity Group | 21.02.2011 11:36 | Public sector cuts | Social Struggles
About half of the 30 or so local residents occupied the bank and turned it into a home - with rugs, chairs and cushions - to bring attention to the number of people that will face homelessness if cuts to housing benefit and other public services go ahead. The occupation lasted over half an hour, before the protestors moved outside to continue their protest in front of the doors. The branch remained shut for at least another an hour. 200 special anti-banks leaflets were distributed, and also over 1,500 leaflets publicising the coming borough-wide anti-cuts rally at the Civic Centre on Thursday 24th February.
The protest was part of a 'UK Uncut' national day of action against Barclays in which over 50 branches were occupied and picketed - the day of action took place the day after Barclays were forced to admit it had shockingly paid only 1% corporation tax on its obscene £11.6bn profits.
Barclays have also just paid £3.5bn in bonuses, with average pay per employee in the investment banking division rising to £236,000 – that's ten times the UK's average salary. It was this greed, and the recklessness of the banks, that caused the economic crisis. Yet the government are making ordinary people pay the price. David Cameron himself has said that the cuts will change Britain's "whole way of life".
The government are lying to us when they say that the cuts are a necessity. They are a political choice. The government could get tough on the banks, they could tax bankers’ bonuses, they could stop the tax avoidance of the super-rich. Instead they choose make people pay by cutting essential public services, which will drive poor people out of their homes, increase homelessness and make local services unmanageable.
The British taxpayer bailed-out the banks with £1 trillion of public money and they haven’t paid us back. So now we’re bailing-in. We’re transforming the banks into schools, youth centres, libraries and council housing – all the things that the government want to privatise and cut.
The government’s cuts are not ‘fair’, we’re not ‘all in this together’, and there are alternatives. Make the banks pay for the crisis they caused. Barclays could pay for the crisis with a stroke of a pen. It’s our society that's too big to fail, not the broken banking system.
More information:
Action called by Haringey Housing Action Group / Haringey Solidarity Group: www.haringey.org.uk, in support of Haringey Alliance for Public Services: www.hapsnews.net , as part of a national day of action: www.ukuncut.org.uk
Haringey Solidarity Group
Homepage:
http://www.haringey.org.uk/content/