Motions at the next NUS NEC – 23/1/14 – Part 1

Hi everyone

Just a quick update letting you know my thoughts on the motion submitted to this week’s NUS NEC. After last meeting where the motions debate was fairly uncontroversial, I think it’s fair to say a lot of people will be watching Thursday’s meeting (people tend to follow the #nusnec hashtag on Twitter) for some of the motions discussion.

The first motion up is the NUS ‘priority motion’ – each year the president can choose a motion which, if passed, will be put to NUS conference by the NEC as leading policy for the year. This is the substantive motion as moved by Toni Pearce (NUS President) and backed by various Labour Students and members of the NUS leadership:

A New Deal for the Next Generation

NEC Believes:

1. Continued attacks on the prospects of students both in education and in their communities represent a whole generation let down by those with power
2. A feeling of powerlessness and precariousness is increasingly common among the rising generation, squeezed by global recession and biting financial pressures, uncertain about its prospects and its future
3. We too often feel let down by politicians who fail to speak on our behalf in a world where the odds are already stacked against us
4. Young people and students’ prospects continue to worsen due to rising unemployment and living costs
5. Evidence from Ipsos Mori public opinion polling shows more than two thirds of people believe the UK government does not adequately consider future generations in the decisions it makes today
6. The next UK general election is due to take place on Thursday 7 May 2015

NEC Further Believes:
1. At the 2010 general election, just 44 per cent of those aged 18 to 24 voted, compared 76 per cent of the over 65s
2. The introduction of individual voter registration (IER) threatens to further reduce the number of students and young people voting
3. The gulf in voting levels between the generations leaves young people losing out in policy terms
4. That it is through students working with communities across the UK that we stand the best chance of achieving a new deal for the next generation.
5. That NUS’ approach to the general election needs to be both local and national, supporting students to win locally and on a national level. To win for students we will need public support, and this is best achieved through working together with people in the communities we live in and finding common cause.
6. That NUS analysis of the 2011 census data demonstrates that there are over 60 constituencies in the UK with over 10 per cent full time students, and that the strength of the student voice and the student vote should be reaffirmed at every opportunity.

NEC Resolves:
1. To campaign for a new deal for the next generation across the themes of education, work and community
2. To use the opportunity of the next General Election to win for students both locally and nationally
3. To continue and develop the new campaigning partnership between NUS and the Trades Union Congress (TUC) to work together for a better deal for students and workers through a strong collective voice
4. To work with external allies and partners to maximise voter registration and electoral participation among young people and students to ensure their voices are heard
5. To launch a general election hub in 2014, and support every students’ union to develop their own election strategy – supporting students to win both locally and nationally.
6. To empower students and to connect student communities with wider society, including through continuing our community organising work and training students as community organisers on their campuses and in their communities.

I think there are some major gaps in the direction of the motion, largely in that it is completely lacking in instruction to get political parties to take on NUS policy, and particularly the Labour Party. I’m supporting two amendments to this motion, the first deals with the instruction for parties to take on NUS police. Considering NUS’s role as a lobbying organisation (highlighted by its recent opposition to the Lobbying Bill), it does seem utterly bizarre to not include this in the general election strategy!

Delete NEC Further Believes 4 and 5 Add

NEC Further Believes 4. That NUS’ approach to the general election needs to be both local and national, supporting students to win locally and on a national level. 5. To achieve a new deal for the next generation we will need public support, and this is best achieved through working together with people in the communities we live in and finding common cause.

NEC Resolves
7. To campaign nationally for political parties to adopt NUS demands, taken from policies passed or ratified by National Conference, and chosen by NUS NEC.

My own amendment goes further still, highlighting NUS’s link with the Labour Party. I think it is vital that NUS is pressuring the party that actually has those links with the TUC, which it already mentions working with. The trade union link with Labour is a powerful mechanism of political pressure that is rarely used to its full effect. Not only this, but Labour Students makes up the political leadership of the NUS, with many full time officers and part time NEC members as active NOLS members. Funnily enough, the last time I put a motion to the NEC regarding mandating NUS to work with the Labour Party, I was told that ‘we shouldn’t be focusing just on one party’ and that ‘NUS is non-party affiliated’. Whilst this is technically true, it is completely dishonest coming from the NOLS faction within NUS, when the NUS is actually driven by Labour Party leadership policy. It’s time for the NUS leadership to be honest about its political affiliation and use it to good effect, starting with actually pushing the Labour Party to fight for students’ right in the next general election,

Delete Believes 6

In Further believes 5 delete ‘support students… national level’
Delete Further believes 6 from ‘and that the strength’
Delete Resolves 2
Delete Resolves 3 from ‘to work’
In Resolves 3 change ‘the Trades Union Congress (TUC)’ to ‘TUC’
In Resolves 5 delete ‘supporting students.. locally’

Add:

Believes: That while we want everyone to adopt NUS policies, we must focus on Labour, as the main opposition to the Coalition and a party with major input from the trade unions. Resolves: To make one focus a fight for Labour to adopt NUS policies on issues including education funding/student support, cuts and privatisation. The FTOs should initiate discussions with Labour-affiliated unions and left-wing Labour MPs with this aim, and report back to the NEC.

Another motion I am putting to NEC, which I believe is fairly self-explanatory, is regarding the policy of migration and open borders:

Motion 2: For a United Europe with Open Borders

NEC Believes:

1. The right-wing agitation about Bulgarian and Romanian workers coming to Britain.
2. The rise of UKIP.
3. That the rise in right-wing, nationalist agitation is resulting in such things as a major increase in racist bullying in schools (source: ChildLine).

NEC Resolves:
1. To issue a statement saying that all migrants should be welcome here and that “strain” on jobs and services is a result of the government’s cuts, which seek to boost profits and the wealth of the rich at the expense of all workers.
2. That this statement should also condemn UKIP, oppose British withdrawal from the EU and advocate a united fightback to level up conditions and rights, and win greater democracy, across Europe and beyond.
3. To make these themes a major part of our campaign around the 2014 Euro-election and 2015 General Election.

Last term I did a couple of talks around the immigration bill and the way that it is being used to attack international students and refugees. Whilst the EU is a capitalist institution, facilitating free trade across Europe, it does also allow the free movement of labour, and as a result, greater unity between workers organising in different countries. Right wing rhetoric around immigration is used to stir up hatred between different groups of working class people and distract them from the real attacks on their rights and living standards – which come from the rich.

Steph Lloyd, a leading Labour Students member and NUS Wales President, has proposed an amendment:

Delete all and add

NEC Belives:
1. The European elections will to be held on Thursday 22 May
2. The European elections often have a much lower turnout than the General Election which leads to an increase of power in the hands of voters that vote for far-right parties and candidates.
3. Currently the UK is represented by members of the BNP in the European Parliament and both Nick Griffin and Andrew Brones are seeking re-election.
4. The rise of UKIP is symptom of a much wider political narrative of the mainstreaming of anti-immigration rhetoric
5. NUS has a proud history of opposing racist, fascist and xenophobic views and also a proud history of campaigning against this European elections.

NEC Resolves:
1. For NUS UK to continue a principled stance on being pro-immigration and to challenge the wider racist, fascist and xenophobic views that feed into the rise of far-right political parties.
2. For this to the one of the main themes of our European elections.
3. To ensure NUS UK pushed voter registration and voter turnout for the European elections.

Whilst some of the points are true, and useful to note, the ‘Resolves’ are far weaker, and far less instructive for NUS taking a hard and public line on this matter.

Edmund Schluessel’s further amendment reflect the Socialist Party’s euro-sceptical position, which led to their previous involvement in the ‘No2EU‘ party (later merging into TUSC) in recent years). Whilst I can support parts of this amendment which expand on the impact of right wing xenphobia, I think it is uneccessarily anti-EU. Whilst the EU is, of course, a capitalist – a ‘bosses’ institution, the amendment makes little comment on the opportunities it brings for pan-European organising against European employment law (for example).

Replace NEC Believes 2 with: 2. There has been a rise in support for UKIP. Rather than try to counter the conditions which fertilise the ground in which UKIP grows, both the government and the Labour opposition have pandered to and fanned the flames of xenophobia
Replace NEC Believes 3 with: 3. That the rise in right-wing, nationalist agitation is resulting in such things as a major increase in racist bullying in schools (source: ChildLine) as well as incidents of violence against international students.
Add NEC Believes 4. The European Union has contributed to conditions fuelling this hate, for example through imposing devastating austerity on Greece which has opened the space for the rise of the neo-Nazi Golden Dawn.
Add NEC Believes 5. Supposed ‘free movement of labour’ in the EU is rigged in favour of employers, with EU rules contradicting the principle of equal pay for equal work, member states allowed to discriminate against migrant workers, and many members including the UK making heavy use of opt-outs from EU protections on working rights.
Replace NEC Resolves 1 with: 1. That ‘strain’ on jobs and services is a result of the government’s cuts which seek to boost profits and the wealth of the rich at the expense of all workers. NUS will issue a statement condemning racism in all its forms and arguing for a united fight of workers and students from all backgrounds to oppose austerity and fight for adequate provision of jobs, homes and services.
Replace NEC Resolves 2 with: 2. That this statement should also condemn UKIP and support the unity and solidarity of working class people across Europe, in opposition to the bosses’ EU. The statement should support a united struggle of all European workers against brutal (and often EU enforced) austerity as part of a programme of internationalism, fighting for the liberation of the oppressed, the levelling up conditions and greater democracy worldwide.
Add new NEC Resolves: To support trade unions organising to end the super-exploitation of migrant labour and fight for a living-wage for all workers.
Add new NEC Resolves: To oppose discriminatory rules which guarantee unequal access to benefits, state support and the NHS in the UK

The following motion is a simple one calling for NUS backing to the ongoing ‘3 Cosas‘ dispute at the University of London, which recently won significant concessions in a strike, and hopes to win its full set of demands with its upcoming days of action. The campaign is extremely significant for the UK labour movement, in that it is made up of traditionally unorganised workers. It is particularly important that NUS backs this, as they are workers at the University of London, and it will send a clear message to UoL management that NUS backs the campaign, alongside the trade union (IWGB) and student union (ULU). It has become apparent over recent months that the Vice President Union Development, Raechel Mattey, has been meeting UoL management in private regarding the ‘pan-london representation’ issue where ULU is threatened with closure, in what seems to be an attempt to undermine ULU’s future existence. If NUS backs this workers’ campaign, which it should, it should also immediately cease discussions with UoL management who have brutally attacked students and workers (through police intimidation and arrests as well as refusal to meet with IWGB) as part of their attempt to undermine the 3 Cosas dispute.

3 Cosas campaign

NEC Resolves:
1. To support the ongoing “3 Cosas” campaign by outsourced University of London workers, and advertise and promote it widely.
2. To ask the VP Society & Citizenship to meet representatives of the campaign to discuss working together.
3. To mobilise Constituent Members for the 27-29 January strike.
4. To donate £400 to the strike fund

That’s all for now, I’ll publish my thoughts on motions 4-9 later in the week. At present I’m in discussions with NUS about the legality of an amendment I wrote about the Mark Duggan inquest, calling for full support for calls for justice. After some comments from the NUS legal department, I will be resubmitting the amendment to be heard by NUS NEC, and will publish as soon as I hear back.

Rosie

NUS Backs Cops Off Campus day of action – now it must campaign against the closure of ULU and back wider struggle!

dtrtplogoBelow is copied an email from the NUS Vice President Higher Education, Rachel Wenstone to student union officers on Monday morning. The call for action on Wednesday was arranged at short notice by around 120 student activists last Thursday from a range of local groups, from institutions across the country, in response to the grotesque police brutality and oppressive actions of university management at Sussex, University of London, after occupations and protests sprang up last week after the UCU/Unite/Unison Higher Education and Further Education strike.

It feels like a movement is brewing again, and it’s a very exciting time to be a student activist – but it is abhorrent that we are having to respond to more than 40 students having been arrested last week, and universities banning protest (UoL, Sheffield), suspending students (Sussex), or trying to charge sabbatical officers with £25,000 legal fees (Birmingham).

If NUS is serious about backing this campaign, it must act on these words – mobilise student unions and promise them legal backing against arrests and injunctions. This will provide the confidence that many students need to fight back against the repression from their universities.

NUS must also take account of the reasons these protests have been quashed in the first place, and support those struggles too – the 3 Cosas campaign of outsourced workers at the University of London has been hugely successful in its demands so far, and further strike action has been announced for January. It was as part of that campaign that a student was assaulted and arrested by police after she wrote in chalk on a wall earlier this year. NUS did not get involved in this case – they must explicitly announce their support for 3 Cosas, and against outsourcing and privatisation of university staff which has huge implications for the education sector as a whole.

The occupation of Senate House, which sparked the heavy handed approach of the police and University of London security last week, had within its demands opposition to the closure of the University of London Union. Students have been campaigning against this closure for months now. Unfortunately, NUS has – instead of backing these students’ demands, been undermining that fight by meeting University of London management in private – away from the ULU officers, and effectively bidding against them for pan-London representation. This is a very problematic position to take, and one which undermines this entire struggle. Let us be clear – NUS and constituent member unions have stated their support for ULU, and NUS is going against their wishes. It has even done this with little to no initial consultation – NUS VP Raechel Mattey was suitably vague about who she had spoken to prior to bringing the matter to the NEC, when questioned by NEC members. London unions have indicated that what they want is a union which is political, a hub for student activism, is led by students, and includes the kind of activities and sports which ULU currently provides, not a top-down, bureaucratic, student service centre. The University of London’s brute force is part of their attempts to clamp down on the ‘Save Your Union’ campaign, and unless NUS backs that campaign, it is ignoring, and being silent on, a huge part of the problem, as well as the wishes of its members.

It is good that NUS has taken a position to back the Cops Off Campus struggle – but it must see that this is part of a much wider attempt by university managements’ across the country to clamp down on student representation and democracy. NUS should immediately back 3 Cosas and the Save Your Union campaign at ULU, and cease any negotiations with University of London management.

Dear all,

Over the course of the last week, we’ve seen students across the UK take action on their campuses and in their communities against the sell-off of the student loan book, and supporting staff striking for better pay and conditions. Action and activism we should be proud of.

But this activism has been marred by a heavy-handed response from university management, and in London, disproportionate and confrontational policing.

In Sussex, five students have been suspended from their studies, in Sheffield and Birmingham, university management have attempted to ban protest, whilst in London, the police arrested over 40 students over the course of 24 hours.

On Thursday we released a statement condemning the police response in London, calling on the Mayor of London to set up an inquiry into to the Metropolitan Police tactics and behaviour towards activists.

However we think its important, at this time, to come together in unity and defend one our most basic and celebrated civil liberties – the right to peaceful protest.

We will be supporting the “cops off campus” day of action, organised by the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts, on Wednesday 11th December. You can see details of the event here:

https://www.facebook.com/events/565580810188930/?ref_dashboard_filter=upcoming&source=1

There will be a peaceful demonstration in London, meeting at 2pm. If you’re in and around London on Wednesday, consider joining. Contact me [rachel.wenstone@nus.org.uk] if you’d like to meet and march with someone.

Consider what action you can take on your campus this Wednesday, and let us know by tweeting on the #copsoffcampus hashtag. I have attached a copy of our Occupations and Protest Guidance for Students’ Unions to help you plan and respond to action.

We will be supporting those students affected by suspensions and those campuses affected by protest injunctions, by writing to university management and pushing them to overturn their decisions.

Please be in touch if you have any questions. Remember that the most effective protest is a peaceful one. Stay safe!

In Unity,
Rachel