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Encyclopedia > Socialist Party of England and Wales

The Socialist Party is a Trotskyist political party active in England and Wales and part of the Committee for a Workers International. They publish a weekly newspaper entitled The Socialist and a monthly Socialism Today. As an organisation, it has evolved from the Militant Tendency, who in the early 1980s started to be expelled from the Labour Party, for entryism, after opposing the social democratic line of the leadership, particularly when leading Liverpool city council in the mid-1980s and leading the anti-Poll Tax campaign at the end of the 1980s and eraly 1990s.


There was a debate with the Militant Tendency as to whether or not to cease working within the Labour Party and the majority of the group decided to do so, although a minority around Ted Grant broke away to form Socialist Appeal. This debate ran alongside a parallel debate on the future of Scottish politics. The result was that the experiment of operating as an "open party" was first undertaken in Scotland under the name of Scottish Militant Labour. This initiative would eventually lead to the foundation of the Scottish Socialist Alliance. The majority of Scottish members, after forming the Scottish Socialist Party, left the CWI in early 2001 as they moved away from traditional Trotskyist politics.


For a while, the party was known as Militant Labour. They then changed their name to the Socialist Party, but the ownership of this name has been contested by the much older Socialist Party of Great Britain. As a result, the new party is frequently known as "The Socialist Party of England and Wales". In elections, it has had to use the name "Socialist Alternative". They were one of the founders of the local Socialist Alliance groups, but they left in 2001.


Since ending their short tenure in the Socialist Alliance, the Socialist Party has run candidates in elections as Socialist Alternative. They have two councillors in Coventry and two in Lewisham, South London.


The Socialist Party is a smaller organisation than the Militant of the 1980s, but has influence in some trade unions. In 2004 19 Socialist Party members are elected members of trade union national executive committees. Under the leadership of Peter Taaffe, their policies have remained close to the Trotskyist mainstream. Their demand for the nationalisation of the one hundred and fifty top British companies and their longstanding emphasis on running in elections has led some critics to label them as reformists though the party insists that their method is based on Trotsky's Transitional Programme.


The Socialist Party is affilliated to the Committee for a Workers International, and is indeed the largest of its forty members.


External links

  • Socialist Party website (http://www.socialistparty.org.uk)
  • Committee for a Workers' International website (http://www.socialistworld.org)

  Results from FactBites:
 
Socialist Party (England and Wales) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (549 words)
The Socialist Party is a Trotskyist political party active in England and Wales and part of the Committee for a Workers' International.
The Socialist Party is a smaller organisation than the Militant of the 1980s, but has influence in some trade unions.
The Socialist Party is affiliated to the Committee for a Workers International, and is indeed the largest of its forty members.
Socialist Party (England and Wales) - definition of Socialist Party (England and Wales) in Encyclopedia (425 words)
They then changed their name to the Socialist Party, but the ownership of this name has been contested by the much older Socialist Party of Great Britain.
Their demand for the nationalisation of the one hundred and fifty top British companies and their longstanding emphasis on running in elections has led some critics to label them as reformists though the party insists that their method is based on Trotsky's Transitional Programme.
The Socialist Party is affilliated to the Committee for a Workers International, and is indeed the largest of its forty members.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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