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Will a Labour government help us achieve socialism?
Labour has only ‘trade union consciousness’ – but if a left-wing generation of the party were supported by a mass movement and the unions, socialism might be advanced, argues the MARX MEMORIAL LBRARY

WILL a Labour government help us achieve socialism? The short answer is “perhaps” or, more accurately “we’re unlikely to get socialism without one.”

Our parliamentary institutions, which were secured through struggle and sacrifice, can have a potentially vital role in the advance to socialism.

In 1881, half a century before women secured the vote, Engels declared that in England, where the working class “forms the immense majority of the people” they should “use the power already in their hands, the actual majority they possess in every large town in the kingdom, to send to Parliament men of their own order.” Whether this could lead peacefully to socialism would depend on the response of the ruling class to policies which threatened its power.

  • This Wednesday February 20 a panel discussion at the Marx Memorial Library and Workers’ School will feature Mick Costello and Professors Mary Davis and John Kelly on the 1974-79 Labour government and working-class mobilisation.
     
  • The MML’s four session course on Trade Unions, Class and Power, starts on Tuesday February 19 with an examination of the strengths and weaknesses of the trade union movement in Britain today. There are still some places left on this and on the accompanying on-line course which has just started. More details on these and other events on https://tinyurl.com/MMLEvents
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