1978 Lambeth by-election
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December 3, 2013 at 4:14 pm #82522ALBKeymaster
This by-election, held on 20 April 1978, has come back into the news as a result of the Maoist cult "slavery" case because they (and us and the IMG, SWP, WRP and 6 other candidates, making 11 in all) contested this by-election. We contacted our candidate, Barry McNeeney (who is no longer a member), to see if he remembered the cult candidate. He didn't but sent us some interesting recollections of the election. Here's an extract (the full version will go into our historical archives at Head Office).
It was a snap election, called, campaigned, polled and the result announced within the university Easter vacation.
I was a second-year philosophy mature student under a professor who specialised in dishonest arguments […] Richard Swinburne went on to become a professor of religion at Oxford University […]
On the Friday morning of the Socialist Party of Great Britain conference at Conway Hall it was observed from the floor that the party headquarters were in the constituency. "But we have no candidate", the chairman replied. Harry Young asked me, "Do you want to stand, Barry?" "…Yes", I replied.
Harry then proposed me as the party candidate, somebody else seconded me and the delegates agreed. I was taken away for the parliamentary candidates test. This was conducted at the head office in Clapham High Street. The examiners were Harry Walters, Harry Young and [Ron Cook]. There were a lot of questions about surplus value and the economics of exploitation, the materialist conception of history, the development of society through time and what the working class had to do to effect a socialist revolution through the ballot box.
I steered round such trick question as:
"Can the workers buy back with their wages all of the commodities they produce in a week?" (Short answer: exploitation takes place at the point of production, not consumption.) [….]
They passed me.
We set up a table on the pavement outside head office with literature and posters advertising our candidacy in the by-election and button-holing passers-by — by telling them if they had read our literature and developed a socialist consciousness, they could vote for a genuine socialist candidate here and now.
"But who is he?" many asked. It was eerie to answer with my name; "We're not asking you to vote for a caracter, or celebrity, but for a way of reorganising society by democratic agreement", was frequently said.
Ronnie Weidberg had two public address systems with megaphones that could be attached to the roof of a car. We toured many streets in the constituency while I spoke into the microphone. The socialist case reverberated from the tower blocks, in snatches.
Harry Young and I teamed up from door-to-door canvassing. We encountered no hostility. A seventy-five year old and a thirty-two year old talking about a classless, moneyless world community are idealists, at a glance. We shook the loyalty of many die-hard Labour supporters and got invited in for coffee by a few floating voters.
There were a lot of candidates for the election. We met up with the Liberal and her entourage. I asked her to tell me her case. Then put the SPGB case to her, pointing out that "the science of the possible" can be expanded if the majority of people have knowledge and conviction.
We made enough noise to attract media attention. A BBC television crew turned up at head office while we were outside on the pavement. They filmed the bullet-proof window, then pushed the camera in my face, "Right you've got one minute", the director said.
Desperately, I grabbed the nearest passer-by, who happened to be a beautiful, black twenty year old woman. "You're on television. Do you have a vote in this election?" I whispered to her. "Yes", she said, terrified. I put the most charming and winning argument I could to her in a minute, while she smiled at the camera, nodded and answered in monosyllables. When it was over I pressed a copy of the Socialist Standard into her hand and thanked her.
The one-minute recording was screened on BBC six o'clock news, on the day before the election, I think. A fterwards the announcer smiled and shook his head.
I wrote an article for the local Caribbean newspaper recounting this and other experiences with black people over the years. They liked it but would not publish it until the election was over, lest it be seen as an endorsement. I don't know whether they did.
Barry McNeeney
June 12, 2015 at 2:44 pm #98693imposs1904ParticipantA report from the May 1978 Socialist Standard on the Lambeth by-election.
February 10, 2017 at 4:02 pm #98694jondwhiteParticipantInterested account from Barry McNeeney
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